T O P

  • By -

mermaidpaint

I couldn't live in the house without replacing the fireplace.


SlackPriestess

You can still see where it's damaged from ChazzleDazzle burning his parents' skulls in there. Nope. I don't know how anyone thought they should just leave that like that.


NoOneCanPutMeToSleep

No way, I'd host parties with that fireplace roaring.


DuperDayley

I just don't think I could live there, regardless. It's such a pretty home, but no.


Emmy3303

Right? Ewww. I wonder why it's for rent? I'd have sold it and never looked back.


henriettoz

Agreed. The fireplace and the shower tile from his creepy post murder shower 🤮


Emmy3303

Ugh, that shower shot, with Cat looking cray in the small screen.


henriettoz

Just disgusting.


prideprejudices

Gotta love those cozy nights inside snuggled up around the fireplace that two bodies were partially cremated in


DuperDayley

🥴 How can he be so depraved, vile and evil? I hope he relives it every day. And that the smell is embedded in his sinus cavity.


pleasure_hunter

It will never sink in for him.


DuperDayley

I'm afraid you're right.


pleasure_hunter

Yeah. I think he's a sociopath. He's probably completely fine where he resides now.


EquivalentTerrible

This is one of the few 100% sociopaths. He learned to mimic normal humans in childhood, but he for himself does not have any values and borders like normal people have.


DuperDayley

This is where I get confused. And I understand that not every human can be labeled with a known clinical term... doctors are learning things every day... but I thought a lack of empathy was associated with sociopathic behaviors. CH shows immense empathy and sympathy towards the 2 pups. I think whatever CH is is still undetermined or unidentifiable or something! 🥴


kang4president

They can still have empathy for some people but it's more limited


RandoDude124

Man, that’s… a lot cheaper than I thought. I think Mitch said he actually bought a house which… by age 27, that’s honestly mindblowing to me.


Spicy_lube

It's easier than you'd think if you start saving sooner. I'm not saying this as a flex, but I just bought a home for 300k. I had gone into it with 25k prepared, thinking I needed that much, and ended up needing 2500 after grants and 5k in closing credits. The hard/ annoying part was the underwriters at the banks. They want to see all kinds of information and ask questions about your job, then want you in that job for 2 years. It was honestly annoying. And after college I had a remote job and really only needed a year to save up 15-20k. This all excludes any of my fiancée's money or income. If I had no grants or closing credits, it would have cost me 13k. I was mistaken to think you need to put as much down as possible, like 20%. It doesn't really change the principle payment that much because the loan is large and if you plan on refinancing at a later point then all that really matters is a comfortable monthly rate you can afford. You can also find your own insurance and see if the lenders insurance is too much or the best deal. Also, a lot of people want to see the home price go down( the 300k) but after going through the process, I think it's better to fight the seller on closing credits, this gets you paying as little out of pocket to move into the home as possible. So if you want a house at 295, it's better to just offer them their list price of 300k, with 5k in closing credits. The 5k over 30 years hardly moves your monthly payment, but what it does do is let you keep 5k extra dollars in your pocket for emergency funds, or furniture. (I say emergency, just buy furniture over time since you'll be in the home for a while. ) The thing that 20% down does do is save you on pmi which in my case would knock off like 130 bucks a month, this falls off when you own 20% of the equity in your home. Lastly, shop lenders, if you put 2 or 3 lenders against each other, you'll see that magically, now they can come up with better deals. Edit: I know income is important part of savings and people may think I had a fantastic income during my 1st year out of College. I originally started at 40k, stayed that way for about 12 weeks then was at 52k a year, but about 57k after overtime. I had just made a budget, looked at what I can save and still have fun money, decided that was 500 a paycheck and if I ended up with over 500 bucks in my checking after everything, I just transferred the rest to savings. Also had a paid off 06 hyundai. This was in 2021. Also I graduated with 11k in debt, which I took out simply because I didn't want to work and juggle school anymore.


RandoDude124

My brother in Christ, that’s a treatise


Spicy_lube

Ik, i just wanted to help people know that home affordability is a little more easy than we think.


DuperDayley

That's impressive.


larsen36

He received life insurance plus money from the sale of the house


RandoDude124

No, he bought a house prior to the murder. Listen to the victim impact statement that Mitch’s wife had


homelovenone

Usually houses where something like murders occur are torn down. I wonder if the city attempted to do so. But I’m also curious if Mitchell ended up inheriting and then selling the house.


homelovenone

The picture of the fireplace looks so fucking creepy.


No_Presentation9035

There are 2 fireplaces. I'd only use the other one.