Nancy Snyderman, the former NBC medical editor who violated a voluntary quarantine when she returned from a reporting trip to Ebola-affected areas of West Africa, is selling her longtime Princeton home for $2.95 million, the Trulia.com listing shows.

Snyderman sparked outrage in October 2014 when she and her crew were spotted getting takeout from a local eatery after the freelance cameraman working with her in Liberia tested positive for Ebola and she agreed to self-confinement in Princeton. When news surfaced that she had violated it, New Jersey health officials instituted a mandatory quarantine. She apologized but said she had not endangered anyone: "I came back to a warped environment. I'm a really good doctor and a good person who misjudged the fear of the American public."

In March 2015, Snyderman announced she resigning from NBC to take up a faculty position at an unnamed U.S. medical school.

Snyderman had been with NBC since 2006, the year records indicate she purchased the 5-bedroom home for $2.65 million. She put the lushly-landscaped 2-acre property on the market this week. It features a freshly-renovated kitchen, three wood-burning fireplaces, and a first-floor master suite with his-and-hers studies, a dressing room with walk-in closets and a spiral staircase to an exercise room. (This health expert apparently approves of inversion tables.)

Property taxes are $47,845, records show.

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