Photo Tamieka Goode
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A Maryland woman who was released from jail and returned to squatting in a $2.3 million mansion was arrested again this week.

Nearly a dozen sheriff’s deputies, a crew of movers, and a security company converged on the house in a quiet Maryland suburb on Tuesday night.

Deputies entered the house and took serial squatter Tamieka Goode into custody. She was placed into a police cruiser and transported to the Montgomery County Detention Processing Center shortly before midnight.

“Stop f—king recording,” said Goode as she was placed inside the police vehicle.

@anonymously.loud Kudos to the system for finally booting Tamieka Goode and Corey Pollard out in that midnight raid—deputies hauling couches, a piano, even a Pac-Man machine? Sounds like a bad heist flick, but it exposes Maryland’s squatter laws as a glitchy loophole fest. Goode, posing as a “pro-se litigation coach” (not a real lawyer, mind you), turned a bank-owned pad into her social media HQ, exploiting residency rules after 30 days. Neighbors endured the headache, pushing Annapolis for tighter regs on property rights and safety—especially with reports of a kid possibly left solo while she did her 12-day jail stint. But hold up—flip the lens, and it’s a symptom of deeper housing cracks. Blue states like Maryland lean pro-tenant to shield folks from shady landlords, arresting slumlords and banning them for years when they ghost court. Goode’s camp claims title glitches let her in “legally,” spotlighting how foreclosure voids can invite opportunists. Is it theft or smart survival in a market where homes sit empty while people scramble? Critics slam it as criminal enablement, with Pollard’s rap sheet (theft, vehicle stuff) adding fuel—neighbors feared violence, and that’s no joke. Bottom line: Victory for the bank and block, but this sparks a fire debate—beef up squatter crackdowns like Florida did, or risk punishing the vulnerable? Maryland Dems stalled anti-squatter bills last year; time for a rethink without swinging to landlord tyranny. What’s your take? #anonymo#anonymouslyloudpodcasto#anonymouslyloudq#fype#squatters ? original sound – Anonymously Loud Podcast

Goode was convicted of squatting in the same house in January 2026. She was released from jail last week after serving 12 days of a 90-day sentence and a $5,000 fine.

Neighbors were surprised to see her strolling across the front lawn on Monday, Feb. 9.

“Less than two weeks of being incarcerated, Tamieka Goode is back in the house,” said neighbor Ian Chen, a 19-year-old college student, who pressed charges against Goode and her husband, Corey Pollard, last July.

Goode and Pollard moved into the vacant, bank-owned mansion in July. They were arrested that same month and charged with trespassing and burglary.

Goode was seen moving some things out of the mansion just before 9:30 p.m. Tuesday, prior to the arrival of deputies and movers.

After Goode was taken into custody, two dozen laborers moved furniture and personal property out of the mansion during the night. Sofas, a PacMan arcade game, piano, a movie popcorn maker, and hundreds of other items were placed on moving trucks. The house was secured by property security experts on Wednesday morning, according to FOX45 News.

“We’re going to put everything out if you’re saying it’s not supposed to be here,” said a Montgomery County Sheriff’s Deputy to the property’s bank representative and real estate agent. “The back door, I guess, is where they got in, because it’s broken.”