The house at 1333 Page Boulevard in Springfield appeared abandoned for weeks after a high-profile law enforcement search of the grounds that turned up the bodies of three dead women in early June.

Until Monday, when a large "PuroClean" truck and oversized Dumpster appeared in the driveway. Lettering on the truck advertised the company as "disaster specialists" and pushed its niches as fire and mold mitigation as well as bio-hazardous waste.

Among the residents of the small, green house surrounded by a fenced-in yard was Stewart Weldon, accused of kidnapping and sexual assault in connection with two women. Hampden County District Attorney Anthony Gulluni signaled during a series of press conferences in June that there will be more charges to come, linked to still other victims. But, that has yet to happen.

Weldon also has not been charged in connection with any of the dead women recovered from his property: Kayla Escalante, 27, of Ludlow; Ernestine Ryans, 47, and America Canales Lyden, 34, both of Springfield.

The state medical examiner's office has yet to release reports on causes or times of death for any of the three.

Weldon has pleaded not guilty to kidnapping charges and other alleged crimes linked to two separate women.

He has been held on $2 million bail since his arrest on May 27 during what seemed a routine traffic stop for a broken taillight. His female passenger -- a live-in girlfriend and mother of two small children -- told police he had been holding her against her will, sexually and physically abusing her for weeks.

A second woman came forward and said Weldon had abducted and raped her in February.

Weldon's mother, Constance White, the owner of the home on Page Boulevard with whom Weldon lived, answered the door on Monday when a reporter knocked as men in hazmat suits worked in the back yard.

"Oh no, sorry. There's much too much going on," White said, smiling apologetically.

A police narrative recently obtained by The Republican states Chicopee police took a report from a woman in May of 2017. She told Chicopee detectives Weldon picked her up on Worthington Street in Springfield, tied her up, duct-taped her mouth and raped her repeatedly. The alleged victim told police she heard an adult woman and a small child upstairs.

Chicopee police determined the alleged assault occurred in Springfield, and advised the woman to report it to Springfield police, the records state. She didn't until more than a year later -- on June 6, in the midst of the intense search of the Page Boulevard property.

Springfield police officials told The Republican they requested older records from Chicopee detectives about Weldon based on a tip. They discovered there was latent DNA information linking Weldon to two prior rapes, according to the documents obtained by the newspaper.

The state police crime lab in January sent letters to the Chicopee police department and Hampden district attorney's office flagging DNA matches to Weldon in two unsolved rape cases dating back to 2009 and 2017, the records show.

He was never questioned, charged or arrested in connection with those allegations. He evaded Springfield police's repeated efforts to arrest him on outstanding warrants that had nothing to do with the crimes at issue now, officials have said.

He snapped off a GPS tracking bracelet ordered by a judge in February, according to court records. Police did not catch up to Weldon for another three months.

Chicopee police argue they alerted Springfield police to the DNA matches in January though officials in this city vehemently disagree.

"There are no records or recollection that Chicopee Police contacted the Springfield Police Department prior to June 4th, 2018, about this incident ... or the (DNA) hit on Mr. Weldon," Springfield Police Capt. Trent Duda said.

Chicopee police spokesman Michael Wilk said although he feels "terrible" for the families of the dead women, it is an unfair leap to pin their deaths on any potential missteps by detectives.

"Things can fall through the cracks and here we are. I don't know what to say other than that. I'm not going to call anyone a liar," he said. "To blame us for the actions of an individual who is going to do what he is going to do is not fair," he said.