CRISIS Staggering 1,200 homes in the Georgia city are now occupied by SQUATTERS

Cardinal

Chickministrator
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pics of the usual suspects at link. It's Atlanta, after all.

Atlanta is battling a squatting crisis as 1,200 homes have been overtaken and landlords have to clear the unwanted residents themselves or wait months for police.

The situation has become so dire that some homeowners offer to pay off squatters to get them out of their homes - rather than risk losing months of rent.

One squat in the Georgia city was even being run as illegal secret strip club and had to be cleared out by an entire FBI swat team.

Matt Urbanski, who runs a home cleaning company in Atlanta and cleans 40 squatted homes a month, told Bloomberg: 'I’d be terrified in Atlanta to lease out one of my properties.

'The large corporations are having a hard time dealing with it. A small individual who would want to use that property to build their long-term wealth and secure their future, it could potentially destroy them.'

The National Rental Home Council trade group has now estimated that 1,200 residences across the city are being squatted - more than any other metro area.

Evicting squatters can take over six months with backlogs in the courts and overwhelmed police forces.

One of Urbanski's employees was even shot while attempting to clear out a house after getting into a fight with the squatter.

CEO of the National Rental Home Council, David Howard told DailyMail.com: 'Incidents of illegal trespassing in the Atlanta metro area are disproportionately higher than comparable markets across the country.

'The sheer volume and consistency of practice in terms of how these incidents happen are clearly indicative of some kind of organized criminal effort.'

He added: 'This is obviously a property rights issue first and foremost, but the impact of this kind of activity extends well beyond the concerns of the individual property owner.

'There are serious public safety issues at play here – who is in the home? What is happening in the property? What is the risk to others in the neighborhood? Also, there’s a real concern here about the availability of affordably-priced housing.

Every incident of illegal occupation means there’s one less home available for a family in need of quality, single-family rental housing.'

As well as individual homeowners, the squatting crisis is making business hard for some of the country's largest single-family-rental businesses.

CEO of Tiber Capital Group Simon Frost, reportedly wrote to local authorities begging for help, he said: 'Unlawful occupants often brandish weapons and threaten neighbors, including children.

'This problem is rapidly growing. We are concerned about the impact that this is having on safety and livability of our local neighborhoods.'

The problem is being fueled by soaring housing costs in the city, with rent rising 34 percent from pre pandemic prices to $1,897 a month.

Helen Z. Willis, councilwoman for the city of South Fulton, told Bloomberg: 'There is a lack of affordable housing, and homelessness has increased during the pandemic.'

It's also gotten easier for squatters to find homes to move into.

Online listings and virtual real estate agents can allow squatters to find vacant addresses and gain access by booking fake appointments.

Some people may not even know they are squatters as scam artists can set up fake listings for empty properties and fake lease agreements.

Once a squatter is in, it's hard to get them out. It can take three months to get a court hearing for an eviction, and another three months to get a deputy or marshal to clear out the home.

In October, an Atlanta home was taken over by squatters who ran an illegal strip club inside on weekends and kept horses on the property.

The FBI had to get involved and arrested four people who had taken up residence at 4951 Wewatta Street in South Fulton without permission.

The 4,000 square foot five bed home with three bathrooms was trashed by the squatters.

Photos from inside the home after the FBI cleared it out showed the halls eerily empty, save for a cartoonish green lizard painted on one wall.

Other walls were covered in dark scuff marks.

Trash littered the property with a half-finished water bottle, a crumpled plastic bag and a bottle of Pink Whitney - the popular lemonade-infused vodka - sitting atop a railing.

Neighbors said they were running a strip club on the weekend, noisy parties and car races in the street.

One neighbor said: 'They would get live horses. One day they had live horses.'

Four young men - DeAnthony Maddox, Jeremy Wheat, Kelvin Hall, and Tarahsjay Forde - were arrested on the premises.

All four were booked into Fulton County Jail on multiple charges, including several counts of theft by receiving stolen property.

