This video demonstrates that individuals cannot avoid legal eviction proceedings by claiming they are 'indigenous' to the land or that their name is not on the paperwork; the legal system operates based on court orders and property ownership, not personal beliefs or conspiracy theories. The case shows that proper legal processes must be followed, and those who ignore court orders face consequences such as arrest, regardless of their claims about property ownership or personal circumstances.
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“She Thought Eviction Rules Didn’t Apply to Her… Then Reality Hit”Hinzugefügt:
Sheriff's office start eviction.
Sheriff's office here to serve eviction for everybody inside this residence.
>> Okay, we're serving eviction. Open up the door, ma'am.
I'm not getting an eviction from nobody.
>> I've been here for 20 years. I'm not evicted. You go through a process. I haven't been through no process.
>> Can't nobody just come up here.
>> My name is Miss Green.
>> Okay. Miss Green.
>> We post a notice on your door.
>> That's not It said unknown. I'm a known person. I don't know what that means.
>> Miss Green, is anybody else in there with you?
>> My grandson is in here with me.
>> Okay. How's your grandson?
>> He's 19.
>> 19.
>> Okay. Why didn't you go to the courthouse when they're noticeable with postcon?
>> I'm not an unknown person. I'm Zoanne Green. I've been here for 20 years. They don't have no contracts with me to be doing nothing with anyone. So, I don't know why they're here talking about they can evict me and all this stuff. So, you go past foreclosure to evict to get the Listen, this is a scam and the bank is a scam. And so, they don't have no jurisdiction over me. I'm indigenous to this land. This is my property. I've been here. That's why they can't touch me. Now, this person comes over here talking about, "Oh, I just uh purchased this house from an auction with no paperwork in his hand. He just talked to I could have killed him." You don't come up to nobody's home talking about what you got. You ain't got nothing in your hand. You're just talking. Like, who the [ __ ] does that supposed to be a victim?
My name is not unknown. Everybody knows it. This my light, the light bill has been in my name for 20 years. I have been here. This is my home. Okay? Don't nobody can't nobody buy somebody's home from under them if they don't have no paperwork or no nothing.
>> That's not right.
>> So you can't evict me for nothing.
>> Well, my question to you, Miss Green, why didn't you go to the courthouse?
>> Because the papers say unknown. I'm not an unknown. If you have something I bet all my neighbors know, I'm part of the neighborhood watch. Why is my name not on any paperwork?
Explain that to me. I'm not unknown. I'm very known.
>> So, I don't know what kind of eviction you're doing, but it's it's illegal and you can't evict me.
>> I'm doing a court order, man.
>> Well, I don't know who what court order.
What name is it under?
>> It's under 3718.
>> That's not a name. That's an address.
>> All right, guys. Today, we are looking at a chaotic eviction case involving a woman who genuinely believes foreclosure laws and court orders do not apply to her because she claims a land is sovereign territory. Right from the start, deputies arrive to serve the eviction notice, but instead of cooperating, she immediately challenges the paperwork and insists the courts have no authority over her. As the argument continues, she repeatedly focuses on her name, not appearing on the documents while completely ignoring the fact that the property itself was legally foreclosed on. Things get even more intense when she starts claiming the bank is running a scam, and says nobody has jurisdiction over her because she is indigenous to the land.
Meanwhile, officers stay calm and continue explaining the legal process while she grows more emotional and confrontational. By the end of this section, it becomes obvious that she fully believes she has discovered some loophole that can stop the eviction while everyone else already understands a legal battle was lost long before deputies ever showed up at the property.
>> Let me explain to you, Mr. Green, while I'm here. And the court order was signed by the judge saying the duty of eviction >> under who? For who?
>> I'm just explaining it to you. Yeah. Go ahead.
>> It's for the property.
>> No, you can't even >> really. So, you think you can come here and evict somebody off of a property and you don't even have their name?
>> Okay. It doesn't require me to have a name.
>> You want to read this portion?
>> Are you [ __ ] serious, too?
>> Yes, ma'am. I'm going let you read this.
>> I don't need to read none of that. I don't want to read it. It don't have nothing to do with me.
>> It has to do with this property.
>> It says >> this is my property under my name. You don't even have a name on there.
>> The screen. So, I'm not leaving my property.
>> State of Florida, which we're in, >> to the Orange County Sheriff's Office, which county we're in.
>> So, you're going to throw me out of my house right now?
>> I have no choice, man. This is Yes.
>> Y'all are come throw all my [ __ ] out there since you're going to do that to to an indigenous person of this land.
So, you go do it.
>> All persons.
>> You're not removing me from my property.
So, you about to take me out of here?
How?
>> Voluntarily, preferably.
>> You listen, I'm telling you, you're not removing me out of my property.
>> Okay.
>> I'm not leaving. So, >> okay. We don't want to take you to jail.
>> Really? You This is pathetic. Y'all are something else. God will deal with you.
>> God will deal with you.
>> I'm not leaving my house. This is my property. You You You walk up here with a guy. What? What does he do? Who is that white man coming up here trying to take black people's homes?
>> No, you walked up here with a guy with no name on no paper.
>> You can keep one certain guy.
>> There's no name on on that paper. You think you can throw me out of my house?
That is against the law. I'm sorry.
>> You can't.
>> All right, sir. You got to leave here.
Got a court order. Move off.
>> I got to leave.
Look. All my stuff is in here. All my life is in here. I've been here for 20 years.
