Amid speculations and investigations about the Boston Marathon bombings, the home of suspect Tamerlan Tsarnaev, in North Kingstown, Washington, has been put on the open listing market for sale with a price tag of $467,000.
According to the Providence Journal, the home belongs to Katherine Russell, who was married to Tsarnaev. Russell has a three-year-old daughter with Tsarnaev. The home's listing lies with RILiving real estate.
Located at 10 Coriander Lane in North Kingstown, the home is a single family residence, spread across an area of 3090 square feet. Sitting on a 32,278 square feet lot, the colonial style residence has three bedrooms and two full and one half bathroom. The place has hardwood, ceramic and carpeted floors and cathedral vaulted ceilings as well.
The home has nine rooms, which include a hall/ living room, a dining room, a recreation room, a library, a family room and a laundry as well. Outside, the house has a small patch of green and two covered parking spaces.
"We've been working on the listing for a number of weeks and the listing went live on Friday," Ian Iannuccilli, agent at Re/Max Professionals of East Greenwich said to the Providence Journal.
Check out the photos of the home, here.
While it is entirely impossible to determine if the home will have any luck selling, investigations are on full swing about the brothers who planted the deadly explosives. While older Tsarnaev was killed in a violent gun-fight with the police on April 19, the younger Tsarnaev is being treated in hospital for a bullet he took in his throat. The injury is making investigation difficult and delaying a potential breakthrough in the case, reports The Guardian.
While the whole country is shaken and can only feel anger for the two brothers, their mother, Zubeidat Tsarnaev is allegedly claiming that this was a "set-up" and that her sons are innocent. She also claims that her older son, Tamerlan was controlled by the FBI for long, reports BBC.
Check out some of the biggest unanswered questions over the Boston Marathon bombings, here.