Villages are held to ransom by the gypsy family from hell after their rampage in New Zealand: Deported travellers tell Worcestershire residents 'buy our land for £600,000 or we'll move in' (14 Pics)

A notorious family of travellers is holding villages to ransom by buying land cheap and threatening to build homes without planning permission unless locals buy the plots back for vastly inflated sums.
The Doran clan hit the headlines earlier this year after they wreaked havoc across New Zealand before being deported back to Britain.
Now residents in historic villages fear their tranquillity will be shattered by the very same brand of mayhem unless they pay up.
Pictured: The patch of land bought by the Dorans which they are trying to sell on to residents in the area
Pictured: The patch of land bought by the Dorans which they are trying to sell on to residents in the area
Discriminated: Patrick Doran claimed they were being treated differently because they are from the travelling community
Discriminated: Patrick Doran claimed they were being treated differently because they are from the travelling community
The field, entrance pictured above, in Dough Bank in Ombersley, Worcs, could be flipped for a massive profit, residents fear, saying the Dorans have them 'over a barrel'
The field, entrance pictured above, in Dough Bank in Ombersley, Worcs, could be flipped for a massive profit, residents fear, saying the Dorans have them 'over a barrel'
Local residents say this shoddily-built 10ft high wall has already been erected by Patrick Doran on the site despite his not having applied for, nor having received, planning permission
Local residents say this shoddily-built 10ft high wall has already been erected by Patrick Doran on the site despite his not having applied for, nor having received, planning permissionPictured: Dough Bank, Worcestershire. One Dough Bank resident said: 'Family members would take it in turns to urinate, or worse, in people's driveways'
Pictured: Dough Bank, Worcestershire. One Dough Bank resident said: 'Family members would take it in turns to urinate, or worse, in people's driveways'
The first to be targeted was the quaintly-named Dough Bank, which nestles in the heart of the Severn Valley in Worcestershire.
THE DORANS PAID £9,000 FOR A TENNIS COURT-SIZE PIECE OF LAND IN THE VILLAGE, THEN DEMANDED MORE THAN £600,000 TO RETURN IT AND LEAVE.
Soon after buying the plot, which they named Pleasure View, more than 20 members of the family had moved their caravans, 4x4s and building machinery on to the site, often blocking the narrow lanes.
Locals claim the clan members threatened violence against anyone who challenged them.
One Dough Bank resident said: 'Family members would take it in turns to urinate, or worse, in people's driveways. 
The resident said: 'They turned their site, which was once beautiful, unspoilt woodland, into an eyesore' (pictured: Dough Bank, Worcestershire)
The resident said: 'They turned their site, which was once beautiful, unspoilt woodland, into an eyesore' (pictured: Dough Bank, Worcestershire)
Patrick Doran told villagers the family would move out – on the condition that locals bought the land from them for £600,000 (pictured: Dough Bank)
Patrick Doran told villagers the family would move out – on the condition that locals bought the land from them for £600,000 (pictured: Dough Bank)
'They built 10ft high breeze block walls, which the council made them take down, and dumped hundreds of tons of rubble in heaps everywhere,' the resident said (pictured: Dough Bank)
'They built 10ft high breeze block walls, which the council made them take down, and dumped hundreds of tons of rubble in heaps everywhere,' the resident said (pictured: Dough Bank)
'They turned their site, which was once beautiful, unspoilt woodland, into an eyesore. 
'They built 10ft high breeze block walls, which the council made them take down, and dumped hundreds of tons of rubble in heaps everywhere.'
Patrick Doran told villagers the family would move out – on the condition that locals bought the land from them for £600,000. 
He posted letters through the doors of the 22 households warning them he would sell the land to another member of the traveller community if they failed to stump up the cash.
Locals refused to pay. One told The Mail on Sunday: 'We won't be held to ransom by him.'
Meanwhile, eight miles away, the villagers of Astley – which is listed in the Domesday Book and was once the home of Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin – found themselves at the centre of a similar battle.
The Doran family first paid £9,000 for a tennis court-size piece of land in the village of Dough Bank, Worcestershire
The Doran family first paid £9,000 for a tennis court-size piece of land in the village of Dough Bank, Worcestershire 
Brit 'gypsy' family cover park in rubbish before threatening locals
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Some members of the Doran clan, pictured here on their arrival back at Heathrow, tried to shield their faces at Terminal 3 in January. Larry (facing camera) told a photographer: 'I'll break your bones. I'll break your camera'
Some members of the Doran clan, pictured here on their arrival back at Heathrow, tried to shield their faces at Terminal 3 in January. Larry (facing camera) told a photographer: 'I'll break your bones. I'll break your camera'
The Dorans bought a quarter- acre plot in Astley Burf for just £12,000 from an elderly couple. Five weeks ago Lawrence Doran told residents he intended to build a five-bed house on it, even though locals believe it is highly unlikely the local authority, Malvern Hills District Council, would give planning permission.
One Astley Burf villager said: 'A few days later, he and other members of his family rocked up with bulldozers and earth-scrapers and punched a hole straight through the hedgerow into the plot of land to gain access, then flattened everything. It looked like a battlefield.'
Locals claim the Dorans have been lighting huge bonfires on the plot, throwing in aerosol canisters that explode, and in recent weeks inexplicable scratches have appeared on villagers' cars.
Lawrence Doran has told residents he would be happy to leave Astley Burf if they bought the land back for around £100,000.
Villagers have set up a crowdfunding site, which has so far received pledges of more than half that sum and a chartered surveyor, David Banks, has been appointed to act as land agent on behalf of locals to try to reach a settlement with the Dorans. 
A villager said: 'If the Dorans stay, they'll wipe £100,000 in value off a £500,000 property here, so we've got no option but to give in to what amounts to blackmail. They've got us over a barrel and they know it.'
The Dorans have snapped up land in Worcestershire but want £600,000 to leave. Pictured above during their time in New Zealand
The Dorans have snapped up land in Worcestershire but want £600,000 to leave. Pictured above during their time in New Zealand
Larry (left) and Joe Doran (right) chugging Red Bull energy drinks on returning to the UK
Larry (left) and Joe Doran (right) chugging Red Bull energy drinks on returning to the UK
British gypsy family allegedly con red bull from service station
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The family were deported back to Britain following the problems they caused in New Zealand
Joe Doran.
Pictured: The Doran clan in New Zealand. The family were deported back to Britain following the problems they caused down under
Last night, Patrick Doran said: 'We bought these plots in good faith. I just want to build a home for my family. What's wrong with that? Everything has been done legally, fair and square. 
'We're being discriminated against because we're from the travelling community. People treat us like animals.'
Members of the Doran clan were deported from New Zealand in January after allegedly threatening locals, refusing to pay for restaurant meals and leaving vast amounts of litter on beaches.
An application for permission to put a caravan at the Dorans' Pleasure View in Dough Bank was submitted to Wychavon Council by Patrick Doran in January this year.
'The application is for 'change of use of land to use as a residential caravan site for one gipsy family, including laying of hardstanding, erection of amenity building and improvement of access'. The decision is currently 'pending'.
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