For two years, Kathy Rowe and her husband John searched around San Diego's upscale Carmel Valley for a one-story home that would fit the growing needs of their severely disabled teenaged daughter, now 16 years old. "I was having to carry her up and down the stairs and she was getting heavier," Rowe tells People exclusively. "It is okay to carry someone when they are 40 or 50 pounds, but when they get to 100 pounds it is hard. I threw my shoulder out. So we needed a one-story." Rowe says she "easily went to 100 open houses" before she finally found her dream home...
- 2/14/2015
- by Christine Pelisek, @chrispelisek
- PEOPLE.com
Strange things were happening on Lone Cypress Place. Crista Hubbard had been living on the street in San Diego's upscale Carmel Valley for 13 years when she received a disturbing, official-looking letter in the mail, informing neighbors that a sex offender had moved into their tiny, picturesque cul-de-sac. "It came on what looked like official letterhead," Hubbard tells People exclusively. "I have four kids here. I did go on and look at the sex offender registry. There were no big red flags on my street." It turned out it was just one of a long list of many torments inflicted by Kathy Rowe,...
- 2/13/2015
- by Christine Pelisek, @chrispelisek
- PEOPLE.com
The house seemed to have everything a growing family could want. Located in an upscale suburb, the Spanish-style home featured a huge backyard and a school right up the street. When it went on the market in 2011, Janice Ruhter and husband Jerry Rice were one of eight families who bid on the property. When they won, they were elated. But their happiness soon turned to terror as unexplained things began to happen. The house was placed for sale on real estate websites. Dozens of traveling missionaries knocked on their front door. Their mail was stopped. Neighbors received bizarre valentines from Rice.
- 2/11/2015
- by Christine Pelisek, @chrispelisek
- PEOPLE.com
The house seemed to have everything a growing family could want. Located in an upscale suburb, the Spanish-style home featured a huge backyard and a school right up the street. When it went on the market in 2011, Janice Ruhter and husband Jerry Rice were one of eight families who bid on the property. When they won, they were elated. But their happiness soon turned to terror as unexplained things began to happen. The house was placed for sale on real estate websites. Dozens of traveling missionaries knocked on their front door. Their mail was stopped. Neighbors received bizarre valentines from Ruhter.
- 2/11/2015
- by Christine Pelisek, @chrispelisek
- PEOPLE.com
Soon after Jerry Rice and Janice Ruhter bought their dream home in San Diego's upscale Carmel Valley in the fall of 2011, bizarre things started happening. Their home was mysteriously listed for sale on the Internet, their mail suddenly stopped over Christmas, and they were inundated with over $1,000 worth of magazines and books they had not ordered. On Valentine's Day, an angry neighbor confronted Rice, asking him why he was sending a Valentine's Day card to his wife. At least eight of his neighbors' wives received similar cards. Then, Rice typed his wife's name into an Internet search engine and discovered...
- 1/13/2015
- by Christine Pelisek, @cpelisek
- PEOPLE.com
Soon after Jerry Rice and Janice Ruhter bought their dream home in San Diego's upscale Carmel Valley in the fall of 2011, bizarre things started happening. Their home was mysteriously listed for sale on the Internet, their mail suddenly stopped over Christmas, and they were inundated with over $1,000 worth of magazines and books they had not ordered. On Valentine's Day, an angry neighbor confronted Rice, asking him why he was sending a Valentine's Day card to his wife. At least eight of his neighbor's wives received similar cards. Then, Rice typed his wife's name into an Internet search engine and discovered...
- 1/13/2015
- by Christine Pelisek, @cpelisek
- PEOPLE.com
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