Columbus double homicide, lack of info shakes Weinland Park community

Monique and Spencer Tepe shot and killed
Monique Tepe, 39, and Spencer Tepe, 37, were found dead Dec. 30 at their residence in the 1400 block of North 4th Street in Columbus’ Weinland Park neighborhood. Their two children were unharmed.
Residents in Columbus’ Weinland Park say they are frightened by a lack of information or arrests in a double homicide that left an Athens dentist and his wife dead.
The neighbors say they don’t know why Spencer Tepe, 37, and Monique Tepe, 39, were apparently gunned down in their home on the 1400 block of North 4th Street, and that scares them.
Columbus police have not cited a motive or named any suspects in the couple’s death. They were found the morning of Dec. 30 after coworkers and at least one friend called police, saying Spencer, a dentist at the Athens Dental Depot, had not come to work or answered his phone.
The friends and coworkers went to the couple’s house at about 10 a.m. that morning after a Columbus police officer conducted a well-being check and got no answer at the front or back doors.
Police returned when one of the coworkers called, saying they could hear children inside, and a friend called 911, saying he had found Spencer’s body. The couple’s two children were found in the home when police returned.
Columbus police spokeswoman Nicole Jaros said Jan. 2 police had no updates to share. The division released a QR code that allows people living near the shooting site to submit footage from security and doorbell cameras. Police said they are specifically seeking footage captured in the area bordered by Summit Street, North Grant Avenue, East 7th Avenue and East 11th Avenue between 12 a.m. and 9 a.m.
Tiara Ross, the Columbus City Council member who represents Weinland Park and other central areas of the city, said Jan. 2 she had not been briefed on the shooting.
A spokesperson for Mayor Andrew Ginther’s office, which in recent days has touted its lower homicide rates in 2025, said they had no additional comment on the ongoing investigation.
Council President Shannon Hardin and member Emmanuel Remy issued a joint statement the afternoon of Jan. 2 expressing their shock over the Tepes’ deaths.
“Acts of violence like this shake our sense of safety, and we know CPD is working hard to investigate this crime and hold those responsible accountable,” the statement says. “Columbus remains committed to the safety of every neighborhood, and we will continue to invest in prevention, support for victims and community-based safety efforts.”
Tepe neighbor: ‘They were such nice people”
A couple who live near the Tepes’ home spoke to the Dispatch on the condition of anonymity because they are afraid of the suspects who remain at large. The woman said she has not been able to sleep since the shooting.
“I just think, why them and not us?” the woman said.
She added that her and her husband’s home has never been broken into, nor have their cars. She said she takes the ordinary precautions that come with living in a downtown area — she doesn’t leave her purse in her car or walk alone very late at night, but before the Tepes were killed, she felt safe.
The woman and her husband said they knew the Tepes because their children played together, and their daughters attended the same daycare. The Tepes had a boy about a year old and a girl about four.
The Tepes were very ordinary, their neighbors said. The woman who spoke to the Dispatch anonymously said they threw one party in the time they lived on the block — and she later found out it was their wedding, a small COVID-era affair they held at their home in 2021.
Neighbors said the Weinland Park neighborhood has transformed over the past few years. They said the area used to be fairly high-crime, although they rarely worried about random violence.
Now, apartment complexes that were boarded up have been revitalized, and high-end new homes have been built, said Chris Micciche, who moved a few houses down from the Tepes’ home in 2014.
“When I would drive past them, they were always waving and really friendly, and their kids would play in the back alley with the neighbors,” Micciche said of the couple.
Micciche said he was never worried by the violence in the Weinland Park neighborhood because it often involved the drug trade, but the details of the Tepes’ death trouble him.
None of the neighbors who spoke to the Dispatch heard anything before the Tepes were found dead.
“I hear gunshots all the time,” Micciche said. “I heard nothing that night or the morning of.”
The neighbors said they hope police quickly find who killed the couple.
“They were such nice people,” said the woman who spoke to the Dispatch anonymously.
Columbus officials are asking anyone with information about the killings to contact the Columbus Police Homicide Unit at (614) 645-4730. Columbus police have also asked anyone with relevant video to submit it by using the QR code below.
Public Safety and Breaking News Reporter Bailey Gallion can be reached at [email protected].




