Discover the chilling past of this $530 Sydney rental – Would you live here?

Content warning: This article mentions gruesome descriptions of a crime scene, including decapitation, mutilation, and stabbing. Reader discretion is advised.

It appears as just your typical three-bedroom, one-bathroom home in St Clair. But its past is far from ordinary.

A house that was the scene of a shocking tragedy that left locals shaken has divided the community when deciding whether to rent it out.



A suburban house of horrors where a woman beheaded her mother has gone up for rent for $530 a week. The kitchen has been recently repainted, according to the property listing.

However, that same kitchen was the scene of a horrific crime on July 20, 2019, when Jessica Camilleri launched a brutal attack on her mother, Rita, resulting in the death of the 57-year-old woman.


rent1.jpg
This is the newly repainted kitchen. Credit: Real Estate Australia

According to the details of the case, including the official investigation launched by authorities and police testimonies, Jessica Camilleri stabbed her mother at least 100 times using seven knives in a fit of rage, four of which broke due to the intensity of the attack.

The court heard that an argument broke out between the pair before the attack.

Jessica then decapitated her mother, took her head from the kitchen of the home, and placed it on a footpath outside. She was sitting beside it when authorities arrived at the house.

Meanwhile, Rita Camilleri’s body was found on the kitchen floor near her eyeballs, tongue, and the tip of her nose. She was found with more than 30 defensive wounds on each hand.



The court heard that Jessica asked police at the scene if doctors could work miracles and if they could ‘sew her head back on’.

An officer replied that the request was a ‘bit of a stretch’.

‘So, there’s nothing that can be done to bring her back? She asked Senior Constable Anthony D’Agostino at the time.

The court also discovered that Jessica has severely complex mental disorders, according to a psychiatrist assigned to the case.


rent2.jpg
The home can be rented for $530 per week. Credit: Jessica Lewis Creative/Pexels

David Greenberg, the forensic psychiatrist, said there was no single diagnosis to explain Jessica’s behaviour.

He diagnosed her with a mild intellectual disability, autism spectrum disorder (ASD) that features a fixation on horror movies and figurines, and an intermittent explosive disorder (IED) that led to anger-based impulsive outbursts that are often disproportionate to the provocation.

‘When she reveals macabre details about how she killed her mother ... she doesn't use social gestures in the sense of communicating that. There's a bland lack of emotions on her face when she's discussing these difficult, emotional topics,’ Professor Greenberg told the court at the time.



According to her testimony, Jessica ‘saw red’ when her mum threatened to call on emergency services to put her in a mental institution. She was in a fit of rage as she dragged her mother by her hair down the corridor.

Professor Greenberg told the court that Jessica had the capacity to tell right from wrong during the attack, but her other mental health issues, particularly the IED, made it difficult for her to control herself as her abilities were substantially impaired.

The professor also told the court that Jessica’s fascination with horror movies could have resulted in her learning how to have ‘goal-directed and targeted aggression’.

He also said she might have ‘identified with these macabre acts to deal with disempowerment, low self-concept and poor sense of frustration tolerance’.


Intermittent Explosive Disorder.jpg
Jessica pleaded guilty to manslaughter. Image credit: The Seniors Discount Club

After two days of deliberations, the court found Jessica not guilty of murder due to a partial defence of substantial impairment by abnormality of the mind, which led to her loss of control during the attack. She was instead found guilty of manslaughter.

In 2021, Jessica was sentenced to more than 21 years behind bars. Last September, she appealed the length of the sentence in the Court of Criminal Appeal. The verdict will be announced at a later date.



Knowing the gruesome history of the home, the listing for the St Clair property raised eyebrows on social media. Some admitted they wouldn’t be able to live there, while others said the house was just ‘bricks and mortar’ and found the crime irrelevant.

The agent does not mention the property’s history in the listing; however, it says: ‘There is a material fact relevant to the home, which will be disclosed when attending a viewing in accordance with relevant legislations.’

The listing also describes the home as ‘superb’, a ‘rare find’, and that it is ‘inviting from the get-go’.

The house was sold less than a year after the crime was committed in June 2020 and was previously up for lease that same year.

That said, real estate agents are required by law to be upfront about the issues in a property, including if a crime had taken place in the location.

