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Sugar Cookie

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When Tracie and Myles Albert purchased a beautiful four-bedroom house in Riverside, California they never realized that at the end of escrow the seller would suddenly refuse to give up the keys and leave.

"It’s just draining, emotionally and financially," says Tracie. On January 31, 2020, the couple purchased the home. More than a year later, they still haven’t been able get inside their property. Chris Taylor is the Real Estate Agent who sold the house to the Alberts from a man who wanted to sell immediately.

"He needed $560,000 from the sale of his house in two weeks and he called me on a Sunday, so in traditional real estate there's no way of doing that unless the buyer’s a cash buyer," says Taylor.

Since the house was free and clear and worth more than $560,000 the Alberts felt it was a great deal.

"It took us scrambling to get everything we had, our life savings put together and a hard money loan on top of it to make that happen," Myles stated.

During escrow they discovered there was a $30,000 tax lien on the house which slowed things down, but in the end, all parties signed on the dotted line and the sale was completed.

"We own the house, outright. That's our house and it's all in a contract, written, legal, done. He's been paid the money in his account. How could we have no rights to go into our home," asked Myles.

Taylor says, "It’s genuinely unfathomable to me that we live in a state where something like this is even possible. They closed escrow on this home January 31, 2020." The Alberts and Taylor have contacted authorities and tried to get the seller evicted but because of the pandemic, they’ve gotten nowhere.

"They have this case under a COVID tenant situation, of no evictions when it doesn't fall under that at all. This transaction went through in January 2020 before any of that, it isn't a renter who was getting thrown out. It's the guy who collected all of this money," stated Myles.

Eviction Attorney Dennis Block says, "This year alone, we’ve handled at least 7 maybe 8 cases of this exact type of situation."

He says people purchasing homes need to be extremely cautious, especially if they notice any red flags during the process. Block says what’s happening to the Alberts could happen to anyone.

"This person is not a tenant, it’s a previous owner who is enjoying the benefits of the money that was transferred to his account but of course doesn’t want to move out of the premises that he no longer owns," Block stated.
Her frustrated husband says when he contacted law enforcement, they told him, "If you were in Arizona, if you were in Nevada, this wouldn't be a problem, you would just go take your house back. But in California, like our hands are tied, even though we're on your side, there's nothing we can do."

After 15 long months of soaring legal bills and a thousand tears, Tracie Albert finally walked through the front door of her new home on Skyridge Drive in Riverside.

She walked through the house expressing a sense of disbelief. The Alberts closed escrow in January 2020. But once escrow ended — their nightmare began. The seller refused to allow the couple into their hilltop home. The former seller had turned into a squatter.

Tracie and Myles Albert tried everything humanly possible to get the squatting family out. But they were advised they had no recourse; they had to evict the sellers-turned-squatters to legally gain access to their property.

So they began legal proceedings. And then COVID-19 protocols hit and evictions literally stopped. The Albert family says no governmental agency would help them. The husband and wife had spent their entire life savings on the 4,000 square foot home — and they couldn’t move in.

Last October, Tracie and some friends hired a locksmith and attempted to get into the home. The squatters, identified in court documents as Sam Boktor and wife Miriam Khalil, came to the door.

Cell phone video shared to FOX 11 shows a screaming Boktor wielding a tire iron and a visibly upset Tracie Albert eventually retreating. The sellers called the sheriff's deputies. A sheriff's deputy told Tracie she had to leave, which she did.

So finally in exasperation, real estate agent Chris Taylor called FOX 11. My colleague Gina Silva did a story a couple of weeks ago. And since then, public support began pouring in favor of the Alberts. The heat was on the squatters.


Neighbors were closely watching the two-story home. And when they noticed the squatting family loading up a vehicle with luggage, they notified Tracie and Myles.

On Friday, FOX 11 was the only camera there as a locksmith used bolt cutters to gain access to the home. We entered with Tracie.

The house was mostly empty, a little messy; some furniture left behind wrapped in plastic wrap. Tracie Albert walked us through the spacious home with lovely views. She teared up several times.

When I asked her how it felt to finally be inside her "dream home," she said she and her husband had discussed selling the property. The last 15 months had tarnished their love of the property.

For now, additional security will patrol. And the Albert Family will clean up the property and change the locks.
 
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