Idaho House Infested With Snakes, Ex-residents Say

Snake House

First Posted: 06/15/11 08:52 AM ET Updated: 11/15/11 05:42 AM ET

REXBURG, Idaho (AP) -- They slithered behind the walls at night and released foul-smelling musk into the drinking water. And they were so numerous that Ben Sessions once killed 42 in a single day.

Shortly after buying their dream home, Sessions and his wife discovered it was infested with thousands of garter snakes. For the next three months, their growing family lived as if in a horror movie. More than a year after they abandoned the property, the home briefly went back on the market, and they fear it could someday attract another unsuspecting buyer.

The five-bedroom house stands on nearly two pastoral acres in rural Idaho, about 125 miles southwest of Yellowstone National Park. Priced at less than $180,000, it seemed like a steal.

But the young couple soon learned they would be sharing the home with reptiles at least two feet long that had crawled into seemingly every crevice.



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While setting up a chicken coop, Sessions lifted a piece of sheet metal and was startled to see a pair of snakes slither away. A few days later, he found more and soon started to collect dozens in buckets. At times, there were so many in the yard that the grass seemed to move.

If he rapped a stick against the roof overhang, he could hear dozens scatter, their scales sliding against the aluminum. After he removed some panels of siding, dozens of snakes popped out. When he made his way through the crawl space to investigate further, he found snakes everywhere.

That's when he realized his family was probably living atop a garter snake den where the nonpoisonous reptiles congregate in the fall and winter.

Sessions quickly developed a daily snake-fighting routine. Before his pregnant wife and two small boys got out of bed, he would do a "morning sweep" through the house to make sure none of the snakes had gotten inside. One day, his wife screamed from the laundry room, where she had almost stepped on one. He rushed in to find that she had jumped onto a counter.

"I was terrified she was going to miscarry," he said.

When they bought the house, the Sessions signed a document that noted the snake infestation. They said they had been assured by their real estate agent that the snakes were just a story invented by the previous owners to leave their mortgage behind.

They soon learned that nearly everyone else in this tiny college town knew the snakes were real.

"I felt bad," said Dustin Chambers, a neighbor. "By the time we knew someone had bought it, they were already moving in. It was too late."

Among locals, the property is known simply as the "snake house," he added.

The pests were impossible to escape no matter the hour of the day.

At night, the Sessions would lie awake and listen to slithering inside the walls. During the day, the family often had to eat out because their well water smelled like the musk released by the snakes as a warning to predators.

But because of the paperwork they had signed, the couple had little recourse when they decided to flee the home. They filed for bankruptcy, and the bank foreclosed on the house.

The Sessions left in December 2009, the day after their daughter was born and just three months after moving in.

"We're not going to pay for a house full of snakes," Sessions said.

His wife, Amber, said she felt like their family was starting to fall apart.

"It was just so stressful," she said. "It felt like we were living in Satan's lair. That's the only way to really explain it."

Several months ago, the house briefly went back on the market.

Now owned by JP Morgan Chase, it was listed at $114,900 in December, according to Zillow.com, a real estate data firm. That price fell to $109,200 in January.

Then, the Animal Planet network featured the Sessions' story in its "Infested" series.

The listing was removed, and it has stayed off the market while Chase decides what to do with it.

A Rexburg real estate company that was hired to sell the house referred all questions to a Chase spokeswoman in Seattle.

Darcy Donahoe-Wilmot did not return repeated phone calls from The Associated Press. But she told a business columnist for Dow Jones Newswires that the bank had contracted to have the snakes trapped and released elsewhere.

Sessions said that he has been diagnosed with snake-related post-traumatic stress disorder and that the house should be condemned.

"It's not right to continue to sell this home," Sessions said. He and his wife said they still have nightmares and have not recovered financially.

The home was probably built on top of a winter snake den or hibernaculum, where snakes gather in large numbers to hibernate, said Rob Cavallaro, a wildlife biologist with the Idaho Department of Fish and Game.

In the spring and summer, the reptiles fan out across the wilds of southeastern Idaho to feed and breed. But as the days get shorter and cooler, they return to the den in search of warmth.

In 2007, another couple named Neal and Denise Ard sued the couple who sold them the home and the real estate agent who negotiated the $189,900 deal. The complaint was dismissed a year later.

Since the Sessions moved out, other people have looked at the house. One day, when a real estate agent was showing the property, a farmer who lives down the road stopped by to warn them, Chambers said.

"Now, if anybody sees anybody, they kind of will let them know," he said. "Just so that somebody else doesn't get caught in the same trap."

