4 'squatters' charged with grand theft

rockin'robin

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 22, 2007
Messages
24,433
Reaction score
544
1 of 4 charged Monday ran was candidate for mayor of Jacksonville last year

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. - Four people -- one of them a recent Jacksonville mayoral candidate -- were charged over the weekend with taking over vacant homes, either to live in themselves or to rent them out to others.

"They were living in them, or presented them as their own," Sheriff John Rutherford said Monday. "They squatted there."

Warren Lee, 46, who ran for mayor last Spring, was charged with grand theft, scheme to defraud and acting as a real estate agent without a license.

Police called Lee the mastermind of the scheme to take over homes and rent them to others.

Marcellous Dunbar, 31, who was previously charged with grand theft after being found living in a $500,000 Oakleaf Plantation home in Clay County, also faces grand theft and other charges in the five Jacksonville cases announced Monday.

State Attorney Angela Corey said Dunbar threatened the rightful owner of the Oakleaf house to get off the property, and the homeowner sought the help of Clay County deputies for protection when moving in.

In Channel 4's coverage of Dunbar and Lee last year, they claimed they were doing this to help homeless people or veterans.

Also arrested in the Jacksonville cases were Cleveland Stephens and Rhonda Johnson.

"These people simply moved into these vacant residences and claimed them as their own, and and then became the landlord of these residences," Rutherford said. "The phenomenon of literally stealing someone's house and either living there or renting it out is pretty rare."

The sheriff said the investigation began five months ago when neighbors of the homes involved became suspicious and contacted authorities.

"It is unfair that people who have lost their homes in foreclosure, who are fighting, literally, to keep themselves afloat, are having now to deal with someone cutting the locks and moving into their homes," Corey said. "It's offensive, and beyond that, it's a criminal act."

Dunbar claimed to Channel 4 last year that he legally took over the property through the controversial Florida statute of adverse possession, which allows change of ownership to an abandoned home. Authorities said he was not in legal possession of the home, which had just been sold to a Navy family.

Authorities said Dunbar left the home trashed.

Rutherford used Monday's announcement of charges to anyone else

"If you are in one of these homes, you can be waiting on the knock at the door by the police, because we're coming to get you," Rutherford said.


4 'squatters' charged with grand theft | News - Home
 
They shouldnt have tried to rent a property that wasnt theirs. there is a thing called adverse possesion that people use, but it rarely works.
 
Back
Top