House Refinance Center
How Squatters Take Possession Of Foreclosure Properties
Foreclosures:
Squatters
Rejoice In New
Found Homes



The foreclosure mess we have found
ourselves in, has opened new opportunities
for squatters. They simply move in to a
vacant house. It's better than sleeping under
a bridge or in doorways.

Many
renters and homeless families now
have a house to call home. There are
thousands of properties to choose from.
When the
robo-signing and foreclosure
fraud investigations have been concluded,
there will be thousands more coming to the
housing market. How did this all start?

We can look back years ago to the
Homestead Act to find some basis in law
for squatting. President Lincoln signed the
act into law in May 1862. The law basically
said that if you find a piece of land owned
by the Federal Government, you fill out an
application, you "improve the land" and then
you file for a deed. You had to live on the
land for five years. Remember we were still
in a predominant agriculture economy so it
was backbreaking work. "Improving the
land" was clearing the land, planting a crop
and harvesting the crop.

There were several changes to the law
which was abolished in 1976. Alaska
discontinued the law in 1986. The main
change was the increased acreage. It went
from 160 acres when the law was passed,
to 640 acres when the law was terminated. .

Modern day squatters are looking for
houses that they can "improve", stay in the
house for a set number of years, then file for
the deed. With the damage done to the
houses by vandals and criminal activities,
improving the property means fixing the
fence, cutting the grass, repairing broken
windows and doors. This is nothing
compared to farming 160 acres like our
forefathers.

Common law provides for a person to
obtain land through use. For example, your
neighbor put a driveway between the two
houses so that he can easily get to the rear
of his property. In doing so he takes a strip
of your property six feet wide. If you do
nothing, your neighbor could end up owning
that part of your property. In theory, you
didn't challenge your neighbor with a
lawsuit, therefore you abandoned the rights
to your property. This is the foundation of
adverse possession.

But there is more to adverse possession
than meets the eye.
1. Some states require you to pay taxes.
2. The "act' must be in the open. Anyone
who wants to see what is happening can do
so.
3. You must improve the property.
4. The property must be exclusive to you.
5. You must live in the house continuously
for a period of time determined by the state.

One of the areas that makes squatting on
foreclosure properties attractive is that it
falls under civil law not criminal. Therefore in
many instances the police is not involved.
The second area is eviction. The rightful
homeowner has to go through a formal
eviction to get rid of any squatters, and this
could be expensive.

Finally, I would like to mention that squatting
is illegal. The
homeowners can charge you
with trespassing.
Squatters Next
Door: Leeches Or
Saviors To The
Neighborhood



The housing crisis has brought out the best
and the worse of American ingenuity and
creativity. We have seen thousands of
mortgage relief scams where companies
promise to save your house from
foreclosure.
We have seen hundreds of community
non-profits like NACA, that are brokering
deals between the banks and homeowners.
Now, we see squatters trying to claim
abandoned houses.

On the surface it seems like a great idea.
You
need a house for you and your family,
including the pets. You find a house. It's
abandoned...windows are broken, doors are
smashed, the grass is two feet high, the
water is cut off, the electricity is shut off, and
the roof needs some work. You are up for the
challenge and you move in. You fix and repair
and paint the house. You even pay the
property taxes, and have the utilities
connected.

The neighbors are happy. They can see
some hope of
re-vitalization returning to their
street. Where half the houses were once
vacant, now there are squatters working on
three or four houses. The city is happy
because there is revenue from property
taxes. Furthermore, crime is down in this
area, resulting is less work for the EMS, the
police and the fire department.

For many people and government agencies
a squatter is a savior. However, many
opponents still see squatters as leeches who
want something for nothing. These opponents
of squatters would prefer to have the
squatters charged with trespassing and
evicted. If we go this route it allows the
houses to be vandalized and deteriorate.
Houses on the same street and in the nearby
vicinities will see their values plummet.

In Florida, squatters are utilizing an 1869
statute that says if a person takes a property
and the owner does not claim the property in
seven years, the squatter gets to keep the
property.

It seems that real estate wheeling and
dealing flourishes in Florida. Mark Guerette,
the owner of Save Florida Homes Inc., has
taken the squatting game to a new level. He
has taken possession of 20 houses using the
adverse possession argument. These
houses he has rented at around $289 a
month each. In return the sub-squatters
(tenants) fix and maintain the properties.

I would like to mention that squatting is illegal.
Mr. Guerette has been charged with
fraud
and if convicted can spend about 15 years in
prison. Mr. Guerette, in his defense, has
pointed out that the houses he selected had
the large orange sticker plastered across the
door. These stickers are generally placed
there by the city and they indicated that the
property was a "public nuisance". It should
also be noted that Mr. Guerrette notified the
owners of the properties of his intentions.
Nineteen of the owners and their banks did
not respond.

Opponents of squatters are of the opinion
that if they win in court it would be expensive
for them. They also feel that the activity of
renting houses that are not yours could open
the floodgates to shady
real estate scams.
Furthermore, additional damage will be done
to an already fragile
housing market.

As an outside observer, with no axe to grind, I
feel that the bigger issue is how to get rid of
the tenants. An easy answer is, you keep
them if the house is in livable condition. Give
them a proper, legal lease and let them
redirect the rent to you. If they were paying
$289 a month, that's more than you were
getting before.

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Squatters Move In
The housing crisis has created more
problems for law enforcement. Squatters
are moving into vacant homes. Some
squatters were homeless and living under
bridges, in doorways or in shelters. Now
they have found temporary housing.

A more serious problem is the criminal that
rents a vacant house to an unsuspecting
family. When the police show up to evict the
family, the family produces a lease
agreement. As tenants the family has
rights. The police has to do a thorough
investigation before anyone can be evicted.
By this time the crook is long gone.

Watch the slideshow.
More Foreclosure Info