Logo

Aussie financier Michael Daffey, the Goldman Sachs veteran and Bitcoin biggie who paid $51 million for pedophile sex predator Jeffrey Epstein’s Upper East Side mansion — as Gimme revealed exclusively — has sold his Noho penthouse for $24.6 million, according to city property records.

The buyer is Eric Schmidt, the ex-Google boss famed for dating scores of high profile women during his open marriage with his wife, Wendy.

The 6,350-square-foot penthouse property, which includes a rooftop hot tub, is at 25 Bond St. It had been asking $29.5 million.

The home features four bedrooms, four bathrooms, two powder rooms, radiant heated floors and four woodburning fireplaces. There’s also 2,450 square feet of outdoor space — including a 1,900-square-foot stone and wood roof deck — and a 550-square-foot terrace, along and two parking spots.

Daffey preciously told Gimme through a spokesperson that he would purge the Epstein mansion on 9 E. 71st St. spiritually, as well as gut renovating it.


  The expansive Noho penthouse is 6,350 square feet. Evan Joseph The expansive Noho penthouse is 6,350 square feet. Evan Joseph

  The home’s eat-in kitchen is swimming in tech. Evan Joseph The home’s eat-in kitchen is swimming in tech. Evan Joseph

  Speaking of swimming, there’s a hot tub and lounging area amid the roof’s 2,450 square feet. Evan Joseph Speaking of swimming, there’s a hot tub and lounging area amid the roof’s 2,450 square feet. Evan Joseph

  A $24.6 million check, mate! The Aussie millionaire’s former cozy chess room awaits the new owner. Evan Joseph A $24.6 million check, mate! The Aussie millionaire’s former cozy chess room awaits the new owner. Evan Joseph

  The eight-story 25 Bond Street building was designed by BKSK Architects. Evan Joseph The eight-story 25 Bond Street building was designed by BKSK Architects. Evan Joseph

“The physical and spiritual rehab of 9 E. 71 St. is well underway, but it’s going to take a long time to restore its grandeur from before the Epstein era. When we’re done, it promises to be a home like no other in New York,” says Stu Loeser, Daffey’s spokesman.

Daffey spearheaded the Bond Street development for Goldman Sachs in 2005 by putting a deal together to buy a two-story parking garage and transform it into an eight-story boutique building.

The listing brokers were Adam Modlin, of the Modlin Group, and Michael Ives of Sotheby’s. 

Comments
anonymous profile image
Powered by RoundtableBuilt on infrastructure designed for real-time media. Learn more at RTB.io.© Roundtable 2026. By using this site you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy