BALTIMORE (WBFF) — The man at the center of Maryland’s $2.3 million Bethesda squatter saga once cited work with former Baltimore City State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby as part of his rehabilitation, an assertion now drawing renewed scrutiny as he faces fresh allegations in federal court.
Corey Pollard, identified by neighbors and court records as living inside the luxury home alongside squatter Tamieka Goode, was released from jail this week despite prosecutors accusing him of falsifying documents, manipulating associates and continuing a pattern of criminal conduct tied to luxury car theft.
The latest developments—new criminal allegations, a disputed lease presented in federal court and Pollard’s own claims of working with Mosby—mark a significant escalation in a case that has evolved from a neighborhood dispute into a multistate investigation.
From squatter house to federal court
Pollard’s name surfaced publicly after Spotlight on Maryland identified him as living inside the Bethesda home that Goode occupied without legal ownership while the property was tied up in foreclosure proceedings…