Scumbag TikToker Tells Illegals To 'Invade' U.S. Homes, Become Squatters

A Venezuelan migrant TikToker believed to be living in Columbus, Ohio has gone viral for one of the most disgusting videos in the history of the Chinese social media app. 

Leonel Moreno, @leitooficial_25, posted a video this week advising illegal aliens living in the United States to "invade" American homes. "If a house is not inhabited, we can seize it," Moreno tells his followers, while trying to come off as an expert on American squatter's rights laws. 

"I have thought about invading a house in the United States," a man identified as Leonal Moreno said in the TikTok video. "I found out that there is a law that says that if a house is not inhabited, we can seize it." 

Don't live on the streets and be a "public burden," Moreno advises illegals who found their way over the border. He also advises the illegal squatters that the law says deteroiated homes can be sold by the illegals who squat. 

If you think this all sounds insane, welcome to 2024 when illegals can do their thing in the U.S. and take property, if they like. What rights do property owners have? In New York, a woman who inherited a home worth $1M in Queens ended up arrested when she tried to evict squatters. 

This is what Moreno is advising illegals to do to homes across the United States. Watch. 

Still not convinced that this stuff is just isolated incidents? Let's go to Chicago back in 2022 when a woman moved out of a house to have contractors do work as she was listing it for sale. Squatters moved in, changed the locks on the homeowner and moved in. 

The cops were called, the squatter showed fake documents, claimed she paid someone to move into the property and she wasn't leaving. The cops told the homeowner she would have to handle the case through civil court. 

At that time, the Cook County civil courts were backed up "six, 12, 18 months," according to a real estate attorney. 

"So, generally speaking, squatters have to figure out a way to show some sort of residency," the attorney, Mo Dadkhah, told ABC-7. "So I've heard a variety of stories -- forged leases with the landlord's name, I've seen forged leases with realtors' names.

"But if somebody gets into the property in the middle of the night, nobody sees them get in the property, they have a lease in hand. Well, a police officer can't determine - they're not a judge - (if) that's a fake lease, or that's a fake signature or it's forged."

In 2021, a Chicago senior citizen put $40,000 into a house with the intention of selling it. Three women decided it was their new house. 

"Getting you the f**k away from my s**t," one of the scumbags yelled at a TV reporter. When told that a senior citizen owned the home, the scumbag didn't show much compassion. 

"I don't give a f**k what she say. I'm in this b***h, ain't I?" the squatter responded.

And now we have Moreno advising illegals to bring this type of behavior to cities across the United States. 

Good luck, property owners. 

Written by
Joe Kinsey is the Senior Director of Content of OutKick and the editor of the Morning Screencaps column that examines a variety of stories taking place in real America. Kinsey is also the founder of OutKick’s Thursday Night Mowing League, America’s largest virtual mowing league. Kinsey graduated from University of Toledo.