A few weeks before the start the ARD-Summer show “Always on Sundays” is Stefan Mross back in the Newspaper headlines devices. A retired couple accused the presenter of deliberately misleading them when purchasing their property in Passau (Bavaria). Now Madam answers on Instagram speaks out and vigorously defends itself against the accusations.
Stefan Mross senses calculation behind fraud allegations
“I need to get something off my chest now,” the pop star wrote on Instagram on Thursday (May 30). “[…] You’ve been reporting negatively about me for days while on tour. I accept many things, but if you cross the line too much, I will defend myself – also legally. My right, you would think.”
Madam suspects that there may be calculation behind the negative headlines of the past few days. Because: The ARD star is in the middle of preparations for his anniversary show ‘Always on Sundays’, which starts on June 16 at Erste. “Another three weeks before the broadcast starts. Just like last year,” the entertainer laments in his statement.
Launch of ‘Always on Sundays’ overshadowed by real estate scandal
Last year, public attention focused mainly on the surprising divorce of ex-wife and pop singer Anna-Carina Woitschak (31) and on alleged alcohol problems in the run-up to the popular ARD show. Now overshadowed an alleged real estate scandal his 20th anniversary as host of “Always on Sundays”.
As the newspaper ‘Bild’ reports, it is said to be a married couple a property owned by the pop star purchased for 835,000 euros. The electricity costs Mross quoted “only $200 to $300 a month” for the house when it sold. The reason for the low costs would have been a solar system on the roof of the house, which, according to ‘Bild’, turned out to be non-functional.
“Mr. Mross deliberately lied to us about the functionality of the system and electricity costs. If we had known this in advance, we wouldn’t have bought it. Because we cannot pay these electricity costs,” buyer Alfonz F. told Bild. The couple received an electricity bill of 3,649.79 euros for three months. In addition, there were monthly payments of 894 euros.