Elizabeth Hirschhorn, the woman who had squatted rent-free at a Los Angeles Airbnb for 570 days, was escorted by police off the property on Friday.
Hirschhorn, 55, began renting the guesthouse in September 2021 from a periodontist in Los Angeles’ Brentwood, the LA Times reported. Following her 6-month stay, she refused to leave, arguing that she wasn’t obligated to pay rent because the landlord, Sascha Jovanovic, hadn’t obtained an occupancy license for the unit. Labeled as the “tenant from hell” by Jovanovic’s lawyer, Hirschhorn had demanded $100,000 in relocation costs to move.
“I’m very relieved and also a bit overwhelmed,” Jovanovic told the Daily Mail.
Before moving into Jovanovic’s Airbnb, Hirschhorn was also caught up in a similar dispute with an Oakland landlord. In fall 2019, she sublet a room in a Rockridge home, then allegedly refused to leave or pay rent, citing COVID regulations and health concerns. Though the landlords filed to evict her in August 2020, she remained in the two-bedroom cottage for over a year, the Mercury News previously reported, and came to a settlement with the landlords in July 2021.
On Friday, Jovanovic was at his home when he saw three men walk into the guesthouse, the LA Times reported. Fearing that they might be breaking into his house, Jovanovic called the police.
The men turned out to be movers. Once Hirschhorn’s belongings were cleared from the house, the police escorted her off the property, Jovanovic told the LA Times. Once she was gone, Jovanovic change the locks on the door.
Even though Jovanovic may have won in getting Hirschhorn off his property, the legal battle may not be over.
“Ms. Hirschhorn had discussed with me concern over the constant harassment and surveillance, and also the desire to get the things repaired that needed to be repaired,” wrote Hirschhorn’s attorney, Amanda Seward, in an email to Jovanovic’s lawyer that was reviewed by the Times. “Subject to my discussions with Ms. Hirschhorn, please be advised that you have no authority to change the locks or to assume abandonment of the unit… Further, you have violated the law by entering without permission and changing the locks.”
Jovanovic is still seeking damages from Hirschhorn of about $58,000 in unpaid rent. For now, though, he says that he plans to clear out some of the mold in the unit that had become a sore point when Hirschhorn was renting from him, and to then turn the space into a recreation room for his children.
“It was a long time coming but now she is finally out,” he told the Daily Mail.