Deployed soldier's home​

Last year, a deployed Lt Colonel Dahlia Daure said she felt 'violated' when she learned a man was squatting in her home while she was away on active service.

Daure told local media that Vincent Simon - a man who has been convicted on guns, drugs, and theft charges - was living in her $500,000 home.

The Army officer had been away from her Ellenwood residence for duty in Chicago - and only found out he had moved in as the house was in the process of being sold.

'I felt violated. Had I not been serving my country, I would have been in my home,' Daure told WSB-TV.

The active-duty Army officer was told by police they could not evict Simon and that the issue is considered a 'civil matter.'

'I want to go shoot out the windows, turn off the water, cut wires, but I can't. That's a crime. Law-abiding citizens can't do that,' she said.

The massive 4,300 square-foot estate has five beds and five baths, Zillow states, and is valued around $495,000.

Before listing the home, Daure had been renting it out and had even put in an estimated $35,000 in renovations.

The squatter initially presented police with a lease that he said showed him having paid $19,000 to stay in the property for six months.

In that time, the convicted criminal installed cameras and put up 'Beware of Dog' signs in addition to covering the windows with cardboard.

Daure urged the police to investigate and they discovered the lease was fake.

Police discovered the number on the lease did not lead to a real person or listing agent and Simon was served with an intruder affidavit. He was arrested after cops discovered he had suspected ecstasy and a gun, which he is not allowed as a convicted felon.
 

Matt

Veteran Member
Nothing destroys a single family neighborhood like rent seeking "investors".... especially the short term rental model. Who thinks it's OK to turn a residential home into a constant party house?

I have no use for Squatters and would probably arrange some Jewish lighting to strike if I had to deal with it, but the fact that they are discouraging the rent seekers from doing their thing doesn't cause me to lose sleep....

The rent seekers don't provide affordable housing... they drive the costs up by outbidding families that would like to buy and then ratchet the rent up every year creating a cost of housing inflation spiral the family can never get out of.
 

Kathy in FL

Administrator
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Most laws are not in favor of the landlord/owner no matter what people think. The truth is it costs big bucks to legally evict someone from a property. Doing it illegally? Can cost you ten times as much when the “victims” take you to court for your methods and the law states that you owe the victims whatever percentage the law says you do.
 

dvo

Veteran Member
Really don’t know what to say. Atlanta was a gem in the early 80’s, and before. I never lived there, but visited a lot and only have good memories. Lenox Mall, with its Abercrombie and Fitch store. Wow. A lot of things have changed in America since then. Most not for the better.
 

Betty_Rose

Veteran Member
It’s a huge problem here in Florida where there are so many snowbirds. And for that reason, I’d never do the snowbird thing because I’ve heard so many stories about squatters.

And once they’re in, you’re in big trouble.
 

ainitfunny

Saved, to glorify God.
WTH? I thought that occurred rarely, maybe as high as 3 in a city at one time! Why wasn't this life altering crime publicized in the media?? It can take a year or more to get to and have your case heard in civil court! The law-abiding homeowners need better legal protection from squatters!
 

Krayola

Veteran Member
This is ridiculous. Someone can break into your house to steal your stuff, and if you catch them in the act, the cops will come to arrest them for burglary. I suppose from now on, the burglar caught in the act just needs to tell the cops he lives there and suddenly "it will be a civil matter" and the cops will take no further action against the perp. It's outrageous.

One also has to be careful helping someone who is down on their luck. I know a lady who let a homeless person stay with her. It was supposed to be temporary until the person could get back on her feet but then she refused to leave and the authorities told the homeowner there was nothing they could do. It was a nightmare.
 

mikeabn

Finally not a lurker!
I think it is over 30 days and the squatter has rights, you have to go through the eviction process. Should you 'help' someone, without any formal agreement as to rent, etc. the process is ejectment. Either way it takes a LONG time and costs a fortune.
 
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