White trash gonna white trash. |
|
Very stable geniuses:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/06/27/AR2009062702234.html |
| Not only that, but the daughter sounds like she was coached on what to say. I think I saw her Twitter account (or her social media was referenced somewhere) and it was barely more tolerable than her brother's. |
| So can the father be charged for leaving a gun out? (I assume parents live apart since they are estranged). |
|
The only thing in her article that is the truth is she is very much to blame for these murders.
#1 She absolutely did know her son’s Nazi views. She posted them herself on her social media account. And it was the reason for the break up. And she had been warned by school administration. She just chose to believe everyone else was crazy. #2 He was court ordered to stay off the Internet. This leads me to believe his arrest in 2016 had to do with the internet. She knew that. I also believe she knew he was continuing to use the internet and if she didn’t she wasn’t watching him and she certainly allowed him to have a phone with access to the internet. #3 I don’t buy that she hid her keys. It’s a good 30-40 min drive from Lorton to Reston so he spent no time finding the keys. #4 I don’t buy it was too late in the day to get him help. She could have taken him any ER or called 911. Honestly she had from September when school administration warned her of trouble to seek help and have him committed. #5 She left a gun and ammo unsecured in her home with a kid she knew had mental and behavioral issues for years! And according to her social media posts thought it was a great idea to teach him how to use them. So yes ma’am you are very much to blame for these 2 murders. It very much is on you and I hope you pay the price for it. |
|
The house hit the market this morning. We are actually looking in that neighborhood and I didn’t realize it was THAT house until my husband said something.
|
I live nearby but not in the same neighborhood and looked at the house pictures and listing. It looks like it was repainted, and then staged--not surprisingly. No pictures of any of the upstairs other than the master bedroom and bathroom. It's a nice house and layout, good neighborhood. Seems to be priced correctly if it were just another house being offered for sale, though it is listed for $20,000 more than they bought for last August. I'm curious how many people won't even consider this house because of its history though. I have had relatives buy a house where someone had died recently (suicide), and it didn't bother them, this seems different though. Not sure what I would do if I were in the market for a house. |
|
I’m PP. I think we are going to look at it. It feels terribly ghoulish, but it checks all our boxes and is priced well for the neighborhood.
I noticed they didn’t put the pics of the upstairs rooms in either. Also there is a weird bathroom setup in the master suite. |
Creepy AF to live there. They might as well tear it down and rebuild. Maybe someone from out of state might buy it, I guess. |
What's the address? |
That bathroom setup is pretty common, the doors/spot for a balcony at the front of the master is a bit different/strange though. The backyard looks challenging too, depending on what you want from a backyard. Do you think your real estate agent would have told you if your husband hadn't realized that it was that house? |
Hmm, found it. This is so sad. Just a few months ago, there were celebrating the new house purchase as a family. My heart goes out to the surviving young boy and his older brother. |
|
It's a nice house, big lot. Very sad.
In cases like these, would the estate file a home owners insurance claim to handle cleaning, replacing flooring, painting, etc? I'm sure it's big, expensive job that requires a specialized crew and equipment. |
Any damage done and clean up needed should be covered by the Giampas. IMO |
Before they get locked up for negligence. |