Is this story about a town being taken over true?

I heard from I don’t know where/when that there was a small town in the US and due to loose residency requirements, a person was able to pay or persuade enough people, mostly homeless to move there, register to vote, then pass a bunch of new laws in the town, including renaming it after the organizer.

I can’t recall what the name was, and I can’t seem to find it on search so I think I may have been fooled.

Sounds to me like an urban legend. Curious to find out if it’s true.

There’s Rajneeshpuram, but I don’t think that is what you had in mind.

I think it is, though. It matches Bone’s description, as far as these vague memories allow.

I think that is it! Though from when I remember, the issue wasn’t fully resolved, or at least the way I heard it wasn’t. Here’s an article about the issue in People written around the same time:

It does have some key elements correct, like the voter registration, influx of new people, and kinda sorta the laws aspect (town council). Apparently I got a bunch of the other key information mixed up, it wasn’t homeless people, but there were sorta cult people.

Thanks for the find!

Something (maybe a mention here?) clued me in on the Rajneeshies a while back, and I found this 5-part story about them.

Then there was this:

and from Wikipedia:

The town is named after Harrison Braselton, a poor dirt farmer who married Susan Hosch, the daughter of a rich plantation owner. Braselton built a home on 786 acres (318 ha) of land he purchased north of the Hosch Plantation. The land he purchased was later called Braselton.[6]

In 1989 actress and Georgia native Kim Basinger and other investors bought 1,751 acres (709 ha) of the town’s 2,000 privately owned acres for $20 million from Braselton Brothers Inc, intending to turn it into a tourist destination.[7] Five years later, on the eve of personal bankruptcy, she and her partners sold the town at a large loss.

There’s also Jonestown, which fills all the requirements except for being in the U.S.

Yes, it is true. A group of White Supremecists tried to take over a town in North Dakota. The documentary is Welcome to Leith.

Then there is Stonewall Nation, but I don’t think that is what you had in mind, either.

Here is another description of it.

I can’t see anything wrong in any of these. Neither the peoples nor places were exploited.

IIRC NPR had a story about a town with a single occupant who was paid to live there by some zoning commission because as the sole resident of the town he could vote on issues that affected the surrounding area, so the zoning commission during yearly elections voted on ballot issues that gave the commission the land for cheaper than it would have normally gone if the entire area was empty.

It does in fact look like you got this pretty much correct. If you look a the Wiki page for the Rajneeshpuram spokesperson, Ma Anand Sheela (Ma Anand Sheela - Wikipedia), she was involved in the following plot involving homeless people:

[QUOTE=from Ma Anand Sheela’s wiki]
By 1984 the ashram was coming into increasing conflict with local residents and the county commission (Wasco County Court). Sheela attempted to influence the Wasco County Court’s November election and capture the two open seats by busing in hundreds of homeless people from within Oregon as well as outside, and registering them as county voters. Later, when that effort failed, Sheela conspired, in 1984, to use “bacteria and other methods to make people ill” and prevent them from voting. As a result, the salad bars at ten local restaurants were infected with salmonella and about 750 people became ill.
[/QUOTE]

You are probably thinking of what happened in Columbia MO a year or two ago, and it was certainly not intentional. Hopefully I can post a working link from my phone.
http://www.columbiatribune.com/6702c44b-0243-51f8-861c-1df0b462cd92.html

I dont know about the other cases, but the rajnesshies did a lot of harm to that community. A lot. It was a very ugly situation for several years.

Even after seeing post #13?

Then there was Bill Fries’ account of a small town in Colorado being taken over.

:D