Ruja Ignatova's $2.5 million mansion in Sozopol is now renting rooms to tourists for $1,200 a night.

The OneCoin fraud mastermind, who vanished in October 2017 and landed on the FBI's top 10 most wanted list, built the clifftop villa in 2017. Construction continued through 2018 even after she disappeared. Today, six years later, the property operates under a new name: The Lodge Luxury Villa.

The discovery came through a Bulgarian music video. Singers Alisia and Toni Storaro filmed their July 2023 single "Полудях" at the mansion. The video credits tagged "The Lodge Luxury Villa Sozopol," revealing the property's new commercial life.

The mansion sits on a secluded bay in Sozopol, one of Bulgaria's premier beach destinations. It offers absolute privacy, the villa's marketing materials promise, with premium spaces and ocean views. Since September 2022, the property has had a Booking.com listing. A dedicated website launched at thelodgevilla.bg, with an associated Facebook page created in April 2022. Neither page discloses who owns or operates the rental business.

The domain registration offers a murky trail. It lists "Holidayinvest 2009" as the owner—a Bulgarian shell company registered in January 2009. The listed principals are Kiril Ivanov Yovnov, Ivan Kirov Yovnov, and Georgi Nikolov Atanasov as a managing partner. Public records contain no information identifying these individuals.

The domain registration email redirects to Bulgarian Industrial Group, which claims to be "a leading industry of engineers and designers." No obvious connection exists between the industrial company and a luxury villa rental operation—or between either entity and a fugitive Ponzi schemer's property.

The timing raises questions. Ignatova's Sozopol mansion went dormant after her 2017 disappearance but clearly remained maintained. By early 2022, it had transformed into a functioning rental business with online booking systems and social media presence. The operation runs smoothly enough to attract recording artists and paying guests.

Nobody outside these shell companies knows who profits from nightly bookings at a mansion seized from one of America's most wanted criminals. Bulgarian authorities haven't seized the property. No legal notices appeared online. The villa simply reopened for business under a new corporate veil and a friendlier name.

Ignatova promoted OneCoin to investors worldwide as a cryptocurrency that never actually existed, defrauding thousands of people out of billions of dollars before vanishing. The FBI wants her for money laundering and wire fraud. Yet her mansion operates openly as a tourist destination, its ownership obscured by layers of corporate registration and language barriers.

The Lodge Luxury Villa has no online reviews. It has everything else—a booking system, a website, photographs of ocean views, and access to people willing to pay premium rates for a night on the Sozopol coast. What it lacks is transparency about who owns it and where the money goes.


🤖 Quick Answer

Who is Ruja Ignatova and why is she notable?
Ruja Ignatova is a Bulgarian-born entrepreneur who masterminded OneCoin, one of history's largest cryptocurrency frauds. She disappeared in October 2017 and was subsequently placed on the FBI's Ten Most Wanted list. Her whereabouts remain unknown despite international investigation efforts.

What is The Lodge Luxury Villa in Sozopol?
The Lodge Luxury Villa is a luxury oceanfront property in Sozopol, Bulgaria, formerly owned by Ruja Ignatova. The $2.5 million clifftop mansion was constructed in 2017-2018 and now operates as a high-end tourist accommodation, renting rooms for approximately $1,200 per night to international visitors.

How was Ignatova's mansion discovered operating as a rental property?
The property's commercial operation


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