- Jul 21, 2012
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*Sigh*
My Great Grandmother lives in the Boston-Edison Neighborhood. There are some lovely homes (and their residents!) over there that were build back when she was a child. There's also a lot of trashy people around there too.
So, this has become an issue recently, not just in Detroit but in other states. I heard about a case in Colorado, it took nearly a year for the woman to get her home back.
The woman in this case clearly has mental issues....
Batshit Crazy.
My Great Grandmother lives in the Boston-Edison Neighborhood. There are some lovely homes (and their residents!) over there that were build back when she was a child. There's also a lot of trashy people around there too.
So, this has become an issue recently, not just in Detroit but in other states. I heard about a case in Colorado, it took nearly a year for the woman to get her home back.
The woman in this case clearly has mental issues....
After being away for a year, she said she returned to her house last week and found a woman living there. Peterson learned from neighbors she had been living there for a few months.
Peterson claims the squatter changed the locks, reworked the plumbing, replaced her appliances, put a lien on the house and even changed the curtains, and now this squatter won't leave. So now they are forced to sleep one room away from each other, Peterson with her one-year-old daughter.
The alleged squatter's name is documented all over the house as Missionary-Tracey Elaine Blair, a write-in candidate for president.
We asked Peterson whether she feels safe.
"I don't know what the capabilities are. We're afraid of her mindset of entitlement."
A squatter doesn't have a legal right to the property, but under the law the homeowner cannot remove a squatter by force. In most cases, the homeowner has to file a civil action in court, prove it's their property and evict the squatter. That is what Peterson is trying to do.
"She thinks that this is a program in Detroit to take people's homes and fix them up and then she gets to keep them," Peterson said.
As our story was going to air, we had a chance to talk to the alleged squatter. She denied that she was squatting and said she has a lease.
"I have a construction lien for the repairs that I put into the house. Someone had (broken) into the house on July the Fourth and they stripped the radiators and I made a report," she added.
"In February 2011, we had to vacate because the boiler was damaged," she continued. "I took all my books and my writings, but my (furniture was) still left in (there)."
We also asked her whether she thinks there is a program where anybody can go into Detroit, take over an abandoned house and live there.
"I'm an advocate for affordable housing. That's a part of my campaign," she said. "I've believed that since the first time I met her when I was running for state Senate (in) 2010 and she was also running for a political office, that was a part of my belief. I signed an oath pledging that I would fight for affordable homes."
Batshit Crazy.