The Alexander brothers are quietly shopping their Miami homes. Tal and Oren Alexander have employed former agents at their defunct brokerage, Official Partners, to solicit bids for waterfront mansions as their legal and financial woes mount, according to a report by The Wall Street Journal.
The Alexander family is seeking more than $50 million for Oren’s house on the Sunset Islands, which are man-made islands built for the purpose of hosting luxury properties.
Tal’s Miami Beach home on Flamingo Drive is reportedly also for sale, as is another home that neighbors Oren’s on the Sunset Islands.
The two former star real estate agents, along with Oren’s twin brother Alon, need additional liquidity. The three are facing federal and state sex trafficking charges, and there are 17 known civil lawsuits that seek damages for alleged sexual assault. The brothers have denied all accusations and pleaded not guilty in court.
The brothers are currently incarcerated in a facility in Brooklyn, New York, as they await their federal trial on Jan. 5, 2026.
Complicating a potential sale of the homes is the lawsuit filed by Side against Tal, Oren and Official Partners. The white-label brokerage alleges that the brothers and Official Partners — which was affiliated with Side — defaulted on a $4.6 million loan extended in 2022. Side is seeking $4.2 million in damages.
The judge in the case granted Side a preliminary injunction that prevents the brothers from “dissipation, concealment or devaluation” of the collateral on the loan. While the three properties in Miami — and another one in Colorado — are not explicitly mentioned as collateral, Side wants to freeze the assets as potential sources to satisfy a judgment. According to the Journal, there are several claims on the properties.
The lawyers representing the Alexanders in the Side case withdrew their services last week, claiming that the brothers have failed to pay them. They say they tried to contact the brothers about a missed payment on 12 separate occasions between Dec. 20 and Jan. 24 but only received “cursory return of communications” from one of the defendants.
The attorneys also say that the brothers’ December arrests and subsequent incarceration have made it “unreasonably difficult to represent them.”
The brothers and their lucrative brokerage began to fall apart in March 2024 when two women filed civil suits against them for sexual assault, and four more were filed in the aftermath.
Last week, 11 more were filed in bulk, and federal prosecutors expect more to come. The FBI said it has spoken to 60 women who claim they’ve been drugged and raped by one or more of the brothers.
One of the original cases against the Alexanders, filed by Angelica Parker, was dismissed in January on a technicality related to separate gender-violence laws in the state of New York and New York City. Parker has the option to appeal.