___

Jessie L. Bonner can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/jessiebonner

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REXBURG, Idaho (AP) -- They slithered behind the walls at night and released foul-smelling musk into the drinking water. And they were so numerous that Ben Sessions once killed 42 in a single day. ...
REXBURG, Idaho (AP) -- They slithered behind the walls at night and released foul-smelling musk into the drinking water. And they were so numerous that Ben Sessions once killed 42 in a single day. ...
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01:21 PM on 07/24/2011
pour gas on the snakes and the house and light a match, kill the snakes and destroy the house
06:25 PM on 07/22/2011
We had a situation similar to this in my town except it wasn't snakes, it was Brown Recluse Spiders, millions and millions of them. The people that were renting it at the time had moved a piece of the ceiling in the basement and millions of them came pouring out onto him. They moved that day. The owner of the house had it burnt down by the fire department the day after that.
This house should be burnt to the ground. No one else will be deceived by the agent again.
05:34 PM on 06/22/2011
Reporters please, please check your grammar. The family's last name is Sessions. When you discuss the husband and wife together, write Sessionses (more than one Sessions). Their last name ends in 's'. You have to add 'es' to make it plural (more than one Sessions). Incorrect: When they bought the house, the Sessions signed a document... Correct: When they bought the house, the Sessionses signed a document... I know that's not the point of the story, but I mourn the death of proper grammar.
06:41 PM on 06/30/2011
It is actually Sessions' with an apostrophe just after the s.
02:07 PM on 06/20/2011
the cure for the house is...... mothballs and cats the snakes will leave, put them in the attic house basement and cover the yard with moth balls. keep cats at least 2 6 months to 1 year old cats catch snakes.
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04:44 PM on 06/17/2011
they are tearing down far more expensive homes in Michigan than this one, and those are in perfect shape. And entire neighborhood is being torn down there because of all the people abandoned their homes due to the recession. So just tear this tiny little snake infested home down. Whats the big deal? It doesn't seem to be a big deal in Michigan. and they are destroying entire neighborhoods with multimillion dollar homes on the lots.
06:02 PM on 06/16/2011
They should call Samuel L. Jackson, cause he'd get rid of those m*********ng snakes in that m**********ng house!!!!!!!!!!
05:29 PM on 06/16/2011
No home inspection huh? Just another case of those totally unqualified to be making this kind of financial decision doing so all smiles and giggles and getting the screws put to them. The sheeple will never learn. Before you do something of this magnitude do the research and understand what it is your doing and what your rights and responsibilities are. Pathetic.
03:48 PM on 06/16/2011
I guess this couple did not get a home inspection either ??? Obviously they should have ...
If I was signing the morgage papers and there was a notation about the snakes ,,a home inspection would have proved or disproved that there was a infestion !!! And as far as having
PTS disorder , if they were that afraid of snakes why did they even move in . I just don't get it
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Freenation
04:52 PM on 06/15/2011
Full fault of homeowners they probably thought they will win over the snakes and were getting a bargain price too bad they lost...now suing previous owners is desperation; this is what inspections are for...
03:39 PM on 06/15/2011
But the house is mouse-free.
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03:36 PM on 06/15/2011
Hard to feel sorry for someone who read & signed the paper. Why didn't they talk to neighbors & do a little homework before committing to buy? duh
garystartswithg
el sueno de la razon produce republicans
03:41 PM on 06/15/2011
sorry, hard to blame the victim when the realator knew what was up. never met a realator that wasn't creepy. they make used car salemen look like saints. of course being smart and liking the fact i can pick up and move on a whim keeps me a renter.
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12:12 PM on 06/16/2011
again... this is what home inspections are for... most lenders require inspections.
05:57 PM on 06/16/2011
Yeah, the realtor has some share of fault in this, but would YOU sign a paper telling you that you knew you were buying a house infested with snakes and that you accept ALL responsibility for that and won't hold the realtor or bank responsible? I mean seriously. Stupid is as stupid does, the blame mostly goes on the moron who bought the house under those conditions/circumstances.
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darquelourd
You Get What You Play For
03:22 PM on 06/15/2011
Reality Show!

that aside "Satan's lair"? these people!
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babybelle
PureBread Mutt LOL
03:08 PM on 06/15/2011
I saw the show on Animal Planet and it was really disgusting.
I don't blame the people for moving out and filing bankruptcy.
I hope Animal Planet paid them well for their story.
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maribelles
Gopala Gopala Devakinandana Gopala
03:03 PM on 06/15/2011
The headline should say "House Infested with Snakes, and We Knew About it, Signed a document Saying We Knew, And Bought it Anyway."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sliceman
03:09 PM on 06/15/2011
Exactly. Just like the poor "victims" who took out mortgages they knew they could not afford.
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darquelourd
You Get What You Play For
03:23 PM on 06/15/2011
garter snakes at that - dang wussies
01:12 PM on 07/24/2011
wussies not really. The smell from the snakes musk is gross,also they carry saminela and other bacteria that can make the kids sick.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
satanlite
If ur neibor wtchs Fox Nws wtch ur neibor
03:03 PM on 06/15/2011
Oddly enough, regulations may have prevented building on a piece of land classified as a hibernaculum and saved a bunch of people a lot of money. Oh those pesky, pointless regulations.
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darquelourd
You Get What You Play For
03:23 PM on 06/15/2011
extra points for use of the word "hibernaculum"
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
satanlite
If ur neibor wtchs Fox Nws wtch ur neibor
03:29 PM on 06/15/2011
lol ... can't take 'em. It was used in the article.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LLovejoy
Secular Humanist
04:23 PM on 06/15/2011
I agree. This problem will be ongoing. The house should be destroyed and the land deemed unusable.
01:15 PM on 07/24/2011
strongly agree with you. These snakes are born here,so it is naturaly for them to return seasonaly.