Inman

‘Stigmatized’ homes can be bargains

Editor’s note: The following story excerpt is republished with permission of AOL Real Estate. See the entire article, "Jeffrey Dahmer, Andrea Yates, the Lemp Family: Life Inside Homes Where Grisly Deaths Took Place."

By KRISANNE ALCANTRA

The handsome, Spanish-style home on the corner of Beachcomber Lane and Sea Lark Road in Houston couldn’t look any more idyllic. With its charming brick exteriors, and leafy, tree-flanked lawn, the cozy three-bedroom property is picture perfect.

But behind its pretty doors lies a gruesome past. It’s where 37-year-old mom Andrea Yates drowned her five children — including her 6-month-old daughter — in a bathtub in 2001. Yates was later convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison.

Three years later, a man named Peter Muller purchased the house — which had, unsurprisingly, become a neighborhood "attraction" — and has been living there ever since. Unlike many house hunters who are uneasy about purchasing a stigmatized home, Muller had no reservations about buying the infamous "Yates murder home."

"I really don’t care about [the home’s] history," Muller told AOL Real Estate. "I don’t think about it; it doesn’t bother me."

Its horrifying history aside, it’s not hard to see why Muller bought the home in 2004 for $87,000. (It is now valued at $110,000; Muller believes it is worth more than $120,000.) It boasts a wealth of desirable qualities, including its proximity to Houston’s city center and a number of schools and hospitals.

"It’s in a good location," Muller said. "Plus, it’s got a great layout. There’s a living area and combined dining area."

Muller, who lives in the 1,620-square-foot home alone with his dog, Chotty, said that despite the hefty return he might make from the sale of the home, he doesn’t plan to sell or leave 942 Beachcomber Lane in the near future. When asked if he was happy living there, Muller said: "Sure. It has everything I need."

A ‘killer’ deal

Though many may balk at living in a home where brutal murders have occurred, studies reveal that murder homes can be excellent bargains if potential buyers can accept the property’s tainted past.

A buyer can expect to pay 10 to 25 percent off regular market prices for stigmatized homes, said real estate consultant Randall Bell of Bell Anderson & Saunders, which specializes in assessing disaster-damaged properties and murder homes — such as the one where Jon-Benet Ramsey was killed.

Depending on the severity of the crime, the discounts can get even steeper. Take, for example, the Los Angeles home where O.J. Simpson was accused of killing ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ronald Goldman. After two years on the market, it sold for only $590,000 — $200,000 less than the initial asking price. Similarly, the Northern California home where 39 members of the Heaven’s Gate cult killed themselves in 1997 was sold for $668,000 two years after the event. That was less than half of the mansion’s $1.6 million listing price before the infamous mass suicide.

For some, such hefty markdowns are enough of an incentive to push any initial reservations aside. That was the case for Chris Butler, who happened upon a beautiful, split-level ranch nestled in the lush forests of Akron, Ohio, in 2005. Butler immediately contacted the home’s Realtor, Greg Greco, who showed him around the three-bedroom home and its 2-acre lot, a property that Butler swiftly "fell in love with." The going price? A mere $269,000.

Days later, Butler received an unsettling phone call from Greco "in the interest of full disclosure," he was told. Greco revealed that the property was priced so low because of its past: It once was the home of serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer and the site of Dahmer’s first murder. It was here that Dahmer killed 19-year-old Steven Hicks with a barbell, dismembered his body and buried it in the woods surrounding the home.

"My first reaction, of course, was ‘eww,’" Butler told AOL Real Estate. "But then I went and really thought about it, and it was actually kind of creepy-cool. Besides, the house was perfect. So I went ahead and bought it."

Butler ended up purchasing the home for an even lower price of $245,000 — more than $100,000 less than comparable homes in the area.

Even with the savings, however, there are still some common — and valid — concerns for prospective owners of a stigmatized home.

According to Bell, homebuyers often worry about the property’s resale value. (This doesn’t concern Butler, who, after seven years, is selling his home for $329,000 to move East.) Additionally, Bell said, homes where homicides or other heinous crimes took place will typically stay on the market from two to seven years longer than they would otherwise.

But Bell said that, generally, homebuyers — particularly bargain hunters looking for fixer-uppers — can be convinced to buy a notorious crime scene if the price is right.

"In large, it all comes down to finding the right discount to entice a buyer to accept the property along with its tainted history," Bell told AOL Real Estate.

Read the rest of the article, "Jeffrey Dahmer, Andrea Yates, the Lemp Family: Life Inside Homes Where Grisly Deaths Took Place," at AOL Real Estate.

More from AOL Real Estate:

Listing Fails: The Best of the Worst in Real Estate This Week
Dirty Money? Selling Soil From Killer’s Property
Old Haunts, New Buyers: How to Handle ‘Stigmatized’ Property

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