The Real Estate Institute of NSW said: ‘Any information that may influence a decision to buy, sell, rent, or impact a property’s market value needs to be disclosed to potential buyers.’ The organisation also claimed that most properties do get sold eventually, even if it is the ‘scene of a grisly crime’.
Key Takeaways

  • A Sydney rental home – where a daughter brutally killed and decapitated her mother – has been put up for rent again.
  • The home's gruesome past has raised eyebrows on social media, with differing opinions on whether it would affect potential renters.
  • Real estate agents are required by law to disclose any information that may influence a decision to buy, sell, or rent a property, including if a crime was committed there.
  • The Real Estate Institute of NSW mentioned that most properties with negative histories do eventually sell and recommend being honest about any issues affecting the property as early as possible.
In a live poll by Yahoo! News, 55 per cent of survey participants said they wouldn’t live in a house where a crime had been committed. Some 27 per cent said they would.

But we want to know your stance on this, members. Would you dare to rent this house? Let us know your thoughts in the comments!
 
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Our home was bought from the one family who lived there for over a hundred years, passing it down through the line. After reading through papers and discussing it’s history, apparently the grandfather committed suicide in the front bedroom by drinking kerosine and slicing his wrists. We still enjoyed living there a few years, then necessity made us sell it. I would imagine there aren’t many houses that are that original, and the deeds papers were all in beautiful script writing, now I wished I had copies done.
 
In my opinion, far better to replace bad energy with positive energy.

If you think about things in a practical manner, every house/home has some kind of history whether it be gruesome, weird, kooky, fun filled, or odd. Does it really matter?
We cannot do anything about what has happened in the past.
We can, however, do something about the now. This house may well make a difference for a family who have that house homelessness to choose between. It's a no brainer. Anyone can make a house a home, regardless of the history.
 
With the price of rent in Sydney isn't that cheap. No problem with death in the the house, it would be a bigger problem if the daughter got paroled and came back expecting to live there.
My first thought too. I hope she is never released as she is proven mentally deficient and not safe to even be released on strict parole with her history.
 
Way back in the late 1970’s we rented a unit in Melbourne’s outer east while waiting for our new home to be built. There was a stain on the carpet at the front door but we took no notice of it. After we moved in and introduced ourselves to the next door neighbours we were informed that Les Cain had been murdered there and the stain on the carpet was where he had been shot. Apparently the next door neighbour’s kids came out to inform prospective tenants but were out the day we inspected the property so we weren’t aware of the gruesome details. The worst thing was when the trial was on the jurors all came out to see the place it happened at and we had to hear all the horrific details we were unaware of. Luckily our new home was finished soon after and we were able to move out but it was scary while we were there
 
Way back in the late 1970’s we rented a unit in Melbourne’s outer east while waiting for our new home to be built. There was a stain on the carpet at the front door but we took no notice of it. After we moved in and introduced ourselves to the next door neighbours we were informed that Les Cain had been murdered there and the stain on the carpet was where he had been shot. Apparently the next door neighbour’s kids came out to inform prospective tenants but were out the day we inspected the property so we weren’t aware of the gruesome details. The worst thing was when the trial was on the jurors all came out to see the place it happened at and we had to hear all the horrific details we were unaware of. Luckily our new home was finished soon after and we were able to move out but it was scary while we were there
Why was it scary?
 
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It’s just a house…may be different if it was one of your own family that had been killed there. In accordance with the real estate law, the perspective tenants will be told of these details. In Sydney at $530.00 per week, this would be a bargain.
 
It all depends if it is haunted by the deceased or the person that lost there life there did not want to leave. Maybe wait and see with what happens but the rental agreement needs to reflect what happened there. The same now applies that houses that are sold and then re-sold, and then even re-sold again & again. It's exactly like the Gonzalez family at 6 Collins Street, North Ryde NSW. People interstate may not remember what happened here. What the son/brother did to his parents and sister. The story aired again on tv this week. I'm guessing that the house sold cheaper than normal because of what took place there. The other family sold the house and Seth, the son/brother, well he is locked up for life. It is interesting when you actually see someone you knew in the living come back to visit in their own home. I wasn't going to write this but happened to me and saw my aunty, my mum's sister peak her head twice around the main bedroom door. Did it twice within seconds and that was it. Another relative, a cousin spoke to me. He died during WWI aged about 18-19 and he saved my life. There was a criminal hiding inside my aunt's house (his mum and she was still alive). Told me to leave the room immediatelty. That someone very dangerous was hiding in there. I entered the room because I heard a noise. I left the room as he instructed and this criminal stole my mum's handbag but dumped it at a nearby pub minus the cash. Thankfully, left everything else inside the handbag including house keys. I'm guessing that he felt guilty as he saw me with my caliper (leg brace) yet thankful he got a small amount of cash. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sef_Gonzales
 
