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A municipal employee seizes a chalet and demands a ransom of 40,000 euros for repairs allegedly made on his territory.

A municipal employee seizes a chalet and demands a ransom of 40,000 euros for repairs allegedly made on his territory.

A municipal employee seizes a chalet and demands a ransom of 40,000 euros for repairs allegedly made on his territory.

The owner of a house in Calpe (Alicante), Lang, cannot enter his home due to a worker who evicted him. The couple bought the house, but the seller refuses to hand it over: "Now I will occupy it for ten years." 06/15/2023 Updated 06/17/2023 at 05:39.

After several years of living in Switzerland, Lang decided to return to his homeland to spend his vacation with his mother at their villa in Calpe. Everything was planned for the perfect summer... until he arrived at the house. This is because Pedro, a municipal worker, has been living in the house for free for a year and a half: he occupied it with his family. Not only did he move in, but he even made some renovations, for which he demanded 40,000 euros from the owner. Pedro's family is not considered particularly socially vulnerable.

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In fact, he has been working in the local government for 30 years. Despite this, he entered Lang's house, who is now forced to hire an eviction company to try to get his home back.

Representatives of this company have been waiting by the front door for several days, trying to catch them off guard, but Lang and his mother have moved to a hotel until the situation is resolved.

“I don’t know what else to do.” In statements made by Teleginka, Lang expresses his despair. “I’ve tried everything. I’ve tried talking, I reached out to the Civil Guard, to the national police. I don’t know what else to do,” he notes.

The head of the eviction company confronted Pedro, who he found calmly cleaning the pool. "How can it be that a person working for the municipality of Calpe is an alleged squatter?" he wonders.

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