Atlanta homeowner arrested after finding outlaw squatters on his property!
ATLANTA, Georgia (PNN) - August 22, 2023 - A homeowner in Atlanta, Georgia, was arrested for attempting to evict squatters from his own property.
Tim Arko said in an interview with local news that he arrived at his rental property in February after tenants moved out, only to find out that someone had broken into the house. As he approached the property, he was met at gunpoint.
Arko called the terrorist pig thug cops but was arrested after terrorist pig thug cops arrived since the alleged squatters claimed that he was trespassing in their home.
“I just jumped the fence and ran,” he commented. “I didn’t walk in on a family eating dinner. I walked in on weapons, a prostitute, a bunch of dogs in the back, my fence broken down.”
Six months later, the criminal squatters are still at the home, and Arko is working to get them evicted.
Another home in the Atlanta area recently had a squatter evicted: Army Lieutenant Colonel Dahlia Daure arrived home after a work assignment to find a man living in her house.
Daure had put her house up for sale while on an active-duty assignment to Chicago and returned to find that someone had installed cameras, put up “beware of dog” signs, covered the windows with cardboard, and moved items into the house. Vincent Simon, the criminal squatter, claimed to have paid thousands of dollars in a six-month lease.
“I was beside myself and I felt violated,” the Army officer told reporters. “Had I not been serving my country I would have been in my home.”
The terrorist pig thug cops were able to evict Simon by serving an intruder affidavit and bypassing the lengthy process typically required for evictions. The squatter is a convicted felon who illegally possessed firearms and kept drugs in the home.
John Ernst, who represents both Daure and Arko in their eviction cases, told local news that the system is significantly broken. Ernst is also the mayor of Brookhaven, Georgia, and said he is looking at how to change policies so that more families are not affected by the squatter trend.
“You want to have protections for tenants, but you don’t want protection for squatters,” he said.
Arko has been told that he should be able to evict the squatters in September, and no charges were filed against him.