Idaho
Do national housing market trends signal possible Idaho slowdown?
Idaho (KMVT/KSVT) — Nationwide actual property specialists are seeing the primary indicators of a slowdown within the housing market, however that doesn’t fairly imply it’s a purchaser’s market simply but.
“Practically 25% of houses nonetheless bought instantly,” mentioned Mark Johnson with JPAR Actual Property. “That’s down from 33%, so my analogy is we had been touring about 125 miles per hour, now we’re simply going 100 miles per hour.”
With the market slowing down from a file tempo, Johnson says he’s not pointing to a change in demand, particularly in locations like Idaho, the place inhabitants development has but to return to pre-pandemic ranges.
As a substitute, he’s pointing to 1 nationwide development that could be inflicting the slowed market.
“We’re growing stock by 4-6% each week, and I anticipate that may occur via the top of summer time,” mentioned Johnson.
Johnson says a leveling off, or dip, within the housing market, can be sustainable with a extra saturated market, with extra homes out there on the market.
In southern Idaho, every thing is bought or reserved earlier than development is even completed. So what must occur right here within the Magic Valley to see one thing like that happen?
“New development,” mentioned Lisa Haney with 208 Actual Property. “I feel they’re lastly beginning to catch up. I do know builders would give up taking orders for brand spanking new construct jobs as a result of they couldn’t sustain. I feel we’re lastly beginning to see slightly extra saturation in each of these markets.”
Haney tells me she has not seen the sorts of stock will increase Johnson is referencing, however I requested if she believes the market will decelerate within the foreseeable future.
“I feel it should, however I feel it’s correction,” Haney mentioned.
As a long-time Magic Valley realtor and resident, Haney says she is hoping for a correction, saying she believes the realm’s locals deserve it.
“I feel the worst factor concerning the final yr and a half is lots of people who work right here have lived up right here and grown up right here their entire life have been priced out of the market,” she mentioned.
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Idaho
Obituary for Betty Pearl Day at Eckersell Funeral Home
Idaho
U of Idaho murder suspect Bryan Kohberger investigated in 2nd home invasion attack
Idaho
Bryan Kohberger investigated over nearby home invasion year before alleged slayings of 4 University of Idaho students
Idaho murder suspect Bryan Kohberger was once investigated in connection to a chilling home invasion that took place mere miles from where he allegedly slaughtered four college students inside their off-campus housing in 2022, according to a new report.
New information about the accused killer comes after ABC News obtained bodycam footage of police responding to a suspected home invasion in nearby Pullman, Wash., in October 2021 — more than a year before the University of Idaho students were stabbed to death.
“I heard my door open and I looked over, and someone was wearing a ski mask and had a knife,” a frightened woman told police.
“I kicked the s–t out of their stomach and screamed super loud, and they like flew back into my closet and then ran out my door and up the stairs.”
The alleged incident — which took place just 10 miles from the gruesome slayings in Moscow, Idaho — happened at 3:30 a.m., the woman told police, adding that the masked intruder was silent the whole time.
Her roommate immediately called the police, the outlet reported, but the case was left unsolved as police were left without a suspect or evidence at the time.
The terrifying incident shared eerie similarities with the gruesome quadruple University of Idaho murders.
Kohberger, 29, is accused of butchering students Ethan Chapin, 20, Xana Kernodle, 20, Kaylee Goncalves, 21, and Madison Mogen, 21, around 4 a.m. inside their off-campus house on Nov. 13, 2022.
A surviving housemate later told police she saw a masked man with “bushy eyebrows” fleeing the house after overhearing cries and sounds of a struggle.
Kohberger, a criminology Ph.D. student at Washington State University, was arrested at his parents’ Pennsylvania home on Dec. 30 and charged with four counts of first-degree murder and one count of burglary — charges he has since pleaded not guilty.
Thirteen days later he was named a person of interest in the Pullman case, ABC reported, but is no longer considered a suspect.
“We have no reason or evidence to believe he was involved in this burglary at this time,” Pullman police told the outlet, citing a height difference between the alleged attackers.
While Kohberger is 6 feet tall, the alleged attacker in the Pullman incident was described as being 5’3′ to 5’5′. The accused stabber was also not yet enrolled at Washington State University at the time of the 2021 incident, the outlet reported.
The case is now closed but remains unsolved, police said.
“My family and I have been frustrated that the case was not investigated more in-depth or resolved,” the victim in the break-in told the outlet.
Kohberger’s highly anticipated trial is slated to begin in August and last through November.
The lengthy trial, which was moved to Idaho’s capital of Boise, will include two phases — one to determine his guilt or innocence, and the other, if he’s found guilty, to determine whether he should receive the death penalty.
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