Plain English Breakdown
The bill's full text and exact procedures are not provided, leaving some details unclear.
Removing Squatters from Residential Property
This law defines squatters and sets up a process for property owners or their agents to ask local police to remove squatters who refuse to leave after being asked.
What This Bill Does
- Defines a squatter as someone who unlawfully enters and remains in a residential property, refuses to leave when requested, or falsely claims legal rights of possession.
- Allows property owners or their agents to serve a demand for the squatter to vacate the premises.
- Requires local police to remove squatters from properties after receiving a verified request under penalty of perjury.
- Gives local law enforcement agencies immunity if they act in good faith when removing squatters.
- Prohibits fraudulent actions by squatters or others that interfere with the removal process.
Who It Names or Affects
- Property owners who have squatters on their residential property.
- Local law enforcement agencies responsible for removing squatters.
- Squatters who refuse to leave after being asked and those who try to falsely claim rights to stay.
Terms To Know
- squatter
- Someone who unlawfully enters and remains in a residential property, refuses to leave when requested, or falsely claims legal rights of possession.
- perjury
- The act of lying under oath, which can be a crime if someone signs a statement falsely claiming they have the right to remove squatters from a property.
Limits and Unknowns
- This law does not apply to tenants or people who have legal rights to stay in the property.
- Local police will need to charge fees for processing requests and conducting removals, but these costs are unclear.
- The bill requires local agencies to perform new duties without clear funding details.