Toronto Star

Homeowner finally reclaims ‘embassy’

Piles of clothes, dirty dishes found as self-proclaimed sovereign citizen removed

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CALGARY— A woman has seen her Calgary rental home for the first time since a self-proclaimed sovereign citizen was removed from the property last week.

Rebekah Caverhill has said the man claimed the duplex as his “embassy” shortly after moving in and she has spent nearly two years trying to get him out.

Caverhill cried Friday as she toured the beige-brick duplex with a throng of reporters and cameras.

Windows were covered with towels, clothing was heaped on floors and dirty dishes were piled in the kitchen that smelled like rotten food.

Alphabet magnets on the refrigerat­or spelled out the word “respect” and a sign on the door of one room called it a meeting place for people of the “First Nations Sovran Embassy of Earth.”

Caverhill said she rented the home to Andreas Pirelli in November 2011. A friend had recommende­d the man and he promised to do some work on the place in exchange for a few months’ free rent.

A few months later, Caverhill went to inspect the property and said she found the kitchen and bathroom had been gutted, all the inside doors removed and the floor of one bedroom painted black.

Pirelli identified himself as a follower of the Freemen-on-the-Land movement, claimed the home as an embassy, changed the locks and placed a lien on the property.

Last week, a court ordered the 48year-old to vacate the rental property. But before he could be evicted, police arrested him on outstandin­g warrants from Quebec.

He was charged with pushing a landlady down a flight of stairs in Montreal in 2007.

An arrest warrant was issued in 2010 when he failed to show up for his assault trial.

The FBI considers the Freemenon-the-Land a domestic terror threat in the U.S., but followers in Canada have said violence is not part of the movement.

 ?? JEFF MCINTOSH/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Rebekah Caverhill enters her rental property in Calgary on Monday for the first time since a self-proclaimed sovereign citizen was removed last week.
JEFF MCINTOSH/THE CANADIAN PRESS Rebekah Caverhill enters her rental property in Calgary on Monday for the first time since a self-proclaimed sovereign citizen was removed last week.

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