DORIT KEMSLEY’S $6.5 MILLION MANSION FORECLOSURE DRAMA JUST TOOK A SHOCKING TURN!

RHOBH Star Dorit Kemsley Avoids Foreclosure Sale on $6.5 Million Mansion as Attorney Shares New Update

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Dorit Kemsley might just be managing to evade the impending foreclosure of her $6.5 million mansion in Encino, California.

According to an update shared by attorney Ronald Richards on Monday, a lender has revealed that the 49-year-old Real Housewives of Beverly Hills star, who is in the midst of a contentious divorce from Paul “PK” Kemsley, 58, is working with PK to settle the debt owed and confirmed that the scheduled sale on Tuesday would not take place.

“There will be no sale. Borrowers are handling the debt and working their way out of [foreclosure],” the lender shared with Ronald.

“Let’s see if this becomes true,” Ronald added.

While Dorit has not yet confirmed that the sale of her home was called off,  she did address her foreclosure drama on a number of occasions in recent weeks.

During a May interview with Extra TV, Dorit suggested that she had no idea that her mortgage wasn’t being paid.

“The mortgage, so, listen, PK and I had an agreement when we separated and we followed that agreement and when there’s no communication, you’re expecting that things are status quo,” she stated. “I didn’t plan for the mortgage not being paid, and it was never brought to my attention. I was never told, ‘Dorit, I’m not gonna pay the mortgage.’ So I learned about the foreclosure, not too far off from when the world learned about the foreclosure. And by that point, you’re months in arrears.”

That same month, Dorit confirmed she was willing to downsize amid a chat with Entertainment Tonight.

“That’s what I would love to do. [But] when you’re not having communication, it’s difficult to move forward,” she explained.

More recently, speaking to Us Weekly, Dorit said she hoped she and PK had the “same goal” for their home.

“The house should come out of foreclosure,” she explained. “If PK and I are not together, it makes sense for us to sell the home and for the kids and I to move somewhere else. I just think that everything works out a lot smoother and a lot easier when two people can do it together.”