Flyysoulja Accused by Landlord of Leaving Rental Home Full of Dog Feces

During a September inspection, the landlord alleged to have seen broken glass scattered and overflowing garbage in the home.

flyysoulja/Instagram
flyysoulja/Instagram

The landlord that owned Flyysoulja's rental home in Florida alleges that the rapper and social media personality destroyed his property.

One week after the Island Boys member revealed that he was detained after a psychotic episode caused by the use of "multiple substances," his landlord, Andy Zamudio of Equity Real Estate, spoke to TMZ. In the interview, posted on Wednesday (November 19), Zamudio said Flysoulja prepaid the renewal lease for September just two months before, but the rapper “kept postponing” an inspection of the residence.

“Finally, I get into the property on the 26th of September with my partner’s wife and we see there’s lots of issues on the property.”

Among those problems were broken areas of the home, including glass that was scattered about and the garage being “full of trash.”

By October 3, Zamudio sent the rapper a 14-day notice to clean the property. “When he took the property, it was fully furnished,” the landlord explained. “He gave us so much stuff back but he kept some of them.”

Among items that were allegedly taken from the home were a sofa worth $12,000, ceiling fans and a jacuzzi. Zamudio says he extended the notice for Flyysoulja to have the home fixed well into October, but by the 21st of that month, he continued to “avoid” the landlord.

“He did pay for October, he paid it late,” Zamudio added, along with claiming that the two arranged a payment plan for the first week of November. Apparently, Flyysoulja didn’t hold up his end of the deal.

“He got a three-day notice on November 7th. That’s the night he got Baker Acted,” Zumudio said. “I don’t know if he got crazy because of that…he was telling me he was in Mexico [and] he couldn’t pay rent.”

By the time Zamudio enforced “emergency entry” of the home, he found it without electricity and flooded with trash and dog feces. The landlord also counts Kayla Thayla, the mother of Flyysoulja's infant son, as responsible of the home, and wants both to return their keys.

Earlier this month, the rapper was detained under Florida's Baker Act during a livestream. The law enforces temporary custody for an involuntary psychiatric evaluation if they're thought to be a danger to themselves or others, or unable to care for themselves. Flyysoulja was released after a 72-hour period.

While claiming that his rights were violated, during an Instagram Live session, Flyysoulja admitted to destroying his home during the psychotic episode but denied being suicidal.

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