Igor Alberts and Andreea Cimbala have been evicted from their infamous “House of Dreams” mansion in Naarden.

As reported by Noordhollands Dagblad (paywalled), the serial Ponzi promoters moved into the house in 2016 at a set rent of 5000 EUR per month.

Alberts and Cimbala stopped paying rent in April 2024. This prompted VGB Vastgoed, the real-estate developer that manages the property, to bump rent to 11,000 EUR a month.

VGB Vastgoed claimed the rent increase was aimed at “put[ting] pressure” on Alberts and Cimbala to pay owed rent.

When that didn’t work VGB Vastgoed took Alberts and Cimbala to the Rent Tribunal.

As per an agreement reached on November 19th, Alberts and Cimbala

  • do not have to pay 60,000 EUR in owed rent;
  • will forfeit the “extremely large” deposit they paid when they moved in; and
  • will vacate the property by January 15th, 2025

Alberts, who celebrated his 60th birthday at the property on October 20th, is reported to have “fled to Dubai for tax purposes”.

Noordhollands Dagblad reports Cimbala “is at her wits’ end.”

She would have liked to continue living there for her children, who go to school nearby.

She does not have a driver’s license and can take the children by bike. She also does not have another home yet.

Alberts and Cimbala are former OneCoin Ponzi scammers. The pair married in 2019 with the Naarden mansion featuring prominently in the couple’s OneCoin marketing.

The Naarden mansion was also the location of Alberts’ BusinessForHome interview and photoshoot, again tied to OneCoin marketing;

Alberts and Cimbala divorced in 2022 over suspected infidelity (this was never confirmed publicly).

After OneCoin Cimbala and Alberts went on to promote DagCoin and Success Factory (collapsed), and then Ultron and Mavie Global (also collapsed).

Despite OneCoin being a multibillion dollar Ponzi scheme and Alberts and Cimbala stealing millions through it…

…to date Dutch authorities have not taken any public action (recently reported tax issues aside).

 

Update 23rd November 2024 – Sometime after this article was published the cited GooiseMerenNieuws article mentioning Igor Alberts tax troubles in the Netherlands was taken offline.

Not sure what the story is there but reference to the article is still showing up in Google’s search results:

As a result of the article being taken down I’ve disabled the previously accessible link to it.

I’m hesitant to remove the reference to Alberts’ reported tax troubles in the Netherlands unless I receive confirmation otherwise.