@JacobBurgess, you're the only person I'm aware of who has authority on this kind of question.
@codatski @JacobBurgess this led to an intense discussion in my household wherein we determined that owners of multi-family dwellings could theoretically allow vampires entrance into a home, but if the apartment was owned by a corporation that didn't have a clear majority owner then the vampire would only be able to gain entrance to the home from the residents. however, in the case of an individual owner or majority ownership, the landlord could grant entry. this is why you always ward your home

@ldottxt @codatski @JacobBurgess Also, the only case where government could grant a vampire cop access to a home would be if they owned it. So, government housing like Section 8 developments in the US or public housing blocks in the UK would be fair game for a warrant giving access.

This opens up quite a story opportunity for commentary on overpolicing of poor neighborhoods as compared to affluent suburbs.
Another commentary avenue being literal bloodsucking landlords.

@Texan_Reverend @ldottxt I haven't considered ownership of the home as a factor. Because the government theoretically would welcome its agents on what it considers its own property. Interesting.

@codatski Oh, I like this very much. It depends on the Vampiric paradigm we're talking about, but keys go with the classic one as I understand it.

The prohibition of entering a home is because the vampire is unnatural and unwelcome in a space that is a part of another person's life. They must be invited into that person's life, essentially.

I would say this would be situational depending on how much part of society the dweller felt and further would need to see the warrant for entry.

@JacobBurgess Essentially, permission does not equal invitation? I like highlighting whether the dweller feels to be a part of society as an important consideration.
@codatski Permission does not equal invitation would be my interpretation.