Brian Littrell fights for private beach rights in the middle of family privacy problems

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Backstreet Boys member Brian Littrell – who brought a lawsuit against a Florida County who accused the Lensmanns Department of refusing to keep public beaches away from his private beach – says violators “drive” up his property and “come after”.

“This is a matter of truth. It’s a matter of justice that the backyard in my place is a sanctuary,” Littrell, 50, told Fox News’ Dana Perining of an AP performance on “America’s Newsroom” on Wednesday.

“This lady in the video you showed traveled past two or three public beaches just to get to this place to cause my family,” the musician continued, broke to the body of the Walton County police officer who asked a Beachgo to leave Litrell’s property. “It’s property rights, that’s what we’re talking about. I throw this place many years ago and they know absolutely who I am. They come my family. They come after my son, they come after my wife. You know. We play. We’re talking about success with the Backstreet Boys, but we’re talking about people invading my privacy.

Backstreet Boys’ Brian Littrell sues Florida Sheriff to refuse to remove offenders from his private beach

Backstreet Boys member Brian Littrell brought a lawsuit against a Florida County, accused the sheriff’s department of refusing to keep public beach guests away from his private beach. (Sauras Griffin/Getty Images)

LitTrell’s lawyer, Peter Ticktin of Ticktin Law Group, said, “You have these leftist people who think everyone should have nothing and everyone will be happy. These people have to go over sparse populated public beaches that this is not just Brian’s problem.

“These people are there just to cause troubled cause,” he added. “They don’t think people should be able, people who have great talent who work really hard and end up being successful, and they get enough money to get their dream, the American dream, they get their home, they get a beach beach that people need to squat on it.

Littrell, who just started his Las Vegas stay with the Backstreet Boys last weekend, said he is focused on tackling the viola for privacy, which continues to occur.

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Brian littrell on stage

Littrell said that offenders “come after” his family. (Rich Polk/Penske Media via Getty Images)

“We’re just talking about things being fair,” Littrell said. “It’s like me finding out where you live and sit in your backyard waiting for you to come out so I can film you or to get you, it’s just unfair. As a law -abiding citizen and a taxpayer, the owner is the action in our name. We pay tax on. Rights for everyone else who owns the property. [rights]. “

“People started to find [where I live]The public screams my name running down, wanting to take pictures, it violates property [rights]. “

– Brian Littrell

In the trial, Littrell said that to protect the “peaceful enjoy” of his owner in Walton County, Florida, At Gulf Coast, his limited Liabibility company, Blb Beach Hut LLC, has set “no violation” signs as well as tables, chairs and Umbrllas showing where the property line starts on the beach, according to the trial, which is obeyed by Fox News Digital and filed to a Florida court recently.

The trial Seeking a writing of Mandamus to require the Lensmanns Department to keep the alleged offenders away from his beach.

Backstreet Boys

Backstreet Boys started their Las Vegas stay last weekend. (Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images to IHearTradio)

Lontrell wrote in the trial that he has been forced to hire security to protect his land and family, and daughter out of a form of permission to violate Walton County, who authorizes the sheriff’s department to warn and prosecute oversims his property.

“Despite BLB’s numbers requests and the performance of the required forms, the sheriff has refused to come to the subject owl to shout the law and remove violators, to charge offenders or take any action at all and thereby refuse to perform their duty,” the trial claims.

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Retssagen siger, at den 4. maj, hvis lensmanns viceplads til en pÃ¥stÃ¥et overtræder pÃ¥ Litrells fe, men ikke fjernede overtrædelsen eller nævner dem, blot at sige, at den pÃ¥stÃ¥ede overtrædelse “‘ikke er enig med private strande,’ der er taget af karakteriseret BLB’s insistering om, at dens forfatningsmæssige rettigheder er opretholdt som ‘lunacy’, der bruger en af ordet, der blev anvendt af en stedfortræder af Sheriff’s Department. “

The trial also claims that on June 5, an alleged violation grasped legal documents related to the dispute out of the property manager’s hand “and spread the papers into the window over the beach.”

Brian littrell looks at the camera

Littrell and his wife, Leighanne, bought their Florida Beach home “many years ago.” (Gilbert Flores/Penske Media via Getty Images)

Littrel said that BLB also contacted the sheriff’s department twice so day watching the “aggressor” but the department “refused to send any officer.”

He claimed that Sheriff’s Department is now “Obviously defies the BLB’s requests for help to protect his constitutionally protected ownership,” and claimed that from ours were overheard on two separate sayings that the sheriff was “proud not to issue any quotes for violating the property.”

Littrell claimed that a deputy had come to the property but had not taken any action against the alleged violation, and “Recordings of body cameras show several cases of disposal of respect against BLBs of the corresponding officer.”

Walton County Sheriff’s Office told Fox News Digital that the department did not “how on pending litigation,” adds “is proud to deal with any situation, call for service or interaction with professionalism using service access. This has always been our philosophy and forward.”

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Littrell told Fox News Digital in a statement: “We boucht a home here on this private beach on the America Golf to be able to vacation in quiet, to enjoy our time without any attention or drama. Without, we had no idea that had already happened for years.”

He added, “The truly scary thing is that we have given Law Enlow all the things they asked for all the private beach house owners to expand the law and not to bother to do their duty to protect homeowners. They will not do the job they were hired to do whit under oath to … protect citizens and enforce the law.” ‘

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Fox News Digital’s Brie Stimson and Larry Fink contributed to this post.

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