US News

BANK FORECLOSES ON VICTORIA GOTTI’S ESTATE

Here’s the reality: the Gotti’s gotta go.

The bank has been given the go-ahead to foreclose on Victoria Gotti’s palatial estate on Long Island — the same used in the TV reality show “Growing Up Gotti” — saying she owes a whopping $650,000 in mortgage payments, according to court paper made public today.

Gotti’s lender, JP Morgan Chase, claims the daughter of the late Gambino crime family boss John “Dapper Don” Gotti — owes them the staggering amount after she failed to make payments for two years starting in September 2006, court records reveal.

The 46-year-old former reality TV star, who used to own the Old Westbury home along with her former husband Carmine Agnello, became the sole owner in 2005, according to court records.

The couple divorced in 2003, with the bank transferring the deed to the grandiose mansion and surrounding property over to Gotti.

The bank said in court records that the mafia princess owed them $25,000 a month — and that she never made all the payments.

The Brooklyn Appellate Division granted the lender’s motion for summary judgment on the foreclosure and the appointment of a referee to report whether the property can be sold in one lot.

The ruling reversed a 2007 decision by Nassau County Supreme Court Justice Roy Mahon who determined foreclosure proceedings were too early at the time.

Gotti could not immediately be reached for comment, but her mother, also named Victoria, blamed the whole thing on her former son-in-law.

“She’s not in the mood to talk to anybody,” her mother told The Post.

Asked about Agnello’s involvement, she barked, “The creep that he is, he took out a mortgage behind her back. She can’t afford to pay.”

The home, which Gotti once tried to sell at $4.8 million but lowered once she put on the market this past January for $3.2 million, became known to TV viewers across the country after A&E filmed the reality show, “Growing Up Gotti” there in 2004 and 2005.

The show, which also featured Victoria’s Gotti’s gel-headed sons Carmine, John and Frank, was eventually canceled after 41 episodes because of poor ratings.