Moving in with friends sounds like a dream… until it isn’t. The roommate honeymoon period often ends the moment a Significant Other, one who isn’t on the lease, starts leaving their toothbrush (and then their laundry, and then their baggage) in the apartment.
In this story, what started as a “temporary” favor for a roommate’s boyfriend quickly spiraled into a nightmare involving abuse, property damage, and yes, even fish murder.
But the real kicker isn’t the horror; it’s the escape plan. While the toxic couple was off gambling with borrowed money, the other two roommates pulled off a moving day heist that would make Ocean’s Eleven proud.
Now, read the full story:
















Our Take on the Situation
First things first: The fish incident. Just… wow. Killing a defenseless pet by scalding it is not “bad roommate” behavior; it is a textbook sign of sociopathy. At that moment, this stopped being a “roommate dispute” and started being a safety emergency.
The OP and Ben were incredibly smart to leave. In dangerous living situations, especially when domestic violence (the verbal abuse of Crystal) and volatility are involved, confrontation is risky. A “secret move” might seem petty on the surface, but in this context, it was actually the safest way to de-escalate.
Imagine trying to explain to Pablo, the guy who leaves burners on and shouts slurs, that you are moving out because of him. He likely would have trashed their belongings or become violent. The stealth exit wasn’t just satisfying; it was necessary survival.
Expert Opinion
This story is a classic case study of “Guest Overstay” dynamics and the McDonald Triad of warning signs.
The Tenant vs. Guest Nightmare
Legally speaking, once someone like Pablo stays for a certain period (usually 30 days, or receiving mail), they establish “tenancy rights” in many jurisdictions, even without being on the lease. Evicting him would have required a formal court process, which takes months.
Real Estate Attorney Robert Nislick advises that master tenants (roommates on the lease) should never allow guests to stay longer than 7 days without written landlord approval, precisely to avoid accidental tenancies. The landlady in this story was lucky the good tenants handled it themselves!
The Dark Psychology of Animal Cruelty
The detail about the fish is significant. According to The Humane Society and psychological researchers, there is a well-documented link between animal cruelty and interpersonal violence. Hurting an animal is often a precursor or a parallel behavior to domestic abuse.
Psychologist Dr. Randall Lockwood has noted that abusers often harm pets to demonstrate power and control over their human victims. Pablo killing Crystal’s fish wasn’t an accident; it was a terrifying message to Crystal and the housemates: I can hurt things you love.
Getting out immediately was the only correct move.
Check out how the community responded:
Nearly every commenter was rightfully horrified by the animal cruelty, flagging it as the ultimate red flag.



People loved the fact that the OP turned a bad situation into homeownership, calling it the ultimate win.



Others used this as a cautionary tale for roommate boundaries.


How to Evict a “Nightmare” Guest
If you are stuck with a roommate’s partner who refuses to leave, you need to act fast before they gain legal rights.
Check the Lease: Most leases have a “Guest Clause” limiting stays to 3-7 days. Use this. Tell your roommate, “The landlord is asking about the extra person. If he doesn’t leave, we all get evicted.” Making the landlord the “bad guy” can save your friendship (and your safety).
Don’t Confront Alone: If the person is violent (like Pablo), do not try to kick them out yourself. Contact local law enforcement for a “Civil Standby” while you remove your property, or do exactly what the OP did—leave when they are gone.
Protect Your Finances: Contact utility companies immediately to take your name off the bills the day you move out. Do not leave your credit open for a vengeful ex-roommate to run up debts!
Conclusion
Revenge is a dish best served… in an empty house.
This story satisfies our primitive desire for justice. Crystal and Pablo, who lived recklessly and hurt those around them, were finally forced to face the consequences of their actions in a very quiet, very furniture-less living room.
We hope Crystal eventually escaped Pablo too, but as for the OP and Ben? They definitely won the roommate lottery by finally buying their own winning ticket out of there.
The internet agrees: The stealth move was NTA (Not The A-Hole) and totally legendary.
What do you think? Was leaving them without utilities too harsh, or did they get exactly what they deserved?









