The
San Francisco Chronicle reported Monday that police officers found and arrested
38 year old Jeremiah Kaylor, who was squatting in a mansion on the market and
sold several paintings from the home valued at more than $300,000.
The Police went to the home in the ritzy Pacific
Heights neighborhood after receiving reports of a suspicious person.
Officer
Carlos Manfredi says the man told police he was buying the home, but a real
estate agent said he was trespassing. The agent also said 11 paintings were
missing.
Though
the art was valued in the high six-figures, Manfredi said Kaylor sold the
pieces for well below their value.
Police responded to the home on Sunday and found
Kaylor with a painting next to a moving van. He was arrested on suspicion of
burglary after a neighbor tipped off the police that they saw lights on in the
vacant home.
Authorities
say they tracked down nine of the paintings and expect to find the other two
soon.
The home which was once valued at $25million is now
listed as a 'single family home' for $17million.
According
to CBS San Francisco it had been vacant for five years.
Police
say Kaylor occupied the 8-bedroom 7-bathroom mansion for around two months
before he was caught and that it is unclear how he got access to the
home.
Manfredi thinks he was able to enter through an
open window.
'They
made contact with the squatter, he identified himself, produced paperwork
saying that he was going to be the proprietor of the house and was in the
process of owning the home,' Manfredi said.
Officers
were not able to get in touch with the sales manager from Vanguard Properties
since it was almost midnight, and there was no way to prove whether the papers
were real, Manfredi said.
Police
returned on Sunday and arrested Kaylor after the sales manager confirmed he was
trespassing.
'While
detaining him, an officer noticed a big wooden crate that you would put a
painting inside for transport and upon opening the crate, they discovered it
was one of the paintings that belonged to the home, Manfredi said.
Kaylor said he sold the paintings on social media
and also took the art to pawn shops.
According
to Kaylor's Facebook page he is a painter and a father of three children. The
children were not at the mansion and it's unclear whose custody they are in.






No comments:
Post a Comment