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Dacha owners are invading homes and refusing to leave - how is this legal?

Dacha owners are invading homes and refusing to leave - how is this legal?

Dacha owners are invading homes and refusing to leave - how is this legal?

The interference of settlers in the home reflects a violation of the fundamental principles of our laws. Property crimes have gradually begun to lose their significance in many cities.

In Texas

The homeowner reports that she has been evicted from her house by tenants claiming they have a lease agreement after moving in with their family to the state (the woman had previously been evicted from three other homes).

In Maryland

A woman returned from vacation to find two people occupying her bed. They not only lived in her house but also sold about $50,000 worth of her furniture.

This is a typical situation in many cities in the United States.

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It is also common in Europe, where settlement has become a political movement supported by the left.

Some settlers enter legally and then stay. In Long Island, New York, Guramrit Hanspal, 52, has not paid his mortgage for 25 years. The mortgage has been canceled, but the company that now owns the house has been fighting for decades to evict Hanspal, who continues to change lawyers and file lawsuits to delay the process.

“I think that (settlement) is a pretty serious issue, and it’s quite difficult to avoid,” said Jim Burling, vice president of legal affairs at the Pacific Legal Foundation, in an interview with Fox News.

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