(Crankers) If there was ever a f*ck around and find out moment, then I guess this could be one of the great examples!
Brevard County Sheriff Wayne Ivey didn’t mince words when his team rolled up to a condemned home in Sharpes, Florida, this week and took it down with a full-blown demolition crew. The house, long labeled a magnet for drug use, theft, overdoses, and general chaos, had been sitting on the sheriff’s High Intensity Target, or HIT List, which, yes, is actually what Ivey calls it.
According to the sheriff’s office, the property had racked up years of complaints, from stolen cars in the yard to a revolving door of visitors who apparently never left with the same level of consciousness they arrived with. After coordinating with county code enforcement and legal teams, the home was officially declared unsafe, uninhabitable, and ready for a date with the bulldozer.
Ivey called the location a “drug flop house” and said demolishing it was part of a larger push to clean up chronic nuisance properties throughout Brevard County. Neighbors didn’t seem upset about the sudden disappearance of the structure, several residents reportedly told local outlets they were “thrilled” to see it flattened after years of late-night activity and police lights.
This demolition marks the second home taken down under the sheriff’s HIT Unit this year, and Ivey says more are on the way. Translation: if your house ends up on the list, you might want to keep an eye out for heavy equipment rumbling down your street.
Here’s the video of it to enjoy!
