News3 mins ago
Squatting
Should squatting be considered a criminal offence?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by flip_flop. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Incidently if someone is squatting and a person who normally lives there or has a right to do so asks them to go they have to or they are breaking the law.
http://england.shelte...elessness/squatting#1
So how much more do you want?
http://england.shelte...elessness/squatting#1
So how much more do you want?
I have no doubt about it. If someone comes and occupies my home then I will do whatever to get him/her out and I may not bother calling police or going to court. Call me whatever but if someone comes to my home causing problem then I did not invite him and he should be ready for consequences. Although I am a law abiding person but any law that gives criminal more rights than a victim is simply a wrong law.
there was an article I read last week about squatters 'being good enough' to move on when they found out the house in which they were squatting belonged to a couple who were about to have a baby, suggesting if they weren't they would have stayed put. This is obviously the circumstance in which the law needs to be clear, and in favour of the home owners.
Victims of squatters must go through the expense and the time involved of obtaining an eviction order through the civil system.
So in addition to having the stress and sense of violation that having squatters must undoubtedly bring (plus being made 'homeless' if you have nowhere else to go), you then have to incur expense to get them out.
How can this possibly be right?
So in addition to having the stress and sense of violation that having squatters must undoubtedly bring (plus being made 'homeless' if you have nowhere else to go), you then have to incur expense to get them out.
How can this possibly be right?