The “Growing Up Gotti” mansion did not stay a glamorous family home for long: after the family stopped living there, it was abandoned, later foreclosed on, and eventually sold off. Reports say the Old Westbury property was raided by the FBI in 2016, sat vacant for years, and was auctioned in late 2022 before JP Morgan Chase National Bank ended up with it for about $2.65 million.

What changed

  • The house was the main filming location for the reality show “Growing Up Gotti.”
  • After the FBI raid in 2016, the family never moved back in.
  • The property deteriorated while sitting empty, which made it a frequent subject of urban-exploration coverage.
  • By late 2022, it had gone through foreclosure and was purchased at auction by a bank.

Why people still talk about it

Part of the fascination is that the mansion went from reality-TV backdrop to an abandoned, heavily discussed real-estate oddity. Recent coverage still frames it as a symbol of how fast a famous “mob mansion” can fall out of use and into legal and financial trouble.

Current status

The latest reporting in the sources I found says the property was sold and is no longer in the Gotti family’s hands, though its future use remained unclear after the foreclosure sale.

TL;DR: It was raided, left vacant, foreclosed, and sold; it’s basically no longer the “Growing Up Gotti” family mansion in any practical sense.