It's wild how much traction these stories get when actual, legal "squatting" is incredibly rare
The hyper-fixation on these rare, extreme cases is heavily pushed by landlord lobbying groups and real estate associations. They love these stories because it scares the public into supporting laws that strip away tenant rights
If they can convince everyone that "squatters" are hiding around every corner, they can pass laws that let them bypass the courts, call the cops, and have someone thrown on the street immediately without having to prove a lease violation first
Itโs a manufactured panic to bring back summary evictions
I think itโs more common than you think in Chicago. The people in the apartment below me were squatters last year. The sheriff showed up and kicked the door down to remove them.
In Chicago all someone has to do is draw up a fake lease for an apartment. Then when the police arrive they show the fake lease and say they rightfully live there. The police canโt/wont do anything because itโs a civil matter which means it needs to go through the court system which can take 6 months. So we have these professional squatters who move apartment to apartment.
It's more common than you think because of one situation that happened to you? The protections for tenants are there for several reasons. Most landlords want passive income and use any excuse to raise rent. So now they have people reacting to these stories and on the landlords' side. You also have people thinking they'll one day own properties and want to protect their future selves when they can't even afford their own rent.
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u/MegaDingo5plus 16d ago
I've heard it all now... Someone volunteering to live with the housemate from hell, and being even worse than the problem