Leonel Moreno

Leonel Moreno
Leonel Moreno

A big mouth migrant who arrived in the United States promising to move into Americans’ homes, claim “squatters’ rights” and then control those properties, even making it a business, has been deported to Communist Venezuela.

The Gateway Pundit described Leonel Morena as a “freeloading illegal alien influencer.”

The report said Moreno’s return was confirmed by Venezuela Minister of Interior, Justice and Peace Diosdado Cabello, but even he said the influencer disrupted the flight and he was placed in his own plane section with security.

Moreno was ordered deported last year but at the time, Nicolas Maduro, the Marxist dictator in Venezuela, refused to accept deportees, a position that changed with President Donald Trump took office.

The Gateway Pundit had reported Moreno entered the U.S. illegally at Eagle Pass, Texas, in 2022.

He then was granted participation in the “Alternatives to Detention” program but apparently couldn’t follow the rules and soon was defined as an “absconder.”

His profile rose each time he posted various videos on social media, significantly when he boasted, “If a house is not inhabited, we can seize it. I have thought about invading a house in the United States. I found out there is a law that says if a house is not inhabited, we can seize it. Here in the United States, the law of land invasion applies, and I think that will be my next business: invading abandoned houses.”

The video shortly later disappeared.

The New York Post cited Moreno for his actions when he “infamously flashed around wads of U.S. government cash handouts…”

He had been detained in Ohio, then moved to Texas in preparation for being returned to Venezuela.

In one of his social media rants, he charged, “I didn’t cross the Rio Grande to work like a slave.” He was waving $100 bills while making his complaint.

WND reported on Moreno’s claims.

Moreno appears to have been referencing various adverse possession laws which in some locations, in some circumstances, allow unlawful property occupants to have rights over what they occupy.

Those situations develop sometimes when homeowners have inherited locations, but they are left vacant for a time.

When squatters take over, owners often have to go through “eviction” procedures to remove them.