Sally Davidson stormed out of St Albans Magistrates Court on trial s second day
Yesterday, defendant Liam Norton claimed to have glued his hand to a table
Court was cleared while security staff dealt with issue before resuming again
Norton will now be tried in his absence after police arrested him for disturbance
Norton and five others are charged with wilful obstruction of highway in relation to an XR protest and the disruption of the distribution of national newspapers
Five-year ban for alcoholic drink-driver countypress.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from countypress.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Hertfordshire woman banned from entering her own road for two years after harassing neighbours
The 54-year-old s Criminal Behaviour Order has also been extended by four years after she breached the conditions
Falconer Road, Bushey (Image: Google Maps)
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A Herts woman has been banned from entering her own road for two years after harassing and causing problems for her neighbours and nearby businesses.
Sandra Johnson, pictured in 2018, has been banned from entering Falconer Road in Bushey A woman has been banned from entering a road in Bushey for two years under a criminal behaviour order (CBO). Sandra Johnson, 54, of Falconer Road, must have written permission from police to enter the road after her CBO was extended and updated. At St Albans Magistrates’ Court on April 9, Mrs Johnson’s CBO, initially put in place in November 2018, was extended by four years after she breached the conditions by engaging in behaviour that caused harassment, alarm or distress. She was also given an eight-month suspended sentence, which means if she commits any further offences she will go to prison.
The court heard how both owners had their dogs seized after being reported as stray. Neither of the dogs were wearing an identity tag and the microchip details were not up-to-date, meaning the council could not contact the owners. On claiming the dogs back from the council, each owner was served with a legal notice requiring them to update the details of their dog’s microchip within 21 days. Both owners failed to comply – despite each being served with a final opportunity to comply with the notice, which effectively gives a dog owner an extra seven days to meet the requirements of the legislation.