Council wins £285,000 court fine against property firm

Ibrahim Has, owner and director of Has & Co. Properties, exploited Hackney’s housing shortage by squeezing in 13 tiny flats above a pub.

Wood Green Crown Court

A criminal landlord who took advantage of vulnerable tenants by cramming them into tiny flats above a Stoke Newington pub has received a conviction and been forced to pay back rental income as part of a £285,000 court fine after Hackney Council enforcement officers intervened.

Wood Green Crown Court (main picture) heard how Ibrahim Has, owner and director of Has & Co. Properties, exploited Hackney’s housing shortage by squeezing 13 flats into the space above the Yucatan Pub on Stoke Newington Road.

ILLEGAL HOMES

The illegal homes were as little as nine square metres in size – less than a quarter of the 37 square metre legal minimum.

Yucatan pub, Hackney
The Yucatan Pub on Stoke Newington Road.

In March 2022 Mr Has and a co-defendant had already pleaded guilty to failing to comply with Hackney Council’s planning enforcement notice after he ignored both an initial decision to refuse planning permission for the properties and a subsequent requirement for the properties to be removed by March 2019.

The Council then took court action to recoup the income received by Mr Has from the illegal properties after conducting a money laundering investigation under the Proceeds of Crime Act, which allows income from criminal activities to be seized.

ORDERED TO PAY

On 12 June 2023 the company and Mr Has were ordered to pay £284,675.90, including £15,000 for not complying with the planning enforcement notice, £8,110 in legal costs, and a confiscation order of £261,565.90 of illegal rental income he had received.

Councillor Guy Nicholson
Councillor Guy Nicholson

Councillor Guy Nicholson, Deputy Mayor and Cabinet Member for Delivery, Inclusive Economy and Regeneration, says: “Hackney is facing a critical housing shortage, and it’s crucial that the Council does not allow people to exploit this crisis by cramming people into homes that don’t meet decent living standards.

“We should all be proud of Hackney’s enforcement team for not just ensuring that these unacceptable properties have been removed, but for also setting a clear example to others that the Council has no truck with bad landlords and will not hesitate to secure a conviction to ensure that a criminal landlord won’t profit from their actions.”


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