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 It’s Time to End Squatter’s Rights
 by Ryan McMaken

Last month, New York City homeowner Adele Andaloro was arrested after changing the locks on a house that had been seized by squatters. According to The New York Post:
 “Andaloro was charged with unlawful eviction because she had changed 
the locks and hadn’t provided a new key to the residents. The residents,
 however, are squatters.
Fortunately, Andaloro’s arrest was filmed and went viral, reviving an
 ongoing debate over squatters “rights,” under which trespassers can 
take over an unoccupied house or piece of land and attempt to establish 
legal ownership.

Not long after the Andaloro video surfaced, an immigrant TikToker with 500,000 followers posted a video encouraging other migrants to squat in
 private residences in the United States. The immigrant, Leonel Moreno, 
explained to potential squatters that under US law, “if a house is not 
inhabited, we can seize it.”

These videos have fueled increasing concern among property owners who
 have witnessed the explosion in the numbers of aggressive homeless 
residents in both central cities and suburbs. This, coupled with millions of new foreign nationals flooding into US cities in
 recent years, has further increased concerns about a sizable, rootless 
and impoverished population searching for opportunities to seize 
unoccupied homes.

These recent examples have prompted many Americans to wonder why 
squatter’s rights exist at all. Historically, there have been some 
arguably reasonable justifications for the practice, such as in times 
past when real estate records were far less precise and well preserved. 
In modern times, however, squatter’s rights have little purpose beyond 
redistributing property to favored interest groups. Moreover, squatter’s
 rights in modern settings bear less and less resemblance to the 
squatter’s rights of history.

Thanks to all this, it is becoming increasingly clear that squatter’s
 rights have outlived whatever usefulness they may once have had. The 
time has come to end squatter’s rights altogether.
Source: https://libertarianinstitute.org/articles/its-time-to-end-squatters-rights/ 
 The community has no interest in enforcing property rights that are not being used.

If property owners want to leave property vacant, they should pay for their own security firms, not expect the taxpayer to subsidize their poor choices.