A self-employed builder, who purposefully evaded the Health & Safety Executive, has been fined for putting an Essex family in danger of leaking gas pipes after illegally replacing a boiler.

Peter Brown, 49, was responsible for an immediately dangerous installation at the property in Wivenhoe, after carrying out the work as part of a kitchen refit at the home in November 2010.

Colchester Magistrates' Court heard on 2 October that less than four weeks after the work was completed, the householders awoke to a strong smell of gas in the kitchen. They called National Grid who identified that the pipework was leaking and classed it as immediately dangerous.

The householders made numerous attempts to contact Brown to sort the problem, with no success.

A Gas Safe registered engineer inspected the property and found that the pipework installed beneath the floor had not been properly clipped or supported, and was leaking from an elbow joint. Remedial work was carried out and the gas installation was put back into use.

A subsequent Gas Safe examination to check the rest of Brown’s handiwork in February 2011 established that the flue collars had not been screwed to the flue and the flue elbow, and that there was a gap between the flue connection and the flue itself.

The hole for the flue was also found to have been cored out too low in the wall, and as a result the flue could not sit properly on the boiler. In the absence of any seal, combusted materials had the potential to leak into the kitchen.

Once again the installation was classified as immediately dangerous and isolated from use until extensive remedial work had been completed.

HSE's investigation found that Brown had never been Gas Safe registered, and there were no records to indicate that he had ever undergone any verification of competence through training or qualifications.

It also emerged that after carrying out the gas work at the Wivenhoe home he had demanded a cash settlement for the work and refused to complete any details in the boiler's commissioning documents.

The court was told that HSE served a Prohibition Notice on Brown at his last known address in Chelmsford, but further correspondence and attempts to contact him by telephone were met with no response. It later emerged that he had sold his house in early 2012 and endeavoured to conceal his whereabouts.

Extensive enquiries were made in an effort to trace him within the UK without success. Information from associates indicated that he had access to properties and contacts overseas and so, in November 2012, an immediate arrest warrant was applied for and granted by Colchester Magistrates Court.

On 25 September 2013, Brown was arrested on warrant and brought back before Colchester Magistrates Court.

Brown, last staying at Prestbury Green, Shrewsbury, was fined £10,000 and ordered to pay costs of £4,000 after pleading guilty to breaching Regulation 3(3) of the Gas Safety (Installation and Use) Regulations 1998.

HSE inspector Paul Grover, said: "Peter Brown has never been Gas Safe registered and is therefore not competent to carry out any gas work. The standards of his workmanship in this instance were woeful and he knowingly put the householders in danger by exposing them to harmful combustion gases and the risk of an explosion.

"His actions appear to have been motivated by a desire to achieve material gain and he was prepared to place others in danger to achieve this. In doing so, he showed a complete disregard for the health and safety of his clients and the general public. He was totally unsympathetic when the clients sought his assistance after the installation leaked due his lack of competence.

Peter Brown, 49, was responsible for an immediately dangerous installation at the property in Wivenhoe, after carrying out the work as part of a kitchen refit at the home in November 2010.

Colchester Magistrates' Court heard on 2 October that less than four weeks after the work was completed, the householders awoke to a strong smell of gas in the kitchen. They called National Grid who identified that the pipework was leaking and classed it as immediately dangerous.

The householders made numerous attempts to contact Brown to sort the problem, with no success.

A Gas Safe registered engineer inspected the property and found that the pipework installed beneath the floor had not been properly clipped or supported, and was leaking from an elbow joint. Remedial work was carried out and the gas installation was put back into use.

A subsequent Gas Safe examination to check the rest of Brown’s handiwork in February 2011 established that the flue collars had not been screwed to the flue and the flue elbow, and that there was a gap between the flue connection and the flue itself.

The hole for the flue was also found to have been cored out too low in the wall, and as a result the flue could not sit properly on the boiler. In the absence of any seal, combusted materials had the potential to leak into the kitchen.

Once again the installation was classified as immediately dangerous and isolated from use until extensive remedial work had been completed.

HSE's investigation found that Brown had never been Gas Safe registered, and there were no records to indicate that he had ever undergone any verification of competence through training or qualifications.

It also emerged that after carrying out the gas work at the Wivenhoe home he had demanded a cash settlement for the work and refused to complete any details in the boiler's commissioning documents.

The court was told that HSE served a Prohibition Notice on Brown at his last known address in Chelmsford, but further correspondence and attempts to contact him by telephone were met with no response. It later emerged that he had sold his house in early 2012 and endeavoured to conceal his whereabouts.

Extensive enquiries were made in an effort to trace him within the UK without success. Information from associates indicated that he had access to properties and contacts overseas and so, in November 2012, an immediate arrest warrant was applied for and granted by Colchester Magistrates Court.

On 25 September 2013, Brown was arrested on warrant and brought back before Colchester Magistrates Court.

Brown, last staying at Prestbury Green, Shrewsbury, was fined £10,000 and ordered to pay costs of £4,000 after pleading guilty to breaching Regulation 3(3) of the Gas Safety (Installation and Use) Regulations 1998.

HSE inspector Paul Grover, said: "Peter Brown has never been Gas Safe registered and is therefore not competent to carry out any gas work. The standards of his workmanship in this instance were woeful and he knowingly put the householders in danger by exposing them to harmful combustion gases and the risk of an explosion.

"His actions appear to have been motivated by a desire to achieve material gain and he was prepared to place others in danger to achieve this. In doing so, he showed a complete disregard for the health and safety of his clients and the general public. He was totally unsympathetic when the clients sought his assistance after the installation leaked due his lack of competence.