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Why was it scary?
I had someone come to the front door asking if Les’s wife still lived there. Wouldn’t say why he was looking for her but you don’t cross the underworld and if frightened me because my neighbours said I looked like her. I also had someone trying to get into bathroom window which was where the killers got in. My husband was working in Benalla at the time so I was home alone with 2 pre schoolers and I was really scared they would come back again.
 
I already live with an unexplained presence in my home and have done so now for over 30yrs.
I believe it may be the husbands spirit of the couple who previously owned this house. They were the original owners and had resided here for 40 odd yrs.
I have woken to the feeling of someone standing at the end of my bed staring at me but when the light was turned on there was no one there and all my children were in there beds asleep. I told the presence that it wasn't welcome in my bedroom and if it came back again I would get an exorcism done, it's never been back in my room since.
Each one of my children and grandchildren who have ever slept in the original main bedroom have also reported waking in the middle of the night to see the outline of a man in this room looking at them. They have been taught to say 'Get out of our room or we will tell Mum/Mam on you and she will get rid of you'
The presence never shows itself again.
Occasionally things get shifted around in the house and sometimes you hear footsteps when you're home alone or you're under the house and no one else is upstairs but as it has never tried to harm anyone I leave well enough alone and we have learnt to co-exist.
 
St Clair is in Sydney's west and has a high population in dept housing.

Would I live there ...no . When the daughter gets out I'm pretty sure she will head back there.

I remember our first house we purchased. When we walked in I felt a presence, I asked the agent if it was a deceased estate , he said no that the owner was in a nursing home. As we were looking around I felt someone looking at me and following us. I noticed all these amazing lights on the wall and how many Power Point's there were and I felt it had something to do with what I felt. Again I asked was he sure no one had died in there.

My husband talked me into buying the house even though I felt strange and didn't want to.

We moved in and what I hated the most was when hubby did night shift , he was a shutter for the railway. I would sleep with the hallway light on and would feel someone sitting in my loungeroom but felt they were actually protecting me.

We started talking to the elderly neighbours and they told us that the not the person we purchased the house from but the owner before was an electrician and he was the one who put all the lights abd Power Point's in the house and sadly he was electrocuted in the loungeroom .

If I knew someone was murdered or died in a house I wouldn't buy or rent it .
 
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If given a choice, I also wouldn't step foot anywhere near a house with such a... past. That said, I also agree with the other comments that when faced with no other option, I would.
I already live with an unexplained presence in my home and have done so now for over 30yrs.
I believe it may be the husbands spirit of the couple who previously owned this house. They were the original owners and had resided here for 40 odd yrs.
I have woken to the feeling of someone standing at the end of my bed staring at me but when the light was turned on there was no one there and all my children were in there beds asleep. I told the presence that it wasn't welcome in my bedroom and if it came back again I would get an exorcism done, it's never been back in my room since.
Each one of my children and grandchildren who have ever slept in the original main bedroom have also reported waking in the middle of the night to see the outline of a man in this room looking at them. They have been taught to say 'Get out of our room or we will tell Mum/Mam on you and she will get rid of you'
The presence never shows itself again.
Occasionally things get shifted around in the house and sometimes you hear footsteps when you're home alone or you're under the house and no one else is upstairs but as it has never tried to harm anyone I leave well enough alone and we have learnt to co-exist.

Besides, stories like this one from @PepeLePew give me hope that maybe whatever's in there might see reason! :LOL: 'Help a fella out, will you? Maybe less of the standing at the foot of my bed in the wee hours of the morning?'

St Clair is in Sydney's west and has a high population in dept housing.

Would I live there ...no . When the daughter gets out I'm pretty sure she will head back there.

