Fly tipper fined after leaving personal details in dumped rubbish

Andrei Stoica refused to give his name when officers arrived at his home
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A fly tipper has been fined after leaving his personal details on the rubbish he dumped in an alleyway.
Andrei Stoica, 47, from Wolverhampton has been ordered to pay £2,719 after dumping his litter close to his home.
The 47-year-old, who lives on All Saints Road, was convicted at Dudley Magistrates Court following an investigation by the city council's environmental crime team.
Mr Stoica was found guilty in his absence after failing to appear at the hearing.
Bags of domestic waste were discovered in a passageway connecting All Saints Road and Gower Street, with investigators able to identify the culprit through packaging bearing his address that was left among the discarded items.
Council officers passed this intelligence to the environmental crime unit, who subsequently visited Mr Stoica's address in July to question him about the incident.
Upon arriving at the property, investigators observed that additional bags of household rubbish had been abandoned in the identical location.
A search through this fresh pile of waste revealed yet more packaging displaying the man's details.

The culprit had left his personal details in his dumped rubbish
|CITY OF WOLVERHAMPTON COUNCIL
The dumped items were found positioned beside a warning poster in the alleyway.
Clean-up crews from Wolverhampton Council had initially attended the site to remove the illegally deposited rubbish when they uncovered the evidence linking Mr Stoica to the offence.
When officers approached the 47-year-old at his home and explained the purpose of their visit, he declined to provide his name or offer any details regarding the fly-tipping incident.
The council subsequently hand-delivered a notice through his letterbox under section 108 of the Environment Act 1995, requiring him to attend an interview at the civic centre later that month.
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The rubbish was found down an alleyway between All Saints Road and Gower Street in Wolverhampton
|GOOGLE STREET VIEW
Mr Stoica failed to comply with this request, prompting the authority to initiate legal proceedings against him.
He was found guilty of one obstruction charge under section 110 of the Environment Act 1995 for refusing to assist investigating officers.
Magistrates imposed a £660 fine, a £264 victim surcharge and £1,795 in costs.
Councillor Bhupinder Gakhal, cabinet member for resident services at City of Wolverhampton Council, described the outcome as "a great result and an example of real partnership work between our environmental teams."
He added: "Thanks to the address details being spotted by our clean-up crew, officers from our environmental crime team were able to track down and prosecute this offender.
"We continue to work hard to prevent fly tipping and other environmental crimes. Suspected offenders should be aware that they are being watched and we are doing all we can to track them down."
The council confirmed that the costs awarded would be reinvested into its environmental crime service.
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