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$5.95-million buys Bilzerian mansion

By BILL COATS
Published April 28, 2006


[Times photo, 2004]
The largest house in Hillsborough County sold again Thursday. Built by corporate raider Paul Bilzerian and his wife, Terri Steffen, in the Avila community, it boasts a full-size gym, a racquetball court, a fitness room, a music room and a home theater. For everyday use it has 11 bedrooms and 17 bathrooms.

TAMPA - The area's most controversial mansion was auctioned Thursday night for a reported $5.95-million to an undisclosed bidder.

Although auction manager John Haney would not release details, an associate of bidder Mary Haire said $5.95-million was the winning bid.

Haire, president of the corporation controlling the house, bid $4.2-million but nothing higher, said Fred Shrum, the secretary-treasurer of the Guerrini Corp.

Nearly a dozen bidders gathered in the mansion's cavernous foyer, flanked by winding staircases, for the auction. They bid for ownership of 11 bedrooms, 17 bathrooms and a full-size gym overlooking a lake.

The 30,000-square-foot mansion, the biggest in Hillsborough County, was built in the early 1990s in the walled Avila community near Lutz by corporate raider Paul Bilzerian. Bilzerian had made huge killings in a series of stock-buyout attempts.

But by the time the home was completed in 1992, Bilzerian had been convicted of federal securities violations. He served 13 months in prison and lost a judgment for $62-million to the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Ownership of the mansion was transferred to an offshore corporation controlled by Bilzerian's wife, Terri Steffen.

Bilzerian declared bankruptcy and told the SEC he had no assets.

[Last modified April 28, 2006, 01:15:08]


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by steve 10/23/07 02:46 PM
if he was convicted by "92" and had no assets,,(according to bankrucy proceedings) how did he manage to keep the house till "2006"???
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