
“We’re very, very concerned. It’s very out of character,” a colleague said. The words, spoken during what was meant to be a routine well-being check, captured the unease that set everything in motion.
According to records obtained through public records requests and reported by The Columbus Dispatch, Columbus police received the first call at 9:03 a.m. on December 30, 2025, when a colleague requested a well-being check on Spencer Tepe, who had not arrived at work and could not be reached by phone.
For those who knew Spencer’s habits, the silence alone was enough to raise concern.

A patrol car on the streets of Columbus, Ohio. | Source: Getty Images
A Missed Routine That Prompted the First Check
Spencer worked at Athens Dental Depot, which opens at 8 a.m., on Tuesdays. The caller told dispatchers it was entirely out of character for him to miss work without notice.
“He is always on time and he would contact us if there was any issue whatsoever,” the colleague said in the call to the police. “I just don’t know how else to say this.” An officer arrived at the home on the 1400 block of North 4th Street around 9:22 a.m., found no response at the door, and left.

The photo of a dental office. | Source: Getty Images
When Concern Turned Into Alarm
As the morning progressed and Spencer remained unreachable, the concern that began at his workplace spread beyond it. By 9:57 a.m., another call came in, this time from a man at the residence who reported hearing children inside the house. At 10 a.m., another coworker called the police, saying she was worried about the dentist’s well-being and was heading to the residence.
At 10:05 am, a friend called the police from the home. He said he went there because Spencer was not answering the phone. According to dispatcher recordings, the caller said he could see a body inside the house, lying near a bed. “There is a body inside,” the caller stated.
Police returned to the home, located two young children inside, and executed a search warrant at the residence. What they found next would confirm the worst fears raised by the earlier calls.

Columbus police patrol car seen in Ohio. | Source: Getty Images
Who Was Found Inside the Home
Authorities later confirmed that Spencer, 37, and his wife, Monique Tepe, 39, were found dead inside their Weinland Park home. Spencer had been shot multiple times, according to a police radio run log obtained by The Dispatch.
A police dispatcher report also referenced a “41A,” a code used for robbery reports. Police said there were no indications of a murder-suicide but declined to release further details. As of December 31, 2025, Columbus police had not returned The Dispatch’s follow-up calls.
As investigators worked to piece together what happened, attention also turned to the lives interrupted by the violence.