I remember our first house we purchased. When we walked in I felt a presence, I asked the agent if it was a deceased estate , he said no that the owner was in a nursing home. As we were looking around I felt someone looking at me and following us. I noticed all these amazing lights on the wall and how many Power Point's there were and I felt it had something to do with what I felt. Again I asked was he sure no one had died in there.

My husband talked me into buying the house even though I felt strange and didn't want to.

We moved in and what I hated the most was when hubby did night shift , he was a shutter for the railway. I would sleep with the hallway light on and would feel someone sitting in my loungeroom but felt they were actually protecting me.

We started talking to the elderly neighbours and they told us that the not the person we purchased the house from but the owner before was an electrician and he was the one who put all the lights abd Power Point's in the house and sadly he was electrocuted in the loungeroom .

If I knew someone was murdered or died in a house I wouldn't buy or rent it .

Well this one certainly got the goosebumps back :eek:
 
It all depends if it is haunted by the deceased or the person that lost there life there did not want to leave. Maybe wait and see with what happens but the rental agreement needs to reflect what happened there. The same now applies that houses that are sold and then re-sold, and then even re-sold again & again. It's exactly like the Gonzalez family at 6 Collins Street, North Ryde NSW. People interstate may not remember what happened here. What the son/brother did to his parents and sister. The story aired again on tv this week. I'm guessing that the house sold cheaper than normal because of what took place there. The other family sold the house and Seth, the son/brother, well he is locked up for life. It is interesting when you actually see someone you knew in the living come back to visit in their own home. I wasn't going to write this but happened to me and saw my aunty, my mum's sister peak her head twice around the main bedroom door. Did it twice within seconds and that was it. Another relative, a cousin spoke to me. He died during WWI aged about 18-19 and he saved my life. There was a criminal hiding inside my aunt's house (his mum and she was still alive). Told me to leave the room immediatelty. That someone very dangerous was hiding in there. I entered the room because I heard a noise. I left the room as he instructed and this criminal stole my mum's handbag but dumped it at a nearby pub minus the cash. Thankfully, left everything else inside the handbag including house keys. I'm guessing that he felt guilty as he saw me with my caliper (leg brace) yet thankful he got a small amount of cash. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sef_Gonzales
Another chilling read, thank you @MindyMac! (Also very glad that the thief had a heart despite everything and didn't harm you)
 
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Content warning: This article mentions gruesome descriptions of a crime scene, including decapitation, mutilation, and stabbing. Reader discretion is advised.

It appears as just your typical three-bedroom, one-bathroom home in St Clair. But its past is far from ordinary.

A house that was the scene of a shocking tragedy that left locals shaken has divided the community when deciding whether to rent it out.



A suburban house of horrors where a woman beheaded her mother has gone up for rent for $530 a week. The kitchen has been recently repainted, according to the property listing.

However, that same kitchen was the scene of a horrific crime on July 20, 2019, when Jessica Camilleri launched a brutal attack on her mother, Rita, resulting in the death of the 57-year-old woman.


View attachment 19308
This is the newly repainted kitchen. Credit: Real Estate Australia

According to the details of the case, including the official investigation launched by authorities and police testimonies, Jessica Camilleri stabbed her mother at least 100 times using seven knives in a fit of rage, four of which broke due to the intensity of the attack.

The court heard that an argument broke out between the pair before the attack.

Jessica then decapitated her mother, took her head from the kitchen of the home, and placed it on a footpath outside. She was sitting beside it when authorities arrived at the house.

Meanwhile, Rita Camilleri’s body was found on the kitchen floor near her eyeballs, tongue, and the tip of her nose. She was found with more than 30 defensive wounds on each hand.



The court heard that Jessica asked police at the scene if doctors could work miracles and if they could ‘sew her head back on’.

An officer replied that the request was a ‘bit of a stretch’.

‘So, there’s nothing that can be done to bring her back? She asked Senior Constable Anthony D’Agostino at the time.

The court also discovered that Jessica has severely complex mental disorders, according to a psychiatrist assigned to the case.


View attachment 19309
The home can be rented for $530 per week. Credit: Jessica Lewis Creative/Pexels

David Greenberg, the forensic psychiatrist, said there was no single diagnosis to explain Jessica’s behaviour.

