Police have been called to the Virginia home at the center of New York Attorney General Letitia James’ legal woes a dozen times since it was purchased.
James, 67, bought the $137,000 home for her grandniece Nakia Thompson, 37, and her three kids to live in in August 2020.
Last month the attorney general was slapped with a bombshell indictment from Department of Justice in October accusing her of mortgage fraud relating to the Norfolk property.
According to records obtained by The New York Post, cops have been called to the residence 12 times since, sometimes even multiple times a day.
Three calls were placed in 2020, then one each in 2021, 2022, and 2023. In the first two weeks of October of this year there were six calls made. The nature of all of the calls were not known.
Cops were also called out multiple times to another Norfolk home James purchased for a relative, which is not subject to the DOJ probe.
The Norfolk residence was bought via a $219,000 mortgage and is inhabited by James’ OnlyFans model grandniece Cayla Thompson-Hairston and her mother and sister, the Post reported.
It was visited ten times by officers between April 2024 and April 2025.
New York AG Letitia James was issued a bombshell indictment in October by the Department of Justice accusing her of mortgage fraud
Nakia Thompson lives in the address at the center of the probe with her three kids
Calls were made for warrant service, as well as calls for a domestic dispute and a reported assault, according to the outlet.
Federal prosecutors, led by Donald Trump’s DOJ attorney Lindsey Halligan, accuse James of misleading a bank during her purchase of the home Thompson lives in order to achieve a more favorable loan.
The indictment claims James saved nearly $19,000 on a $109,600 mortgage for the property on Peronne Avenue.
The indictment states she signed a ‘Second Home Rider, which required James, as the sole borrower, to occupy and use the property as her secondary residence, and prohibits its use as a timesharing or other shared ownership agreement or agreement that requires her to rent the property or give any other person control over the occupancy or use of the property’.
‘Despite these representations, the Peronne Property was not occupied by James as a secondary residence and was instead used as a rental investment property, renting the property to a family of [three],’ it continues.
If found guilty, James could face up to 30 years in prison per count, along with a $1 million fine on each count and lose ownership of the properties cited in the indictment.
The Daily Mail revealed last month that Thompson is a fugitive from justice and officially listed as an ‘absconder’.
Thompson told a grand jury in June that she had been living rent-free in the home, now valued at $235,000, since James bought it.
James was indicted by a federal grand jury in Virginia on charges of bank fraud and making a false statement to a financial institution in regard to securing a mortgage for the home.
Thompson is seen here outside of the home in Norfolk that James purchased in 2020, records indicate cops have been called to the home on a number of occasions
Another home (pictured) James she bought in Norfolk in 2023 via a $219,000 mortgage, that is not part of the criminal probe, has also had repeated police calls made
She denied any wrongdoing and has called the DOJ’s indictment ‘a continuation of the President’s desperate weaponization of our justice system’.
The New York attorney general is a longtime political enemy of Trump after she successfully sued the president and his Trump Organization for fraud.
She persuaded a New York judge to find Donald Trump liable for fraud in a civil case in February 2024, although an appeals court threw out the massive financial penalty of over $450million while upholding the finding that the president committed fraud.
Her supporters have claimed that it was her sweeping civil case that made Trump seek vengeance against her.
James’ lawyers plan to have the case thrown out, according court filings, by arguing that Halligan was improperly appointed by the Justice Department.
The Daily Mail contacted James’ office for comment.