For a California couple. living in American Horror Story’s Murder House has become a real-life nightmare.
Ernst Von Schwarz and Angela Oakenfold bought the Rosenheim Mansion — which was featured in the first season of FX’s hit show — in 2014 for $3.2 million, but no one told them it was haunted by hoards of unwelcome visitors.
The homeowners claim that hundreds of fans turn up at the property daily to take photos, often trespassing on the plot and occasionally forcing their way into the famous home, according to a CBS report.
Related: 7 Haunted Hotels That Will Totally Give You the Creeps
“We have had several break-ins.
Ernst Von Schwarz and Angela Oakenfold bought the Rosenheim Mansion — which was featured in the first season of FX’s hit show — in 2014 for $3.2 million, but no one told them it was haunted by hoards of unwelcome visitors.
The homeowners claim that hundreds of fans turn up at the property daily to take photos, often trespassing on the plot and occasionally forcing their way into the famous home, according to a CBS report.
Related: 7 Haunted Hotels That Will Totally Give You the Creeps
“We have had several break-ins.
- 2/13/2018
- by Mackenzie Schmidt
- PEOPLE.com
The owners of the famed Los Angeles mansion where "American Horror Story" shot its first season say they got sold a bill of haunted goods, and now they're suing ... a ghost ... so to speak. The Rosenheim mansion hosted Ryan Murphy, Connie Britton, Sarah Paulson and the rest of the cast of 'Ahs' when they shot the "Murder House" season back in 2011. Cut to 2014, when Ernst Von Schwarz and Angela Oakenfold purchased the mansion for $3.2 million.
- 2/13/2018
- by TMZ Staff
- TMZ
It wasn’t until after the first season of “American Horror Story” aired that those first 12 episodes became known as “Murder House,” but the title fits. The (in)famous Los Angeles home where Connie Britton, Dylan McDermott, and Taissa Farmiga lived is currently occupied by a couple who moved in in 2015 — but weren’t told of its involvement in the anthology series. That’s according to a lawsuit they’ve filed against the brokers, reports the Real Deal, and they’re none too pleased with the situation.
In addition to complaining about the “significant nuisance” of “AHS” fans attempting to trespass on a “weekly” basis, actress Angela Oakenfold and cardiologist Ernest von Schwarz have an even spookier problem with the Rosenheim mansion: “The seller and brokers failed to mention the house was haunted by two ghosts, a point that was not included in the complaint,” according to the Real Deal.
In addition to complaining about the “significant nuisance” of “AHS” fans attempting to trespass on a “weekly” basis, actress Angela Oakenfold and cardiologist Ernest von Schwarz have an even spookier problem with the Rosenheim mansion: “The seller and brokers failed to mention the house was haunted by two ghosts, a point that was not included in the complaint,” according to the Real Deal.
- 2/10/2018
- by Michael Nordine
- Indiewire
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