Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's pretty clear what the probable situation is. This is a hoarder's house. Look at the basement and bonus rooms. That's what hoarders are like. The cars in the garage will be packed with junk and scrap, and the garage itself overflowing with more junk. That's why there's no listing photos of the garage or the cars.
I'm guessing that one of the heirs (the son?) moved in after Dad died or even to take care of dad, and family let him stay in the house and he turned it into a hoarder's nightmare. The kid's photo in the bedroom is dated, it reminds me of a school photo from 1995. I'm sure there were no kids or pets living in the house, you're just seeing something left from a long time ago.
Am guessing the family finally got the sibling out and don't want to deal with the house so it's listed as it is.
It's not quite bad enough to be a hoarder. Maybe a hoarder in the making. MIL was a hoarder. When she passed every room was like the basement. Even the crawlspace was packed. The garage was packed solid around the car. It took a month to clear it out. Still sold for $1.1 million in the mid 2010s in Chevy Chase. Most went to a reverse mortgage which is why we bothered with a cleanout.
There are different levels of hoarding but this is definitely, unquestionably, a hoarder's house. Someone a bit more restrained than your MIL but still has hoarding instincts. No one but a hoarder has that kind of piles of junk in basements that you practically have to swim through.
Anonymous wrote:According to a court order, six siblings inherited the house, four of the siblings sued to force sale of the house after they inherited it, one of the siblings was living in the house and refused to leave. The court ordered eviction of the resident sibling and sale of the house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's pretty clear what the probable situation is. This is a hoarder's house. Look at the basement and bonus rooms. That's what hoarders are like. The cars in the garage will be packed with junk and scrap, and the garage itself overflowing with more junk. That's why there's no listing photos of the garage or the cars.
I'm guessing that one of the heirs (the son?) moved in after Dad died or even to take care of dad, and family let him stay in the house and he turned it into a hoarder's nightmare. The kid's photo in the bedroom is dated, it reminds me of a school photo from 1995. I'm sure there were no kids or pets living in the house, you're just seeing something left from a long time ago.
Am guessing the family finally got the sibling out and don't want to deal with the house so it's listed as it is.
It's not quite bad enough to be a hoarder. Maybe a hoarder in the making. MIL was a hoarder. When she passed every room was like the basement. Even the crawlspace was packed. The garage was packed solid around the car. It took a month to clear it out. Still sold for $1.1 million in the mid 2010s in Chevy Chase. Most went to a reverse mortgage which is why we bothered with a cleanout.
Anonymous wrote:It's pretty clear what the probable situation is. This is a hoarder's house. Look at the basement and bonus rooms. That's what hoarders are like. The cars in the garage will be packed with junk and scrap, and the garage itself overflowing with more junk. That's why there's no listing photos of the garage or the cars.
I'm guessing that one of the heirs (the son?) moved in after Dad died or even to take care of dad, and family let him stay in the house and he turned it into a hoarder's nightmare. The kid's photo in the bedroom is dated, it reminds me of a school photo from 1995. I'm sure there were no kids or pets living in the house, you're just seeing something left from a long time ago.
Am guessing the family finally got the sibling out and don't want to deal with the house so it's listed as it is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP. Also wanted to add if you look at the kitchen and bathrooms, there has been some clearing out just enough to be able to walk around and take photos. But the decay in cabinets and finishes are the kind of decay that comes with hoarders covering up surfaces with crap and not cleaning or repairing for years.
That would certainly explain the condition of the floors. Perhaps they were piled with debris for a long time and they were cleared out so someone could walk through.
Anonymous wrote:PP. Also wanted to add if you look at the kitchen and bathrooms, there has been some clearing out just enough to be able to walk around and take photos. But the decay in cabinets and finishes are the kind of decay that comes with hoarders covering up surfaces with crap and not cleaning or repairing for years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are six people who are on the title to this house. Whatever happened here seems sad to me.
I think the house was inherited in 2014 by the children of the original owner. This obit lists the whole family.
https://www.legacy.com/us/obituaries/bostonglobe/name/peter-mitrano-obituary?id=18170893
Was it this guy's house? I was under the impression it was his son's (who share's the name) house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are six people who are on the title to this house. Whatever happened here seems sad to me.
I think the house was inherited in 2014 by the children of the original owner. This obit lists the whole family.
https://www.legacy.com/us/obituaries/bostonglobe/name/peter-mitrano-obituary?id=18170893
Anonymous wrote:There are six people who are on the title to this house. Whatever happened here seems sad to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In picture #2, somebody ripped the stuffing out of the chair. Is it possible the house was ransacked by the owners or somebody else looking for hidden goods?
Three things are clear.
1. The family was forced out very suddenly, hence a towel still hanging on the shower rod, and all possessions including children's pictures left behind.
2. The fact that even the vehicles were left behind suggests the family did not drive away, but was hauled off. Maybe arrested and taken away in a police car?
3. The house was very obviously ransacked -- with furniture cushions opened, possessions thrown about, beds moved away from the walls -- in a hasty search for something (drugs? money? evidence?)