Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania home linked to “The Lost Boys of Bucks County” for sale
A house with a haunting connection to an notorious crime in Bucks County was quietly put up on the market this month.
Driving the information: The 2827 Aquetong Highway dwelling, which is listed for $700,000, is the place authorities found a Nissan Sentra belonging to Thomas Meo, one in every of 4 males who went lacking in July 2017 and had been later found buried in makeshift graves on a farm close by, in line with police information and Google Maps.
Flashback: The brutal crime drew nationwide consideration and was chronicled in a true-crime documentary referred to as “The Misplaced Boys of Bucks County.”
- Bensalem resident Cosmo DiNardo pleaded responsible to the 4 murders and is serving 4 consecutive life sentences whereas his cousin, Scott Kratz, of Philadelphia, was discovered responsible of first-degree homicide and voluntary manslaughter in three of the boys’s deaths and is serving a life sentence.
Particulars: The 1,528-square foot dwelling at 2827 Aquetong Highway was beforehand owned by DiNardo’s mother and father, and bought to Gina DiNardo for $1 in December 2021, Bucks County property information present.
- Gina DiNardo is a member of the identical RE/MAX Aspire crew because the realtor, Tony Esposito, dealing with the itemizing.
- Esposito declined to reply Axios’ questions concerning the property’s historical past. Neither Gina nor Sandra DiNardo, Cosmo’s mom, might be reached for remark at listed numbers.
Between the traces: Police discovered Meo’s automotive title and keys hanging on the house’s storage wall, in line with police information. However the vendor would not should reveal any of that to potential patrons, as a result of solely “identified materials defects” are required to be disclosed beneath Pennsylvania regulation.
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