Atiku Abubakar sells controversial $2.95 million U.S. home

Atiku Abubakar sells controversial $2.95 million U.S. home

Unable to visit America as a result of an embargo placed on him, former vice president Atiku Abubakar has sold off a luxury mansion co-owned by him an

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Unable to visit America as a result of an embargo placed on him, former vice president Atiku Abubakar has sold off a luxury mansion co-owned by him and  his fourth wife, Jennifer Douglas, in the posh neighbourhood of Potomac, Maryland, United States. The property gained international notoriety in 2005 after it was searched by the Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) in connection with a bribery scandal involving disgraced former U.S. Congressman, William Jefferson.

The seven-bedroom cream-coloured single family brick house on 9731 Sorrel Ave, Potomac, Maryland, was originally listed for $3.25 million on Zillow and other online real estate websites on January 25, 2018 but was eventually sold for a pending offer of $2.95 million on February 26, 2018 after an online auction. A pending offer means a buyer and seller of the property have reached a deal. However, a buyer can still pull out from the deal (which is very unlikely) if they cannot resolve issues like cost of repair or they cannot get a bank to approve a loan for the purchase of the property.


The property

Mr. Abubakar and Ms. Douglas bought the 7,131 square feet house in December 1999 for $1.75 million. Built in 1988, the house was described on Zillow as one of the finest in the tony neighbourhood of Falconhurst, Potomac, where houses are valued between $2 million and $10 million. The Atikus’ mansion is a colonial-style building that sits in the middle of a 2.3 acres premises of lush green trees. The mansion has a total of 21 rooms, multiple terraces which are said to be ideal for outdoor parties, a pool sauna, a gazebo, a gourmet kitchen and an outdoor swimming pool.

Sources with knowledge of the state of the mansion but who requested not to be named because they did not want to be publicly associated with this story, said the Atikus had not lived in the mansion since the former VP left office as vice president in 2007. House service staff lived in the mansion for some years, but the place was later locked up, and had remained unoccupied.

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