Categories: Politics

White House calls squatting a ‘local issue’ that governments must address

The White House is calling the squatting trend in which strangers seize and live in a homeowner’s property against their wishes a “local issue” that local governments must address themselves.

Fox News correspondent Peter Doocy asked White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre on Monday whether Americans need to be worried about squatters and where President Biden stands on the issue as horror stories continue to make headlines.

“My understanding is that this is obviously a local issue,” Jean-Pierre said. “We are certainly tracking that issue. The rights of property owners and renters must be protected.”

“And we believe that ultimately what needs to happen is that the local government needs to make sure that they address this, and they take action,” the press secretary continued.

‘SQUATTER SCAM’ ENDS IN FLORIDA AS DESANTIS, SHERIFF TOUT NEW CRACKDOWN: ‘STRAIGHT TO JAIL’

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre speaks during a briefing at the White House on Monday. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)

Jean-Pierre said all Americans in communities across the country want the same thing: “They want their families to be safe and that’s what we want as well.”

When asked whether Biden would support a law like one taking effect in Florida that allows homeowners to call police on squatters, Jean-Pierre said she would not address hypotheticals.

Video

“What I can say is that this is ultimately a local issue, and it’s critical that local governments address this,” she said.

ANTI-SQUATTING ‘PROFESSIONAL’ CELEBRATES FLORIDA BAN AS OTHER STATE LAWS FRUSTRATE HOMEOWNERS

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a bill last week that granted state law enforcement officials the power to remove offenders and increase penalties for squatters.

Video

The move comes as property owners nationwide complain about their homes being seized by strangers and the limited options to take back what is rightfully theirs.

CLICK TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

The new Florida law is set to go into effect on July 1.

Share

Recent Posts

Columbia University data breach hits 870,000 people

Columbia University recently confirmed a major cyberattack that compromised personal, financial and health-related information tied…

21 hours ago

New AI apps help rental drivers avoid fake damage fees

Rental car drivers are now turning to artificial intelligence to protect themselves from surprise damage…

23 hours ago

Fox News AI Newsletter: Melania Trump puts AI front and center

IN TODAY’S NEWSLETTER: - Google CEO, major tech leaders join first lady Melania Trump at…

1 day ago

Delivery giant’s data breach exposes 40,000 personal records

Thousands of people have had their sensitive personal information exposed in a data breach at…

1 day ago

Woman gets engaged to her AI chatbot boyfriend

Technology keeps changing the way we work, connect and even form relationships. Now it is…

1 day ago

Notorious people search site returns after massive breach

Over a year ago, National Public Data (NPD) made headlines for one of the largest…

2 days ago