ORLANDO, Fla. – The city of Orlando is seeking to foreclose on a home where prosecutors said David Tronnes strangled and beat his wife to death in 2018 while arguing about a major home renovation project, court records obtained by News 6 show.
Tronnes is serving a life prison sentence after a jury convicted him of murdering Shanti Cooper.
The house in Orlando’s Delaney Park neighborhood that Tronnes once shared with Cooper has been unoccupied since his arrest more than seven years ago.
Most of the home’s interior had been demolished for renovations and was practically uninhabitable, prosecutors told jurors, straining the couple’s marriage and finances.
One week before Cooper was murdered, prosecutors said she turned down an opportunity for the home to be featured on the reality TV show “Zombie House Flipping”, which Tronnes reportedly hoped would expedite the costly renovation project.
In 2019, while Tronnes was in custody awaiting trial, records show the city of Orlando began issuing code violation notices to Tronnes for failing to maintain the swimming pool in a clean and sanitary condition.
Following Tronnes’s conviction in 2023, the city issued additional code violation notices instructing him to remove boards from doors, clean and repair exterior walls, and remove items improperly stored in the front and side yards.
When Tronnes failed to correct the code violations, records show the city began issuing daily fines.
The City of Orlando has also recorded 24 special assessment liens on Tronnes’s property for “unpaid lot clearing fees”.
Tronnes currently owes the city more than $160,600 in code violation fines and fees, court records allege.
The city of Orlando filed a lawsuit against Tronnes Tuesday seeking to foreclose on the liens.
Under Florida law, creditors generally can foreclose non-homestead property and seek its sale at a public auction to collect judgments.
Tronnes is the sole owner of the Delaney Park home, which he told detectives he purchased with cash for $607,500 in 2015.
Cooper’s name was never added to the deed after they married two years later, records show.
Tronnes, who is incarcerated at the Graceville Correctional Facility in Florida’s Panhandle, has not yet responded to the city’s lawsuit.
Cooper’s minor son from a previous marriage was awarded a $20 million judgement against Tronnes in September after a judge found Tronnes liable for Cooper’s wrongful death in a separate civil case, court records show.
An attorney who represents Cooper’s estate did not immediately respond to an email and phone call from News 6 offering the opportunity to comment on this story.
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