Menace, 63, faces jail for hate campaign against Portsmouth City Council worker

A COUNCIL tenant evicted from his home waged a campaign of ‘hatred’ against an anti-social behaviour officer by distributing leaflets falsely calling him a paedophile.
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Stephen Fisher, 63, targeted Portsmouth City Council investigator Dave Clark after being taken to county court to force him out of the home he lived in for two decades.

For years nuisance Fisher plagued people living near him in St George’s Street, Portsea, and was slapped with an injunction during eviction proceedings.

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At Portsmouth Magistrates’ Court, Fisher was warned he faces jail for his ‘campaign’ against Mr Clark, who is the senior anti-social behaviour investigator at the council.

Stephen Fisher, 63, of Kingston Road, Fratton, accused of harassing a Portsmouth City Council anti-social behaviour officer pictured outside Portsmouth Magistrates Court  Picture: Ben FishwickStephen Fisher, 63, of Kingston Road, Fratton, accused of harassing a Portsmouth City Council anti-social behaviour officer pictured outside Portsmouth Magistrates Court  Picture: Ben Fishwick
Stephen Fisher, 63, of Kingston Road, Fratton, accused of harassing a Portsmouth City Council anti-social behaviour officer pictured outside Portsmouth Magistrates Court Picture: Ben Fishwick

Prosecutor Richard Withey said: ‘There’s rather protracted dealings between the two which culminated in Mr Fisher being evicted in 2018, and since then Mr Clark says there has been a campaign against him.’

Fisher left notes calling Mr Clark a ‘paedophile gang leader,’ ‘pervert’ and ‘perjurer’ at the Somers Town hub on July 1 last year, Mr Withey said.

Then on October 11, Fisher left Mr Clark a voicemail alleging the same false claims and five days later returned a council letter to Mr Clark with the same accusations scrawled on top.

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Stephen Fisher outside Portsmouth Magistrates' Court
(270820-09)
Stephen Fisher outside Portsmouth Magistrates' Court
(270820-09)
Stephen Fisher outside Portsmouth Magistrates' Court (270820-09)
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In his letter he said ‘your friend Ackroyd’ - referring to a county court district judge - and claimed Mr Clark and the judge had sought to ‘pervert the course of justice by illegally evicting me’.

In a statement read out in court, Mr Clark said: ‘It continues to be frustrating. It annoys me and he’s starting to affect my working life.

‘I’m wondering what he’s going to do next.

‘Although he doesn’t scare me physically he’s causing anguish and distress to my good name and in the roles I carry out for Portsmouth City Council.’

Stephen Fisher outside Portsmouth Magistrates' Court
(270820-08)
Stephen Fisher outside Portsmouth Magistrates' Court
(270820-08)
Stephen Fisher outside Portsmouth Magistrates' Court (270820-08)

He added: ‘He’s determined to do so with his hatred against me.’

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In a statement issued after court, he added: ‘For a number of years he persistently harassed his neighbours, staff at Portsmouth City Council and even clergy at his local church.

‘He was eventually evicted from his home in December 2018 and as soon as the suspended prison sentence expired in June 2019 he re-commenced his harassment, this time focusing exclusively on myself.’

Fisher, now of Kingston Road, repeatedly breached a county court injunction, the court was told on Thursday.

Stephen Fisher, 63, of Kingston Road, Fratton, accused of harassing a Portsmouth City Council anti-social behaviour officer pictured outside Portsmouth Magistrates Court on 27 August 2020.

Picture: Ben FishwickStephen Fisher, 63, of Kingston Road, Fratton, accused of harassing a Portsmouth City Council anti-social behaviour officer pictured outside Portsmouth Magistrates Court on 27 August 2020.

Picture: Ben Fishwick
Stephen Fisher, 63, of Kingston Road, Fratton, accused of harassing a Portsmouth City Council anti-social behaviour officer pictured outside Portsmouth Magistrates Court on 27 August 2020. Picture: Ben Fishwick

Fisher had been accused of putting up signs at Rudmore Roundabout and Blackfriars Road in July but pleaded guilty to harassment on a basis not including the signs.

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Reading his basis of plea Tim Sparkes, mitigating, said: ‘I accept that my conduct was not rational as I was still very angry because of what I view as an unfair eviction.’

But outside court Fisher approached The News and said: ‘All this, this is bamboozling, this is bullying, to the highest degree.

‘I’m just a man with a van. I was born here and I feel disgusted.’

He added he ‘had no choice’ but to plead guilty, and added his eviction was ‘inhumane’.

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He said: ‘I’m not a bad person, I’ve never been violent. But first of all I was a racist, then I was a bully, then I was a gangster and now I’m a fantasist. When’s it going to stop?’

Fisher will be sentenced at the same court on October 8 after probation assesses him.

His sentence could ‘include a custodial sentence for the harassment,’ district judge David Robinson said.

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