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The homeowner of an $8million Florida mansion have spoken out about the young partiers who ransacked their home and also stole a $3,500 YSL bag and a football signed by Peyton Manning.
The stay-at-home mom revealed the young partiers ‘went in every inch of my home, every drawer,’ including in her and her four children’s rooms.
‘They were in every single one of our beds. They were in all my children’s beds, they were in our bed.
‘There were footprints in our bathtub,’ the homeowner told Fox News. ‘They were trying on my clothes, my shoes, my swimsuit. They stole my handbags.’
Among the goodies taken was a $3,500 YSL bag, as well as Gucci and Stella McCartney purses, a Manning signed football, as well as Yeezy sneakers and a PS-4, according to Fox News.
They also reportedly tore through the five-year-old’s playroom, ripping apart her priceless toys and throwing her American Girl dolls on the home’s roof, the mother said.
The homeowners, who were out of town during the incident, are also avid wine collectors and said many bottles from their sacred stash were raided, including a bottle of Ace of Spade champagne, which retails for $1,500, as well as a bottle of 1942 Don Julio tequila, and dozens of other high priced bottles, Fox News reported.
The couple’s older children, 15 and 20, do not attend Florida schools and their mother said they did not know any of the 200 partiers who broke in, Fox News reported.
A group of young partiers broke into an $8million Florida home on Saturday, where they threw impromptu boxing matches (pictured), stole items, and partied the night away
The teens and young adults stole a $3,500 YSL bag, a $1,500 bottle of champagne, Yeezy sneakers, and a PS-4, among other things, the homeowners revealed
The partiers were seen fleeing the house from the backdoor as police arrived at the scene. The home was breeched through the backdoors after someone(s) pried the three locks off the door, the homeowners said
The youths broke into an expensive property (pictured) in the exclusive Watercolor in Florida
Walton County Sheriff’s Office is currently investigating the incident, which was allegedly advertised through a Snapchat flyer a week prior to the break-in. Police said they are aware of the flyer, but did not know about its existence prior to the incident.
‘[The party] had been advertised for an entire week, so that’s going to be apart of our process is how they knew the house would be empty and where that information came from,’ Walton County Public Information Officer Corey Dobridnia told WJHG.
The Sheriff’s Office told Fox News that many of the teens have been ‘identified,’ but they are still working to find out ‘who was responsible for the burglary.’ Many were turned in by their parents, school officials, and neighboring police department, Fox News said.
Dobridnia told DailyMail.com on Wednesday that the investigation is ongoing and will take time to discover the full extent of the damage.
The home, which is up for sale for $8million, was allegedly breeched through the backdoors and three of the locked were pried off, the mother told Fox News.
The homeowners had skipped town on Wednesday and had been planning to return on Sunday. They reportedly had a house guest until Friday afternoon, but it is unknown what the guest had any relation to the partiers.
The mother – who lives in the 6,400-square-foot home with her two younger children, five and 10, as well her oil executive husband – said she cared less that the teens stole material items from her, but stole the memories attached to it.
‘It’s not the material things, it’s the memories,’ she told Fox News. ‘The amount of invasion of privacy was just – there was no regard for anything. It was a complete violation.’
Among the stolen items, include a $1,500 bottle of Ace of Spades champagne a YSL bag, which retails for a similar price to the one pictured
The owners also reportedly said they would be pressing every civil and criminal charge against the partiers, according to WJHG.
DailyMail.com has contacted the currently listed owners of the home for comment.
The Walton County Sheriff’s Office was called by security to a house in Watercolor for a ‘noise complaint’ on Saturday after a large group of rowdy partiers broke in.
Once officers arrived at the five-bedroom, eight-bathroom home, the group fled and was seen on Snapchat exiting the house through the backdoors.
Partiers can be seen fleeing around the inground pool into the backyard as the front doors open.
One man can be heard nervously saying: ‘What the f**k,’ while another yelled at others: ‘We got to go, we got to go!’
A flyer (pictured) was passed around for about a week before the party and the Sheriff’s Office is now looking into how the partiers knew the house would be empty. The Sheriff’s Office said they are aware of the flyer, but did not know about its existence prior to the break-in
One teen was seen showing up championship rings he had found inside the home
A large group posted for a picture inside the house as they party raged on behind them
Two boys were seen enjoying the home theater while smoking in a blurry photo
Snapchat videos and photos were posted to the Sheriff’s Office’s Facebook page, showing a young man trying on championship rings and what appears to be a group of teenagers posting for a large group shot, as well as two young men lounging in the home theater.
Other videos show teens screaming song lyrics and nodding their heads and jumping to a beat with the Snapchat location filter for Seaside, Florida, prepositioned over the shot.
Another video shows two men violently throwing punches at each other in a makeshift boxing match as a crowd cheers them on and videotapes the whole thing.
One of the men, who is not wearing a shirt, appears to be landing most of the punches as the one in pink shorts attempted to defend himself.
The other partiers leave a wide berth for the fighters, but can heard ohh-ing and ahh-ing as one lands a good throw.
Police said the the homeowners were ‘not involved’ in the party plans.
The Sheriff’s Office is now reminding the public that an ‘open house party is against the law,’ especially when partiers have to ‘break into’ homes to do so.
The Sheriff’s Office berated the ‘teenagers or someone in their early 20s’ for forgetting that ‘Snapchat isn’t private’ and that they shouldn’t believe anything is sacred.
‘You are not yet worldly. Your friends will snitch. Word gets out. You’ll be tagged in pics on the Gram,’ the Sheriff’s Office wrote on Facebook. ‘Also, we can subpoena Snapchat.’
‘It’s a complete violation of someone’s home that you can’t put a price on,’ the office wrote. ‘Especially in a place where you’re supposed to feel safe.’
The office then asked the youths ‘what’s the move?’ – a common phrase to ask what the plan is – and encouraged them to come forward with any information they know.
‘DO YOURSELF A FAVOR and let us know. Come clean and give us the information we need to hold those responsible,’ it wrote.
Authorities also asked the public to refrain from using the ‘kids will be kids’ mindset and to ask oneself: ‘How you would feel if your home was ransacked and your sense of peace and security was taken from you?’ or ‘Why [the partiers] felt they could do this in the first place?’
The police sassily reminded the public and the partiers that ‘house parties are against the law’ and asked the youngsters to turn themselves in. Some of the partiers have been turned in by parents, school officials, and neighboring police departments
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