SO HEARTBREAKING: The “Death House” of slain dentist couple Spencer and Monique Tepe hits Zillow with a SHOCKING price tag; Realtor reveals gut-wrenching details from the bedroom where the couple’s bodies were discovered next to their two sobbing young children
The real estate market in Columbus, Ohio, is no stranger to high-value listings, but a recent entry on North 4th Street has sent a shiver through the local community and social media circles. Listed at $775,000, the beautifully renovated home in the Weinland Park neighborhood appears, at first glance, to be a dream property. However, for those who follow the news, the address—1411 N. 4th St.—is synonymous with one of the most chilling tragedies in recent Ohio history: the double homicide of Spencer and Monique Tepe.
As the listing hit the market in mid-March 2026, it didn’t take long for internet sleuths and local residents to connect the dots. The “death house,” as some have dubbed it on platforms like Reddit and TikTok, is being sold less than three months after the couple was found brutally murdered inside. The contrast between the bright, professional real estate photos and the dark reality of what occurred within those walls has sparked a heated debate about ethics, psychological “stigma” in real estate, and the sheer horror of the crime itself.

The Tragedy Within
The story began on the morning of December 30, 2025. Spencer Tepe, a 37-year-old respected dentist, failed to show up for work at his clinic. Concerned colleagues called for a welfare check. When officers finally entered the home, they discovered a scene of unimaginable violence. Spencer and his wife, Monique Tepe, 39, had been shot multiple times. Autopsy reports later revealed the sheer brutality of the attack: Monique sustained nine gunshot wounds, while Spencer was shot seven times.
What made the story truly haunt the public consciousness was the presence of the couple’s two young children—a 4-year-old girl and a 1-year-old boy. The children, along with the family’s Goldendoodle, were found physically unharmed inside the house, having spent hours alone in the residence with the bodies of their parents.
The investigation quickly shifted toward Monique’s ex-husband, Michael David McKee, a 39-year-old surgeon from Chicago. Surveillance footage captured a figure, later identified as McKee, walking through an alley near the home during the early morning hours of the murders. He was arrested in January 2026 and now faces multiple counts of aggravated murder. The motive, while still being parsed in court, appears rooted in a long-standing and toxic grudge—a “homicidal obsession” that turned a family home into a crime scene.
The Listing That Sparked a Firestorm
Now, the same house where the Tepes exchanged their wedding vows just five years ago is up for sale. The price tag of $775,000 reflects the gentrification of Weinland Park, but social media users are finding it difficult to look past the floor plans.
On local Facebook groups and real estate forums, the discussion is visceral. One user commented, “I can’t imagine standing in that kitchen knowing what happened upstairs. No amount of granite countertops can wash away that history.” Another noted the specific horror of the bedroom: “The reports say they were found in an upstairs bedroom. Every time you’d go to sleep, you’d be lying in the exact spot where a tragedy unfolded while children were in the next room. It’s haunting.”
The “haunted” reputation of the house isn’t about ghosts in the traditional sense, but about the “psychological impact” that stays with a structure. In real estate law, a house where a high-profile murder occurred is considered a “stigmatized property.” While Ohio law does not strictly require sellers to disclose a suicide or murder unless it affects the physical condition of the property, the notoriety of the Tepe case makes it impossible to hide.



Public Fear and Social Media Morbidity
The digital age has changed how we view such properties. Within hours of the house being listed, “Zillow Gone Wild” style commentary began to circulate. Some users expressed sympathy for the family, noting that the sale is likely necessary to provide for the orphaned children’s future. However, a larger portion of the online discourse focused on the “dark energy” of the home.
True crime enthusiasts have dissected the crime scene photos from news archives and compared them to the current listing. “You can see the same windows where the police looked in for the welfare check,” one TikTok creator pointed out in a viral video. This “digital haunting” ensures that any potential buyer will be well aware of the home’s past.
The fear expressed by many isn’t just about the crime itself, but the lingering “vibe” of a home that saw such concentrated malice. The fact that the suspect was a surgeon—someone sworn to save lives—who allegedly traveled across state lines to commit the act, adds a layer of clinical horror to the narrative.
The Ethics of the Sale
For the real estate agent and the estate, the sale represents a difficult balancing act. On one hand, the property is a valuable asset in a growing neighborhood. On the other, it is a monument to a massacre.
Experts in the field note that houses with such histories usually sell for 10% to 25% less than market value and take longer to move. “Someone will buy it,” says a local real estate analyst. “Usually, it’s someone from out of town who isn’t plugged into the local news, or someone who simply doesn’t believe in ‘bad energy.’ But for the neighbors who heard the sirens that morning, that house will always be the Tepe house.”

A Neighborhood in Mourning
In Weinland Park, the house stands as a silent reminder of a loss that shattered the community. Flowers and memorials had lined the sidewalk for weeks after the murders. Now, those flowers have been replaced by a “For Sale” sign.
For the people of Columbus, the $775,000 price tag feels like a cold ending to a story that was full of warmth and life before December 30. Spencer and Monique were described by friends as “extraordinary people” who built a home filled with “joy and deep connection.” The tragedy is that their sanctuary was turned into a prison of fear in a single night.
As the legal battle against Michael McKee continues, the house on North 4th Street remains a focal point of public fascination. Whether it becomes a home for a new family or remains a “dead” listing on the market, the shadow of the Tepe tragedy is unlikely to fade anytime soon. For now, the internet continues to watch, discuss, and shudder at the thought of what lies behind the front door of the $775,000 house in Weinland Park.