David Howard had lived on John Street, Worksop, for 11 years when the massive explosion reduced the property to rubble on April 12, 2025, killing him and his dog
A man’s home blew up after he told his friend he’d “pulled off the gas pipes” when his landlord put up the rent by £80.
David Howard had lived at the Nottinghamshire property for 11 years before a massive gas explosion destroyed the house and killed him and his dog.
On April 12, 2025 he received a letter from his landlord saying she was putting up his rent, which was mostly paid by the local council, by £80 to £540.
Friends told how at around 3pm that afternoon Mr Howard started telling several people he was going to “blow the house up”, saying “you wait until the end of the day”, an inquest into Mr Howard’s death was told today.
DC Daniel Akehurst read to the court from an account by one of Mr Howard’s friends, she had told cops that on the day Mr Howard was “p****d off and could not cope anymore” due to his rent going up.
Shanelle Williams described how Mr Howard was “in a mood and depressed”. The woman was then called by Mr Howard at around 3pm, when he told her “he had pulled the pipes” and made comments about “blowing up the house”.
In another call at 3.29pm, Mr Howard told Ms Williams “I’ve done it, I’ve pulled the pipes off the gas. It’s going to go with a bang.”
The latter call lasted 42 seconds and was ended by Mr Howard before Ms Williams could say anything. Before this, Mr Howard had told friends he had been up for three days with no sleep and was “very upset” about the rent increase”.
A friend tried to give him advice but he wasn’t listening, with Mr Howard saying, “You watch”, “You wait until the end of the day” and “You wait to see what happens”.
The inquest was told Mr Howard had made similar comments before April 12.
Around 3pm, Mr Howard locked the doors to the property he was renting after two of his friends left to go to a shop, which was described as “strange”.
Upon returning, the two friends were told by Mr Howard to “go, I don’t want anyone else to get hurt. Please just go”.
Asked by his friends if they could at least take his dog, Roxy, Mr Howard said: “Roxy is staying with me.”
Another friend then went to the property and tried speaking to him but was told to “f*** off”. The same person said she could smell gas.
Another then told Mr Howard through the locked door: “You are being stupid, there are kids next door. You are a f****** idiot.”
The hearing wasn’t told any of the friends made any attempts to notify emergency services of the events.
A call was then received by the police at 7.39pm to say an explosion had occurred at 26 John Street.
DC Akehurst described how the house had “fully collapsed” by the time emergency services arrived to the “chaotic” scene and a major incident was declared.
The hearing was told up to 200 people were “milling around” the street, with these residents then evacuated.
DC Akehurst said the explosion was “large and powerful” and its force had also damaged the adjacent properties, as well as some opposite.
A statement from a first responder read out in the hearing said Mr Howard was still conscious when emergency services arrived and reported having significant difficulty breathing and “was slowly being crushed” as he was “trapped under a significant amount of rubble”.
Crew couldn’t get to him, however, due to the difficulty of the scene and he was pronounced dead at 9.58pm.
Christopher Trendowicz, fire investigator at Nottinghamshire Fire and Rescue Service, told the hearing that the explosion happened on the ground floor of the property, with its upper floor collapsing on top.
The Health and Safety Executive (HSE) instructed gas company Cadent to investigate any possible leaks from outside the property but this was not the case.
The gas meter, boiler and piping were also tested and found to be safe.
The only abnormality found was damage to the cooker, owned by Mr Howard, which had its flexible gas pipe “stretched to capacity”.
Mr Trendowicz said this was the likely cause of the gas leak, with the likely cause for the ignition being the capacitator of the fridge/freezer in the property being “ripped out”.
The fridge/freezer was found away from where it would be ordinarily, the hearing was told.
Coroner Nathanael Hartley concluded Mr Howard’s cause of death as 1a asphyxia whilst entrapped beneath collapsed building debris and 2 heroin and cocaine use.
Mr Howard had low levels of the two drugs and alcohol in his blood at the time of his death, which could have led to “mild cognitive impairment”.
He had a history of mental health issues, having been diagnosed with PTSD and moderate depression in 2021, as well as a substance abuse misuse history, which he first reported in 2012.
Mr Howard’s two daughters, Keely and Lauren Howard, both attended the hearing but refused to comment on their father’s mental health or to describe him as a person when asked by coroner Hartley.
No notes were recovered from the property during the investigation, coroner Hartley said.
The coroner said: “Having heard the evidence from the fire service about the damaged gas pipe cooker and the evidence that David had informed his friend that he had ‘pulled the pipes, was going to blow the house up and it was going to go with a bang’, I find that David caused the damage to the gas cooker intentionally.
“It’s possible that David did not appreciate the dangerousness of the situation. With that in mind, I do not find that David intended to end his life when he did. I find that David’s intentions cannot be established.”





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