What the Claim Says
A viral post alleges that the largest eviction law firm in the county has offered to “help evict Billie E.” — implying a coordinated legal effort against a specific individual.
What’s Actually True
There is no public record, no court filing, and no credible news report showing that:
- any major eviction law firm is involved,
- a firm publicly offered to evict a named individual, or
- an eviction case exists involving someone called “Billie E.”
Eviction firms do not announce targeted actions against private individuals, and doing so would violate basic professional and ethical standards.
What This Really Is
The claim appears to be:
- a social‑media joke,
- a misinterpreted meme, or
- a fabricated rumor with no legal basis.
Nothing in public records supports the idea that a real eviction process is underway.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Sinai Law Firm is offering to evict Billie Eilish from her Los Angeles home on a pro bono basis on behalf of the Tongva Tribe.
Sinai Law Firm is the premier eviction firm in the county.
— Real Estate Lawyer (@SinaiLawFirm) February 4, 2026
Let's talk about the opening part of this statement: "nobody is illegal on stolen land." We can break it down, but we should also know what it is. What we are looking at is Chinese-style political sloganeering called "tifa" (提法).
Communist communications ever since Mao took… https://t.co/OPEfOnL9FI
— James Lindsay, anti-Communist (@ConceptualJames) February 2, 2026
The Native American tribe that owns the land under Billie Eilish’s multimillion-dollar Los Angeles mansion said celebrities should “explicitly” reference the tribes if they want to use them to virtue-signal.
The Tongva tribe confirmed the “Bad Guy” singer’s $3 million home does sit on its “ancestral land,” after the 24-year-old used her Grammys acceptance speech to rail against ICE and insist that “no one is illegal on stolen land.”
The indigenous inhabitants of the Los Angeles Basin, known as the “First Angelenos,” said they appreciate Eilish’s sentiment, however, they noted that the performer hasn’t contacted them directly — and insisted that next time she explicitly reference them.
“Eilish has not contacted our tribe directly regarding her property, we do value the instance when public figures provide visibility to the true history of this country,” a Tongva spokesperson told the Daily Mail.
“It is our hope that in future discussions, the tribe can explicitly be referenced to ensure the public understands that the greater Los Angeles Basin remains Gabrieleno Tongva territory,” the spokesperson added.
Eilish was widely mocked for her comments on Sunday, as she yelled, “F–k ICE” from the stage while denouncing the US as stolen land.
“Oh, gee, this ‘stolen land’ nonsense again? Maybe she should step up and forfeit her Southern California mansion since it is supposedly on ‘stolen land,’” Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis wrote on X.’
.@SenTedCruz: "Are we right now on stolen land?"
Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos: "I have no idea of the history of this land."
Warner Bros. Discovery exec Bruce Campbell: "Nor do I."
Cruz: "That speaks volumes…that neither of you are willing to say 'hell, no.'" pic.twitter.com/EWwYYUIHZH
— CSPAN (@cspan) February 3, 2026