RHOBH’s Dorit Kemsley and PK owe $1.3M in unpaid taxes after reducing price of $8M LA mansion amid lawsuits & bankruptcy
REAL Housewives Of Beverly Hills’ Dorit Kemsley and her husband, PK, owe over $1.3 MILLION in unpaid taxes, The Sun can exclusively reveal.
The massive debt comes after the couple recently reduced the price of their $8M Los Angeles mansion that’s on the market by $1.5M and even changed their terms to accept renters in a desperate attempt to sell.
The reality star and British businessman owe an outstanding balance of $635,887.23 to the IRS from a 2018 tax document.
Dorit - who consistently flaunts her - also has an individual tax lien from the State Of California for the amount of $90,269.46 which was most recently dated in March 2021.
In addition, PK has two solo active liens of his own - including one for the a State Of California for $293,222.73 from back in 2015.
The news comes following the star putting her Encino mansion on the market after just ONE year of living there.
In September 2020, Dorit listed the 6 bedroom, 7.5 bath modern farmhouse for $9.5 million.
However, after no buyers, the listing price was reduced all the way down to $8 million.
In the midst of their legal battle with Nicos, a judge froze both Dorit and PK’s bank accounts in July 2019.
However, it appeared the group hashed things out as Nicos later dropped the suit in October 2019.
In a June 2019 episode of Real Housewives Of Beverly Hills, alum Camille Grammer shockingly accused Dorit’s husband of owing “a LOT of money” to someone “very close” to her.
The blonde beauty said on the show after Camille’s allegations: “PK’s affairs, and whoever’s coming out trying to say he owes him money, that is from another lifetime ago.
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“It’s way before me, it’s way before his bankruptcy. It’s at the height — and unfortunately, when you become public they come out of the woodworks and that’s exactly what’s happening.
“There’s far more to the story than what people think that they know, and there’s a lot that I can’t say, obviously, because it’s in the hands of the lawyers and where it should be."