A New York couple is accused of poisoning their blind, elderly neighbor's trees to get a better view from their Maine summer house.
Stephen Antonson, a painter and sculptor, and his wife, Kathleen Hackett, an interior designer and author, bought the $320,000 home in Rockport in 2017.
They immediately began asking their neighbor, Ruth Graham, a widow who was pushing 90 at the time, to remove trees in her garden which would have given them a stunning view of Penobscot Bay.
Graham refused but the couple allegedly persisted, at one point sending her a handwritten note ostensibly from their teenage children begging her to sell them the land.
She once again declined, but the following year in 2021, she began to note that her trees were dying, according to reporting from The New York Times.
An investigation was launched which revealed the trees were killed by 'herbicidal poison'.
The poisoning's impact was, 'limited to a distinct corridor of trees directly in line with the deck of the Antonson residence', according to a report from the Maine Board of Pesticides Control.
Antonson and his wife have denied any wrongdoing, but he has agreed to pay a $3,000 fine after signing a consent agreement earlier this year refuting responsibility.
The couple bought this summer home in Rockport, Maine 2017 and immediately began complaining about the trees on Ruth Graham's property that blocked their view of the Penobscot Bay, according to The New York Times
The neighborly dispute began almost as soon as the couple moved in, according to Graham's relatives, even though she allowed all her neighbors, including the Antonson-Hackett family, to freely use her dock to swim and launch boats.
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Just before the summer of 2020, Antonson and Hackett sent Graham a note that was signed by their children, both of them teenagers at the time.
'It means a great deal to us to have such an accepting and generous neighbor,' the note read obtain by the NYT read.
'As my brother and I grow older, and our activities become more active and outdoorsy, we’re always looking for an easy and more accessible place to play to maximise (sic) our number of outdoor activities.'
'We understand that the land behind our house is owned by you, and since my brother and I are looking for a backyard of sorts, think 25 feet of land is a reasonable number,' the note, penned in childish handwriting, continued.
Ruth Graham was pushing 90 years old at the time of the feud between her and the Antonson-Hackett family
'My parents have agreed to pay for the surveyor fees and the attorney fees. Would you consider selling us a slice of land?'
Graham showed this strange note to her son, Steven Graham, who was handling her affairs.
Steven told The Times that he and his mother thought the note 'was ridiculous'.
They both agreed that the note likely came from the parents themselves and was passed off as an innocent request from the boys.
Graham also believed Antonson and Hackett were using her old age and frailty to try to push her around, so she declined to sell her land.
When she began to notice her trees dying the following year, she contacted an arborist first, which triggered a series of escalations all the way up to Maine's Board of Pesticides Control.
Investigators from the board found that six to eight cedar trees and about four maple trees were dead or dying.
They all had bore holes in them. Liquid discovered in the holes were tested and was determined to be herbicidal poison.
The poisoning's impact was 'limited to a distinct corridor of trees directly in line with the deck of the Antonson residence', according to a report from the board.
Graham, afraid the dead trees would fall on her house, simply paid to have them removed.
'She didn’t want to get involved in an adversarial situation with her neighbor and be uncomfortable every time she came out of her house,' her son said, explaining why his mother didn't pursue further action at the time.
That changed in the fall of 2023 when a friend of Graham's noticed a whole new road of trees had died on her lawn.
The pesticide investigators then returned to her home and found even more dying maples, each about 30 or 40 feet tall, with poison dumped on their bases.
Again, the trees were abutting Antonson and Hackett's rear windows.
'The Board finds that the positioning of the affected trees in addition to prior correspondence from the Antonson’s to the Graham’s requesting tree removal indicate that Antonson would have been the only one to benefit from the application of herbicides to the affected area,' the board's report read.
The report also noted that Antonson denied administering the poison. A lawyer for Antonson and Hackett said the couple has no comment.