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Police Called Two Dozen Times to James’ Homes Over Criminal Incidents

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The two Virginia homes owned by New York Attorney General Letitia James, both now at the center of her federal bank fraud indictment, have drawn repeated police visits — more than two dozen calls in five years — since being occupied by family members with long criminal histories, according to Norfolk Police Department records reviewed by the New York Post.

Police were called 12 times to the first home James purchased in August 2020 for $137,000, often multiple times on the same day, for incidents described as vandalism, domestic disputes, and suspicious persons. Many of the calls came after James’ grandniece Nakia Thompson, 36, moved into the property with her three children.

Thompson, who once told a grand jury she was living rent-free, has a criminal record spanning North Carolina and Virginia, including arrests for larceny, assault on a government official, possession of burglary tools, and contributing to the delinquency of a minor.

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