>> Uh 378.
>> Really?
>> She did. She's old.
>> Okay.
>> Just like that's your mother.
>> My god, this is my grandson.
>> Just like I was praying to your grandmother. We got a court order to remove all person coming into the dress.
>> 31.
>> I need the supervisor to come over here or somebody cuz I'm not This is not happening to me.
>> I don't They think they can just come and take you out your home.
>> That is a shame. I need somebody over here.
>> Okay, so that's what we're doing right now.
>> You can't evict somebody. They don't even have my name on them.
>> They just want to throw me up out of here. And that guy over there did it.
>> He He went and got them with no paperwork that's come to your house.
Y'all do that to black people all day long.
>> He got some paperwork with nobody's name on it. And he for the property, not the persons that's in the propert.
>> Wow.
stuff like that.
>> You're not in trouble. You want to see these people stuff out.
>> Okay.
>> And I don't even know why you showing it to him.
>> I'm the grown person. You >> You didn't want to look at it, man.
>> I don't need that. And my name ain't on it.
>> He's an adult, right?
>> Yeah. But my name ain't on it.
>> We're in the state of Florida, right?
>> You don't even have his glass.
>> Orange County Sheriff's Office. You are commanded to remove all persons from 3718 Avenue.
>> I'm I'm a this company in possession of property. This is a shame.
So I don't know where they think I'm going to go. I don't have any place to go. I'm going sit here on this damn board >> to remove the person up there.
>> Remove all persons.
>> That's That's a shame.
>> So your best to gather your belongings because >> I don't have I don't have nowhere to go.
>> This is where the confrontation really starts spiraling out of control.
Deputies carefully explain that the eviction order applies to every occupant living at the address, but she completely refuses to accept it and won't even look at the paperwork being shown to her. Instead, she doubles down on the idea that the eviction is illegal and insists nobody can remove her from her land. The situation quickly becomes emotional once officers warn her that refusing to leave could lead to arrest.
Family members begin appearing around the house. Accusations start flying and she claims everyone involved is targeting her unfairly. As the pressure builds, the reality of losing the home finally starts setting in and the conversation shifts from anger into desperation. She repeatedly says she has nowhere else to go and continues blaming everyone except the choices that led to the foreclosure. The saddest part about this entire scene is that she likely had opportunities to challenge everything properly in court, but years of believing sovereign citizen rhetoric completely destroyed her ability to handle the situation realistically before it reached this point.
>> You can go to the court and try to fight this.
>> Really? But I need to get out of my hand.
>> I can't stop this inviction.
>> That is a shame. And you and look at you.
>> Yeah, we don't enjoy doing this.
>> Yes, you think you're you think that this is beautiful.
>> This eviction is going to happen. I'm not leaving my house. I'm not. I'd have been living here for 20 years. You want me to just up and leave cuz you brought your you came over here on my porch telling me what I got to do. My name ain't on nothing.
So, you going to take me to jail?
>> Now, we don't want to do that.
>> You don't want to, but you will in a heartbeat. You don't care about nobody.
You have nothing inside.
>> That is not >> nothing. And and I pray for you because something going to happen to both of y'all for coming here trying to remove somebody from their house cuz of that piece of [ __ ] That ain't a foreigner >> on my land. You will pay dearly, honey, if I leave here cuz I don't have no place to go and I'm not leaving. I got too much [ __ ] to get out of here.
>> So, I don't know what we're going to do.
But you might need to go back to the judge and tell him I said to call me.
>> That's something you should have did now.
>> I don't need to do that. That's not none none of it is on my my name is not on any they're not talking to me.
>> Okay. So, you're not a person.
>> I'm not my I have a name and and an identity.
>> But you are a person, right?
>> It doesn't say person. It says it needs to say the person that has been here.
The light bill is in my name for 20 years.
>> You will have to talk to the court about.
>> I don't need to talk to no court. I'm indigenous. This is my land.
>> Well, we got a bit of a situation.
Bought this house at the auction. She's claiming it's sovereign property. We had to go through the eviction process.
Uh she's called me many names. Looks like she has requested all the officers names and badge numbers and they are writing this information down.
>> Yeah, she's asked for all their badge numbers and names. I guess she can file a complaint. She could have showed up for court, by the way, but her reason for not going to the court date was she has a name. Her name is not unknown.
She's going back to the door to do something.
She unlocked the door, went back in for some reason. Don't know why. The police officers are going in with them.
Um, they have a car.
And for the record, it is a BMW.
Everything fully collapses in this final section as she openly refuses to leave and even suggests she would rather go to jail than comply with the court order.
[music] The officers remain surprisingly calm while she continues insisting the property belongs to her regardless of foreclosure laws or legal rulings. At this point, the confrontation is no longer really about paperwork anymore.
It becomes a person emotionally unraveling while refusing to accept the consequences of years of denial.
Eventually, viewers hear directly from the actual homeowner who legally purchased the property through auction, and his explanation completely changes the perspective of the entire situation.
He confirms that the eviction process had already been handled properly through the courts long before deputies arrived. Even then, more chaos unfolds in the background as she continues creating drama around the property. By the end of the video, the biggest takeaway is painfully clear. Ignoring the legal system and relying on internet conspiracy theories never protects people from reality. If you enjoyed the video, make sure to leave a like, subscribe to the channel, and turn on notifications so you don't miss the next upload. We'll see you in the next
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