He diagnosed her with a mild intellectual disability, autism spectrum disorder (ASD) that features a fixation on horror movies and figurines, and an intermittent explosive disorder (IED) that led to anger-based impulsive outbursts that are often disproportionate to the provocation.

‘When she reveals macabre details about how she killed her mother ... she doesn't use social gestures in the sense of communicating that. There's a bland lack of emotions on her face when she's discussing these difficult, emotional topics,’ Professor Greenberg told the court at the time.



According to her testimony, Jessica ‘saw red’ when her mum threatened to call on emergency services to put her in a mental institution. She was in a fit of rage as she dragged her mother by her hair down the corridor.

Professor Greenberg told the court that Jessica had the capacity to tell right from wrong during the attack, but her other mental health issues, particularly the IED, made it difficult for her to control herself as her abilities were substantially impaired.

The professor also told the court that Jessica’s fascination with horror movies could have resulted in her learning how to have ‘goal-directed and targeted aggression’.

He also said she might have ‘identified with these macabre acts to deal with disempowerment, low self-concept and poor sense of frustration tolerance’.


View attachment 19310
Jessica pleaded guilty to manslaughter. Image credit: The Seniors Discount Club

After two days of deliberations, the court found Jessica not guilty of murder due to a partial defence of substantial impairment by abnormality of the mind, which led to her loss of control during the attack. She was instead found guilty of manslaughter.

In 2021, Jessica was sentenced to more than 21 years behind bars. Last September, she appealed the length of the sentence in the Court of Criminal Appeal. The verdict will be announced at a later date.



Knowing the gruesome history of the home, the listing for the St Clair property raised eyebrows on social media. Some admitted they wouldn’t be able to live there, while others said the house was just ‘bricks and mortar’ and found the crime irrelevant.

The agent does not mention the property’s history in the listing; however, it says: ‘There is a material fact relevant to the home, which will be disclosed when attending a viewing in accordance with relevant legislations.’

The listing also describes the home as ‘superb’, a ‘rare find’, and that it is ‘inviting from the get-go’.

The house was sold less than a year after the crime was committed in June 2020 and was previously up for lease that same year.

That said, real estate agents are required by law to be upfront about the issues in a property, including if a crime had taken place in the location.

The Real Estate Institute of NSW said: ‘Any information that may influence a decision to buy, sell, rent, or impact a property’s market value needs to be disclosed to potential buyers.’ The organisation also claimed that most properties do get sold eventually, even if it is the ‘scene of a grisly crime’.
Key Takeaways

  • A Sydney rental home – where a daughter brutally killed and decapitated her mother – has been put up for rent again.
  • The home's gruesome past has raised eyebrows on social media, with differing opinions on whether it would affect potential renters.
  • Real estate agents are required by law to disclose any information that may influence a decision to buy, sell, or rent a property, including if a crime was committed there.
  • The Real Estate Institute of NSW mentioned that most properties with negative histories do eventually sell and recommend being honest about any issues affecting the property as early as possible.
In a live poll by Yahoo! News, 55 per cent of survey participants said they wouldn’t live in a house where a crime had been committed. Some 27 per cent said they would.

But we want to know your stance on this, members. Would you dare to rent this house? Let us know your thoughts in the comments!
No I wouldn’t scared it would be haunted😢
 
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Content warning: This article mentions gruesome descriptions of a crime scene, including decapitation, mutilation, and stabbing. Reader discretion is advised.

It appears as just your typical three-bedroom, one-bathroom home in St Clair. But its past is far from ordinary.

A house that was the scene of a shocking tragedy that left locals shaken has divided the community when deciding whether to rent it out.



A suburban house of horrors where a woman beheaded her mother has gone up for rent for $530 a week. The kitchen has been recently repainted, according to the property listing.

However, that same kitchen was the scene of a horrific crime on July 20, 2019, when Jessica Camilleri launched a brutal attack on her mother, Rita, resulting in the death of the 57-year-old woman.


View attachment 19308
This is the newly repainted kitchen. Credit: Real Estate Australia

According to the details of the case, including the official investigation launched by authorities and police testimonies, Jessica Camilleri stabbed her mother at least 100 times using seven knives in a fit of rage, four of which broke due to the intensity of the attack.

