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Austrailian Activist Claims “Billie Eilish Got Me Deported” After Vowing to Protest Outside Her LA Mansion

February 16, 2026  ·
  Marvin Montanaro
Billie Eilish accepts her Grammy Award

Billy Eilish at the Grammys - CBS

An Australian activist and online content creator is claiming his attempt to stage a viral protest targeting pop megastar Billie Eilish ended with him detained for more than a day and ultimately deported from the United States — and he’s placing the blame squarely on the singer and her legal team.

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Drew Pavlou, known for his political stunts and online activism, says he was stopped by immigration authorities at Los Angeles International Airport after publicly announcing plans to camp outside Eilish’s California mansion as what he described as a “performance art” demonstration.

“Billie Eilish reported me to ICE and got me deported cause I joked about flying to the US and moving into her mansion,” Pavlou said. “She literally said ‘no one is illegal on stolen land’ but called ICE on me. Honestly amazing performance art, I somehow managed to get Billie Eilish and American liberals to endorse border control and deportations. The pain was worth it for the meme.”

Grammy Speech Sparked The Stunt

The controversy traces back to remarks Eilish made during her acceptance speech at the 2026 Grammy Awards, where she delivered pointed criticism of U.S. immigration enforcement.

“No one is illegal on stolen land,” she said. “And f— ICE, that’s all I’m gonna say.”

The comments quickly circulated online, drawing backlash from critics who accused the pop star of political grandstanding from a position of celebrity privilege.

Pavlou seized on the moment, announcing he would test her rhetoric by camping outside her home. He argued that if “no one is illegal on stolen land,” he should theoretically be free to occupy the property until formally asked to leave — framing the plan as satire mixed with protest.

Fundraising And Travel Plans

Before boarding his flight, Pavlou raised roughly $3,000 through crowdfunding platforms to finance the trip. He publicly detailed his plan to pitch a tent outside Eilish’s mansion gates and remain there until authorities intervened.

He repeatedly insisted the stunt would be lawful and that he had no intention of forcing entry into the home itself.

Billie Eilish

Billie Eilish sits for a Vanity Fair Interview – Youtube, Vanity Fair

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“Everything here is completely and totally legal. I am just going to set up a tent on her driveway, and I will leave when they formally ask me to leave,” he said prior to departure. “No human being is illegal on stolen land.”

Despite those assurances, U.S. Customs officials reportedly took notice of his viral posts before he cleared entry.

Detained At LAX

According to Pavlou, border agents directly questioned him about his online statements and whether he intended to trespass on Eilish’s property.

“They asked me if I planned to ‘trespass on Billie Eilish’s property’… I said no, I was sh-tposting,” he wrote.

He also said authorities asked whether he intended to meet the singer in person — which he denied.

Billie Eilish at the 2026 Grammys

Billie Eilish accepting her award at the 2026 Grammys – CBS, YouTube

Ultimately, Pavlou says officials informed him he had entered the country on the wrong visa, citing planned media appearances — including an invitation to appear on a U.S.-based political program — as activity requiring a different entry classification.

“They didn’t ban me from the US, but they said I have to apply with a different visa next time,” he explained.

Activism vs. Reality

If Pavlou’s account is even a little bit true, the episode demonstrates the collision between celebrity activism and real-world legal enforcement.

Eilish’s Grammy speech framed immigration enforcement as morally illegitimate, declaring that “no one is illegal on stolen land” while condemning ICE.

Yet when an activist attempted to test that rhetoric in practice, the result was detention, visa scrutiny, and removal from the country.

To be clear, there is no verified evidence that Eilish or her legal representatives directly intervened in Pavlou’s case, despite his claims. Immigration officials reportedly cited visa classification issues as the formal basis for his deportation.

But perception often moves faster than paperwork.

For critics, the optics are difficult to ignore: anti-deportation messaging from a multimillionaire celebrity followed by an activist being barred from entry while attempting to stage a protest tied directly to those remarks.

Did Billie Eilish Get Drew Pavlou Deported?

While Pavlou speculates that Billie Eilish and her legal team flagged his travel plans to federal authorities, there is no public evidence confirming that claim.

Billie Eilish

Billie Eilish sits for a Vanity Fair Interview – Youtube, Vanity Fair

Immigration officials cited visa issues — not the planned protest — as the reason for his removal. However, Pavlou maintains authorities questioned him extensively about his plans involving the singer and her property.

“Billie Eilish got me deported from the U.S. — I think her legal team contacted DHS,” he wrote in a social media update documenting the incident.

The Planned Protest Never Happened

In the end, the planned mansion demonstration never materialized.

Pavlou never reached Glendale, never set up his tent, and never came face-to-face with the pop star.

Billie Eilish

Billie Eilish sits for a Vanity Fair Interview – Youtube, Vanity Fair

What began as an internet stunt designed to mock celebrity activism quickly escalated into a real-world legal situation with tangible consequences. The planned protest never happened, the mansion demonstration never materialized, and the activist at the center of the spectacle never made it past the airport.

Instead, the episode now lives online — less as a protest and more as a case study in how viral rhetoric, political theater, and immigration law can collide in ways neither side fully anticipates.

Do you think Billie Eilish got Drew Pavlou deported? Sound off in the comments and let us know!

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Author: Marvin Montanaro
Marvin Montanaro is the Editor-in-Chief of That Park Place and a seasoned entertainment journalist with nearly two decades of experience across multiple digital media outlets and print publications. He joined That Park Place in 2024, bringing with him a passion for theme parks, pop culture, and film commentary. Based in Orlando, Florida, Marvin regularly visits Walt Disney World and Universal Orlando, offering firsthand reporting and analysis from the parks. He’s also the creative force behind The M4 Empire YouTube channel, bringing a critical eye toward the world of pop culture. Montanaro’s insights are rooted in years of real-world reporting and editorial leadership. He can be reached via email at mmontanaro@thatparkplace.com SOCIAL MEDIA: X: http://x.com/marvinmontanaro Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/marvinmontanaro Facebook: https://facebook.com/marvinmontanaro YouTube: http://YouTube.com/TheM4Empire Email: mmontanaro@thatparkplace.com
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ReaderX

Not sure if the lawyers did, but I am sure there are enough hypocrites out there who applaud Eilish for her comments and would report Pavlous tweets to ICE on her behalf.

But man there has to be some kind of sunshine/transparency law to find out if Eilish’s lawyers had something to do with it… that would be grand!

James Eadon

So, Airhead Billie didn’t even think through the manifold scenarios in which her virtue signalling would backfire. She’s braindead, and her stupid political comments reinforce the stereotype that women don’t have a clue about serious matters of State.
One asks whether she should be allowed to vote.