
Property investor toured famously raided P Diddy mansion and made shocking discovery
Bo Belmont, the 42-year-old property investor known for flipping notorious estates into gold, wasn't dazzled by
Sean "P. Diddy" Combs
' famous
Holmby Hills
mansion.
Accustomed to luxe interiors and breathtaking grounds, what caught him off guard was not the expected opulence but an unsettling find in the garden. After spinning
Kanye West
's stark Malibu abode into a $9.3 million windfall, Bo cast his eyes on Diddy's once-lively palatial home, priced at a hefty $61 million, which has
now been raided by the feds
.
While exploring the 17,000 square-foot property — boasting 10 bedrooms, 13 bathrooms, a cinema, wine cellar, and a concealed tunnel — it struck him that something was amiss.
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"It definitely did not have the wow factor," Bo confessed to The Sun. "It just looked like a standard Bel Air home — nice marble, basic shaker cabinets. If you're paying $60 million, you expect to be blown away."
Diddy was charged with sex trafficking
(Image: Getty Images)
However, the genuine astonishment was lurking outside. As Bo inspected the estate, his mate, content guru Daniel Mac, allegedly made an eerie find among the greenery: bottles of baby oil, eerily hinting at the mansion's past filled with wild alleged sex-fueled gatherings, reports
the Mirror
.
"I don't know if it was planted or not," Bo remarked, his voice tinged with confusion. "But Daniel posted it on Instagram and suddenly got hit with a ton of legal threats from people connected to Diddy."
The FBI's March swoop on the celeb's mansion unveiled over a thousand bottles of baby oil, intensifying the controversial accusations around the hip-hop mogul who's up against some severe charges such as transportation to engage in prostitution, sex trafficking, and racketeering.
For thrill-seeker Bo, this encounter with infamy only added to his bizarre tour of a home where Hollywood grandeur met tabloid drama head-on.
Despite its A-list location and palatial rooms, Bo wasn't sold on its worth; he went in low, offering just $30 million — to the sheer disbelief of Diddy's representative. "The agent felt disrespected, which is fine — I'm not in this to make friends," Bo said nonchalantly.
Yet, with the clouds of court trouble gathering over Diddy, Bo's now banking he's got a 75 percent shot at snapping up the property. Should his gamble pay off, he's set to strip the place bare, erasing the notorious party palace aura for a clean, contemporary reinvention.
"When it comes to the P. Diddy house, we actually have to change the whole façade," he explained. "It needs to be completely gutted."
Diddy is facing five charges across three federal indictments, including sex trafficking, conspiracy racketeering, and transportation to engage in prostitution. Diddy pleaded not guilty to all charges against him. Additionally, he vehemently denies all allegations of wrongdoing against him, including those alleged in civil lawsuits.
Jury selection for the case is set to begin on May 5 with opening statements slated for May 12.
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