Several dozen empty trailers that have attracted squatters and launched a legal battle in the County of Los Angeles now create a major headache for the neighbors and those responsible for the County of Riverside.
The approximately 70 trailers stored in a vacant land in the city of Wildomar were removed earlier this year from another empty empty land from the industry city while the Sheriff’s deputies of the County Los Angeles supervised the expulsion. The trailers attracted squatters who converted the prize into a sans-bassum camp.
Although the trailers of the Black series are no longer a problem for the city of industry and the Los Angeles County authorities, Wildomar officials say that the trailers are now a nuisance for them. Wildomar authorities say that the owner of the trailers did not obtain the city’s approvals necessary to place them on an empty land which is near several houses.
The city of Wildomar is obtaining a mandate to withdraw the trailers after trying to work with the owner, said the mayor of Wildomar, Ashlee Dephillippo, in a statement. The trailers violate the city zoning and fire code, she said, adding that the case is a case of applying the current code.
Wildomar officials informed the owner of the trailer on Tuesday that the trailers must be moved within 48 hours or if the city would do it and invoice the owner the costs. DEPHILLIPPO said that while the city had put the owner of the trailer in opinion and that the mandate request, the trailers cannot be deleted before the end of the week.
“I want to be clear, the delivery of the mandate may not align with a 48-hour opinion, and we must wait until the good mandate is in place before we can enter the property,” she said.
On Tuesday, two letters were published on a chain connection fence surrounding the trailers in the 20700 block on Palomar Street, according to neighbors.
The opinions dated April 15, 2025 of the city of Wildomar give the owner dozens of 48 hours of Black Series RV to remove them.
(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)
The letters were sent to Hongwei Qiu and Zihan Feng, according to copies of letters shared online. Qiu, which has the RVs of the black series based on the Uplands, did not respond to requests for comments on the trailers after the city issued its referral order.
Ruin trailers on the Wildomar property are listed on the website of the Black series from $ 44,000 to $ 50,000 each.
In an interview with CBS News, Qiu apologized to residents and the city.
He said he did not know that the trailers violated the city code and understand that residents fear that empty trailers will attract squatters.
“We are sorry … for the feeling, because they have read the news. Of course, they fear that the same security problem can reach their neighborhood,” he said.
The resident of Wildomar, Jessica Hume, began to notice that the tapes of the black series were brought to the property at the end of 2024. The trailers of the city of the industry may have started to arrive in Wildomar towards the beginning of 2025.
Hume confronted a man who was laying a trailer. She said he had given her phone and Qiu tried to explain that he was not aware of the city’s zoning codes. Her recent apologies to the community feels hollow, she said.

Residents pass dozens of black VRs.
(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)
“He apologized and then brought more trailers,” she said. “It’s a manipulation.”
Thursday, Hume watched a person trying to tear a chain link fence and try to access the trailers.
She told them not to do it because it would be illegal.
“I am a little Irish woman and I feel like I am there to show police,” said Hume.
The Director of the Wildomar Law application, Raul Berroteran, updated the municipal council on April 9 that the owner of the property where the trailers is attempted to expel Qiu.
Only two days before the meeting, Berroteran said that he had witnessed an employee of the black series traveling another trailer on the property. He informed a representative of the zoning violations company and the company then followed to request an extension on the calendar to remove the trailers.
California Daily Newspapers