A legal case against a housing activist has been dropped following false claims she had been living in empty homes in a Bexley estate to fight against plans for the houses to be demolished.

The homes are located in the Lesnes Estate in Thamesmead and are set to be knocked down by Peabody for a project that would see 1,950 new units being built on the site.

Andrea Gilbert, 36, appeared in Dartford County Court on October 14, to address claims from the Peabody Trust that she had been unlawfully living in four homes in the estate.

A general view of the Lesnes Estate in ThamesmeadA general view of the Lesnes Estate in Thamesmead

The trust used an article published by the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS) last month to allege Ms Gilbert had been living in the properties since April of this year.

A witness statement from Terry Adams, director of commercial estate management for Peabody, said the trust was the registered freeholder of the homes on the estate.

He added that Peabody’s plans to regenerate the estate had been opposed by a group called Lesnes Resistance, who campaigned to have homes in the area repurposed instead of being demolished.

The trust claimed its management of the estate was being negatively affected by its continued occupation by the protestors.

A letter seen by the LDRS from August 22 sent on behalf of Peabody claimed that the occupiers had no right to remain in the homes and that they were to vacate the spaces immediately or else court proceedings would be pursued.

A response letter from Lesnes Resistance dated September 2 appears to claim the group were refusing to vacate the properties until a meeting with John Lewis, the executive director of Peabody, could be arranged.

Ms Gilbert said at the hearing that she was only recently made aware of the case and that was currently living in Wandsworth.

She said she had never lived in the estate and had only attended the site for the purpose of advocacy work to support residents.

The housing activist said at the hearing: “All I have done is support the residents to clear their estate. We have one resident here who has mice and cockroaches in her house because [Peabody] has left properties empty for years… How they have been living is absolutely disgraceful.”

Representatives from the Peabody Trust said at the hearing that they wished to discontinue its claims against Ms Gilbert.

The trust also made claims that several unknown persons had been living in the alleged properties, but District Judge Thistle confirmed none of the unidentified individuals were present at the hearing.

Judge Thistle said: “I appreciate there are a number of people here today who are part of Lesnes Resistance. I’m sure they have strong views of what will happen going forward, but they have helpfully pointed out that none of them are currently living in or occupying the properties.”

The judge said the trust had misjudged the situation by claiming Ms Gilbert had been occupying the homes.

He noted that the homes may be presently empty, but made an order that any individuals living in the four units in the estate were to vacate them immediately.

A Peabody spokesperson previously told the LDRS that the majority of residents on the Lesnes Estate voted in favour of the regeneration.

They added the scheme would bring about hundreds of high-quality, much-needed homes in Bexley borough.