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Georgia police have arrested six squatters who took residence in a half a million dollar home after they stole a neighbor's car.
South Fulton cops busted the squatters at 4300 Caveat Court and recovered the stolen vehicle on Saturday - after they had been illegally lodging in the home for five months.
Video shows cops putting the intruders in handcuffs and sitting them on the sidewalk out side of the home.
Mel Keyton, president of Hampton Oaks Homeowners Association, told Atlanta News First the neighbor whose car was stolen was out of town.
'Squatters stole her car and they brought it back over here to drive it in the driveway,' said Keyton.
South Fulton police busted the squatters at 4300 Caveat Court after they stole a neighbor's car
Video shows cops putting the intruders in handcuffs and sitting them on the sidewalk out side of the home
Neighbors said the squatters have been living in the home since Christmas Day
According to police the home at 4300 Caveat Court, which has a Zillow estimated worth of $518,400, is supposed to be vacant.
Hampton Oaks Homeowners Association Vice President Kendra Snorton told FOX 5 Atlanta the squatters moved into the vacant house on Christmas Day.
'The ringleader, we see him walking his dog all the time. He's very courteous and polite when he interacts with the community,' Snorton said.
The squatters had been living in the community for months but were finally arrested after they stole the car.
'When the police showed up, the car was behind us in the yard. That's how we put two and two together,' Keyton said.
'We don't know who these people are and what they are doing.'
The South Fulton Police Department told DailyMail.com the stolen vehicle was returned to its rightful owner.
'We sincerely appreciate the vigilance of our community members, who play a vital role in our ongoing efforts to reduce crime in our city,' police said.
According to police the home at 4300 Caveat Court (pictured), which has a Zillow estimated worth of $518,400, is supposed to be vacant
Neighbors in South Fulton hope the passage of a new law will make it easier to evict squatters and it will no longer take them committing crimes like stealing vehicles to get them arrested.
'Hopefully, it won't get this bad. Hopefully, we won't have to use this amount of police,' Keyton said.
Governor Brian Kemp signed House Bill 1017, known as the Georgia Squatter Reform Act, into law last month. The bill establishes the offense of unlawful squatting, defining it as 'entering and residing on the land or premises of the owner without consent'.
Offenders will be required to provide authorization of consent within three days, and failure to do so will result in an arrest for criminal trespassing.
If documentation is provided, the accused squatter must attend a magistrate court hearing within seven days to prove that the documents are legitimate.
The new law, which goes into effect in July, makes squatting a misdemeanor offense. Intruders could face a $1,000 fine and up to one year in jail, or both.
False swearing and the submission of improper or fraudulent documentation, meanwhile, count as more serious felony charges.
Those who submit fake documents will be subject to fines covering damages, back rent based on the property's fair market value and up to a year in jail.
The National Rental Home Council surveyed its members and found that about 1,200 homes in the Atlanta area have had squatters, reported Newsweek.
The survey found there were an estimated 475 homes that have had squatters in the Dallas-Fort Worth area and about 125 in Orange County, Florida, which includes Orlando.
George Kalb, 48, was arrested and charged with first-degree burglary and theft by conversion after squatting in a dead man's empty home
Homeowner Michael Peterson died in June 2023 after suffering a heart attack. He had no will, and the house has since gone into foreclosure
Cobb County police arrested a squatter who broke into a dead man's house and charged him with first-degree burglary and theft by conversion on April 26.
George Kalb, 48, was arrested after neighbors on Goldenwood Court, a quiet cul-de-sac in Powder Springs, were alarmed when they saw a U-Haul truck pull into the driveway of the vacant house two weeks prior.
Homeowner Michael Peterson died in June 2023 after suffering a heart attack. He had no will, and the house has since gone into foreclosure.
Neighbors were startled when they saw Kalb arrive in a moving truck on April 16.
Over the course of the next 10 days, he changed the locks, had guests over and tidied up the yard.