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Movie mogul Harvey Weinstein’s continuing fall from grace, following multiple accusations of sexual harassment and rape, has now impacted his real estate.

Andy Kropa/Invision/APAndy Kropa/Invision/AP

In July, Weinstein and estranged wife Georgina Chapman relisted their gated, 9,000-square-foot mansion in Amagansett, NY, for $12.4 million. Now, it’s been pulled from the market, Town & Country reports.

This move seemingly comes as part of the couple’s split, announced Oct. 10 — and it can’t help that anything with Weinstein’s name attached to it is toxic right now.

The pair, in happier times, purchased the seven-bedroom property for $11.65 million in 2014. In 2016, they put it on the market for $13.5 million, before lowering its price to $12.8 million. Its July re-entry marked another price slash, as well as a change to a different brokerage.

The listing, brought back to the market by Beate V. Moore and Frank E. Newbold of Sotheby’s International Realty, no longer appears on their active sales pages.

Weinstein and Chapman originally listed this Amagansett home because they simply weren’t spending much time there. They opted instead to look for another home closer to the Big Apple.

Built in 1995 by filmmaker Barry Sonnenfeld, the home has a furnished lower level, which has a theater with a 20-foot-wide screen for 3-D movie display.

A Sotheby’s spokesperson did not respond to a message seeking comment.

Doug KuntzDoug Kuntz
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