The court heard that an argument broke out between the pair before the attack.

Jessica then decapitated her mother, took her head from the kitchen of the home, and placed it on a footpath outside. She was sitting beside it when authorities arrived at the house.

Meanwhile, Rita Camilleri’s body was found on the kitchen floor near her eyeballs, tongue, and the tip of her nose. She was found with more than 30 defensive wounds on each hand.



The court heard that Jessica asked police at the scene if doctors could work miracles and if they could ‘sew her head back on’.

An officer replied that the request was a ‘bit of a stretch’.

‘So, there’s nothing that can be done to bring her back? She asked Senior Constable Anthony D’Agostino at the time.

The court also discovered that Jessica has severely complex mental disorders, according to a psychiatrist assigned to the case.


View attachment 19309
The home can be rented for $530 per week. Credit: Jessica Lewis Creative/Pexels

David Greenberg, the forensic psychiatrist, said there was no single diagnosis to explain Jessica’s behaviour.

He diagnosed her with a mild intellectual disability, autism spectrum disorder (ASD) that features a fixation on horror movies and figurines, and an intermittent explosive disorder (IED) that led to anger-based impulsive outbursts that are often disproportionate to the provocation.

‘When she reveals macabre details about how she killed her mother ... she doesn't use social gestures in the sense of communicating that. There's a bland lack of emotions on her face when she's discussing these difficult, emotional topics,’ Professor Greenberg told the court at the time.



According to her testimony, Jessica ‘saw red’ when her mum threatened to call on emergency services to put her in a mental institution. She was in a fit of rage as she dragged her mother by her hair down the corridor.

Professor Greenberg told the court that Jessica had the capacity to tell right from wrong during the attack, but her other mental health issues, particularly the IED, made it difficult for her to control herself as her abilities were substantially impaired.

The professor also told the court that Jessica’s fascination with horror movies could have resulted in her learning how to have ‘goal-directed and targeted aggression’.

He also said she might have ‘identified with these macabre acts to deal with disempowerment, low self-concept and poor sense of frustration tolerance’.


View attachment 19310
Jessica pleaded guilty to manslaughter. Image credit: The Seniors Discount Club

After two days of deliberations, the court found Jessica not guilty of murder due to a partial defence of substantial impairment by abnormality of the mind, which led to her loss of control during the attack. She was instead found guilty of manslaughter.

In 2021, Jessica was sentenced to more than 21 years behind bars. Last September, she appealed the length of the sentence in the Court of Criminal Appeal. The verdict will be announced at a later date.



Knowing the gruesome history of the home, the listing for the St Clair property raised eyebrows on social media. Some admitted they wouldn’t be able to live there, while others said the house was just ‘bricks and mortar’ and found the crime irrelevant.

The agent does not mention the property’s history in the listing; however, it says: ‘There is a material fact relevant to the home, which will be disclosed when attending a viewing in accordance with relevant legislations.’

The listing also describes the home as ‘superb’, a ‘rare find’, and that it is ‘inviting from the get-go’.

The house was sold less than a year after the crime was committed in June 2020 and was previously up for lease that same year.

That said, real estate agents are required by law to be upfront about the issues in a property, including if a crime had taken place in the location.

The Real Estate Institute of NSW said: ‘Any information that may influence a decision to buy, sell, rent, or impact a property’s market value needs to be disclosed to potential buyers.’ The organisation also claimed that most properties do get sold eventually, even if it is the ‘scene of a grisly crime’.
Key Takeaways

  • A Sydney rental home – where a daughter brutally killed and decapitated her mother – has been put up for rent again.
  • The home's gruesome past has raised eyebrows on social media, with differing opinions on whether it would affect potential renters.
  • Real estate agents are required by law to disclose any information that may influence a decision to buy, sell, or rent a property, including if a crime was committed there.
  • The Real Estate Institute of NSW mentioned that most properties with negative histories do eventually sell and recommend being honest about any issues affecting the property as early as possible.
In a live poll by Yahoo! News, 55 per cent of survey participants said they wouldn’t live in a house where a crime had been committed. Some 27 per cent said they would.

But we want to know your stance on this, members. Would you dare to rent this house? Let us know your thoughts in the comments!
starting to get like the USA.........
 

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