Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most homeowners insurance will deny a claim caused by the home owner, such as arson. It voids the policy. I wonder if this will be the case here and makes me feel even worse for the other duplex family as they will have an uphill battle getting it rebuilt.
In Del Ray 2 years ago there was a duplex that burned quickly to the ground (and taking cars with it). The fire started in the side that housed a well known hoarder and she also hoarded propane tanks among other trash. The first very quickly spread to the adjoining unit where a mother and baby were home and she said she barely had time to get her baby and her dog out, much less move her car or grab anything else. Police evacuated a 4 block radius for hours.
It still hasn’t been rebuilt.
They'll have to sue him, but I doubt he has money. I would imagine their insurance would kick in which will cost them a lot on the long run
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is why I would never buy half of a duplex. Logistical nightmare.
That seems silly. So you would never buy a townhome or rowhouse? Because of a rare isolate incident with a crazy person? Do some research on the neighbors, and 99.99% of the time you will be fine. Don't buy a home adjacent to a house with covered up windows.
+1
Also, property owners are in the public record. Before making an offer, Google the people next to you to see if they post paranoid delusions.
Anyone with a mental illness should be put on a public watch-list, so home buyers can just google them, and avoid having to live near the mentally ill.
Agree.
I would not want any of those people in my neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So incredibly sad that this man didn’t get mental health treatment he so obviously needs . How did he get so many guns?
To clear the air:
This is a regular SFH/brick duplex neighborhood in Arlington a couple of blocks from the Ballston metro, near a popular trail, a big elementary school, a large community center, etc. About as low-crime, suburban kind of neighborhood as it gets, with those small, close-in lots.
There's no such thing as a "meth lab" in Arlington, lots are too small and rents are too high for there to be vacant properties like that. Small older houses sell for $850K in one week and are torn down to build $1.5M McMansions.
There is no evidence of any guns except the flare gun, so laws may have actually worked in this case. Signs point to natural gas as the source of the explosion.
Records show family (sister and ex-wife) had tried to get him mental health treatment, which is hard to do with an adult.
Calling him "racist against white people" is ridiculous. He was an untreated paranoid schizophrenic, he didn't have coherent thoughts, he thought anyone and everyone was out to get him.
It happens in the most expensive neighborhoods don’t worry.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2023/10/30/california-meth-lab-house-san-jose-million/
Anonymous wrote:where do you draw the line? Do you include depression? ADHD? Tourette’s?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is why I would never buy half of a duplex. Logistical nightmare.
That seems silly. So you would never buy a townhome or rowhouse? Because of a rare isolate incident with a crazy person? Do some research on the neighbors, and 99.99% of the time you will be fine. Don't buy a home adjacent to a house with covered up windows.
+1
Also, property owners are in the public record. Before making an offer, Google the people next to you to see if they post paranoid delusions.
Anyone with a mental illness should be put on a public watch-list, so home buyers can just google them, and avoid having to live near the mentally ill.
where do you draw the line? Do you include depression? ADHD? Tourette’s?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is why I would never buy half of a duplex. Logistical nightmare.
That seems silly. So you would never buy a townhome or rowhouse? Because of a rare isolate incident with a crazy person? Do some research on the neighbors, and 99.99% of the time you will be fine. Don't buy a home adjacent to a house with covered up windows.
+1
Also, property owners are in the public record. Before making an offer, Google the people next to you to see if they post paranoid delusions.
Anyone with a mental illness should be put on a public watch-list, so home buyers can just google them, and avoid having to live near the mentally ill.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is why I would never buy half of a duplex. Logistical nightmare.
That seems silly. So you would never buy a townhome or rowhouse? Because of a rare isolate incident with a crazy person? Do some research on the neighbors, and 99.99% of the time you will be fine. Don't buy a home adjacent to a house with covered up windows.
+1
Also, property owners are in the public record. Before making an offer, Google the people next to you to see if they post paranoid delusions.
Anyone with a mental illness should be put on a public watch-list, so home buyers can just google them, and avoid having to live near the mentally ill.
This is stupid. "Mental illness" is a very broad range. Windows covered up? Car and yard filled with stuff? Move on to another listing. You don't even need to google anyone (but you can, as pp mentioned with public property records), just use sensible judgment.
But why take the risk?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is why I would never buy half of a duplex. Logistical nightmare.
That seems silly. So you would never buy a townhome or rowhouse? Because of a rare isolate incident with a crazy person? Do some research on the neighbors, and 99.99% of the time you will be fine. Don't buy a home adjacent to a house with covered up windows.
+1
Also, property owners are in the public record. Before making an offer, Google the people next to you to see if they post paranoid delusions.
Anyone with a mental illness should be put on a public watch-list, so home buyers can just google them, and avoid having to live near the mentally ill.
This is stupid. "Mental illness" is a very broad range. Windows covered up? Car and yard filled with stuff? Move on to another listing. You don't even need to google anyone (but you can, as pp mentioned with public property records), just use sensible judgment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So incredibly sad that this man didn’t get mental health treatment he so obviously needs . How did he get so many guns?
To clear the air:
This is a regular SFH/brick duplex neighborhood in Arlington a couple of blocks from the Ballston metro, near a popular trail, a big elementary school, a large community center, etc. About as low-crime, suburban kind of neighborhood as it gets, with those small, close-in lots.
There's no such thing as a "meth lab" in Arlington, lots are too small and rents are too high for there to be vacant properties like that. Small older houses sell for $850K in one week and are torn down to build $1.5M McMansions.
There is no evidence of any guns except the flare gun, so laws may have actually worked in this case. Signs point to natural gas as the source of the explosion.
Records show family (sister and ex-wife) had tried to get him mental health treatment, which is hard to do with an adult.
Calling him "racist against white people" is ridiculous. He was an untreated paranoid schizophrenic, he didn't have coherent thoughts, he thought anyone and everyone was out to get him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is why I would never buy half of a duplex. Logistical nightmare.
That seems silly. So you would never buy a townhome or rowhouse? Because of a rare isolate incident with a crazy person? Do some research on the neighbors, and 99.99% of the time you will be fine. Don't buy a home adjacent to a house with covered up windows.
+1
Also, property owners are in the public record. Before making an offer, Google the people next to you to see if they post paranoid delusions.
Anyone with a mental illness should be put on a public watch-list, so home buyers can just google them, and avoid having to live near the mentally ill.