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New York Post
Fed-up homeowner arrested after tense standoff with squatters ‘stealing’ $1M house she inherited from parents
By Reuven Fenton, Olivia Land, Emily Crane,
2024-03-19
A New York City property owner recently ended up in handcuffs following a fiery standoff with alleged squatters who she has been trying to boot from her family’s home, tense footage shows.
Adele Andaloro, 47, was nabbed after changing the locks last month on the $1 million home in Flushing, Queens, that she says she inherited from her parents when they died, ABC’s Eyewitness News reported .
“It’s enraging,” the homeowner said of the squatter saga.
“It’s not fair that I, as the homeowner, have to be going through this.”
Adele Andaloro, 47, was recently nabbed after she changed the locks on the $1 million home in Flushing, Queens, that she says she inherited from her parents when they died. ABC7
Andaloro claims the ordeal erupted when she started the process of trying to sell the home last month but realized squatters had moved in — and brazenly replaced the entire front door and locks.
She said she got fed up, and went to her family’s home on 160th Street — with the local TV outlet in tow — on Feb. 29 and called a locksmith to change the locks for her.
A man squatting in the home approached a Post photographer.
A heated, caught-on-camera spat with the people occupying the house quickly unfolded.
A man claiming to be on the lease — identified by the local outlet as Brian Rodriguez — said he had been unlawfully evicted. ABC7
Under the law, it is illegal for the homeowner to change the locks, turn off the utilities, or remove the belongings of the “tenants” from the property.
“By the time someone does their investigation, their work, and their job, it will be over 30 days and this man will still be in my home,” Andaloro said.
“I’m really fearful that these people are going to get away with stealing my home,” she added.
Footage shows other alleged squatters being led away in cuffs, but police say no other arrests or summonses were issued.
A woman who answered the door to The Post on Tuesday said she did not know anything about the squatting claims.
“I don’t have to explain more. Talk with the guy who has the business or the problem with the woman, but not with me because I don’t know anything about it. This is not my problem,” she said before slamming the door.
During the recent encounter at her home, Andaloro — who was armed with the deeds — was filmed entering the property after one of the apparent tenants left the front door open.
Andaloro was arrested for unlawful eviction after cops arrived and determined she had changed the locks. ABC7
After changing the locks, a man who said he was leading the property — identified by the local outlet as Brian Rodriguez — returned and barged through the front door.
“You shouldn’t be trying to steal my house,” a furious Andaloro yelled at him during the caught-on-camera ordeal.
Following a flurry of 911 calls, responding cops told Andaloro she had to sort the saga out in housing court because it was considered a “landlord-tenant issue.”
The squatter was aggressive in his approach.
Andaloro was ultimately given an unlawful eviction charge because she had changed the locks and hadn’t provided a new key to the person staying there, the NYPD confirmed to The Post.
She was slapped with a criminal court summons, cops added.
Despite the footage showing other alleged squatters being led away in cuffs, police said no other arrests or summonses were issued.
The $1 million home in Flushing, Queens. James Keivom
Andaloro said she is now being forced to start an eviction filing in court to settle the landlord-tenant dispute.
“It’s horrible. It’s her home. I’m glad it’s coming to the forefront, because it’s a disgrace. They can just come and take your house,” a neighbor, who didn’t want to be named, told The Post on Tuesday when asked about the ongoing spat.
“It’s just crazy. We don’t know how they got in, when they got in. We have no idea. How these people found out about the house being empty, I don’t know.”
New York-based attorney Alan J. Goldberg, who specializes in landlord vs tenant law, told The Post the Big Apple has seen a 40 to 50% in similar cases in the wake of COVID.
“It’s incumbent upon the city to deal with the issue,” he said.
“It’s much harder to remove them now because the courts are so backlogged,” Goldberg continued.
“I think there should be a fast-track court for squatters and licensees. They should have an expedited-type hearing.”
Additional reporting by Haley Brown
For the latest metro stories, top headlines, breaking news and more, visit nypost.com/metro/
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