Serial sex pests spotted in X-rated act on their balcony in ‘full view’ of their furious neighbours: ‘Sick of it’

Tenants living in a notorious public housing block have erupted after catching their neighbours in numerous displays of ‘public sex’ on their balcony.
Residents say they are ‘terrified’ by the vandalism, violence and explicit behaviour seen at the unit block in the inner-city Perth suburb of Inglewood.
A resident claimed tenants and their visitors had been seen having sex ‘in the middle of the day in full view of businesses’.
They said visitors to the unit block had damaged property at a nearby café with a ‘wooden picket’ and had ‘terrorised’ its patrons.
‘Finally, last week, visitors to the complex have begun announcing to local businesses “the KGB have arrived” in a threatening manner,’ she said.
A local business owner told Daily Mail Australia that, in this case, ‘KGB’ refers to a West Australian crime gang known to local authorities.
The business owner called on the state government to do something about the escalating behavior, which earmarked the unit block as fully subsidised two years ago.
‘This whole situation would have been avoided by making the complex a mixed tenure, which is a combination of private, affordable and social housing,’ they said.
Residents say they are ‘terrified’ by the vandalism, violence and explicit behaviour seen at the unit block (pictured) in the inner-city Perth suburb of Inglewood
‘It’s 100 per cent state housing and the disastrous effects on the community are glaringly obvious.’
With a new nearby public housing project in the works – set to be double the size of the existing Inglewood block – locals are concerned that, without escalation by the state government, the problem will be left to repeat itself.
‘The state government has created a huge problem for the Inglewood community by choosing to house unsuitable residents,’ the business owner said.
‘We’re terrified and we have been terrorised by the public housing residents and their visitors for the past several months and we need your help.’
Another local business owner told Daily Mail Australia that while they hadn’t personally witnessed any trouble, a number of their customers had complained.
One customer claimed they saw tenants and their visitors using external plugs at neighbouring homes to charge their phones.
‘I know that’s not as severe as property damage or anything, but customers say they [visitors to the flats] just hang around a lot,’ the owner said.
City of Stirling mayor Mark Irwin told Radio 6PR on Thursday that he was ‘very happy’ to write to the state government to ask for help.
‘I was also surprised to hear it. I really thought these outcomes of 100 per cent social housing in apartments or flat-style accommodation was a thing of the past,’ he said.
‘If you’re going to put a high percentage of people who need, maybe, care or who are struggling in these sorts of developments, they need wrap-around and they need other services,’ he said.