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The basketball star, the Crypto King and the $8.4M mansion

A couple of days after Canadian professional basketball player Shai Gilgeous-Alexander moved into his $8.4 million lakefront mansion this spring, he allegedly received a threatening visit from a stranger demanding the whereabouts of Ontario's self-proclaimed Crypto King: Aiden Pleterski.

Pleterski, 24, had previously been leasing to own the Burlington, Ont., property for about $45,000 a month — until his cryptocurrency and foreign exchange investment operation unravelled last year as investors came looking for the more than $40 million they'd given him. 

Gilgeous-Alexander claims he'd never heard of Pleterski before the man showed up at his door. 

The 25-year-old is a guard with the NBA's Oklahoma City Thunder. He placed fifth in regular season MVP voting last season and more recently led the Canadian men's national team to its first Olympic berth since 2000.

It wasn't until Gilgeous-Alexander's girlfriend called the police and discovered there had been several previous reports of threats at the home — including a threat to burn it down — that they started to learn about Pleterski's history with the property, according to court records.

The couple moved out immediately — and within a month, Gilgeous-Alexander's lawyers filed a lawsuit to try to void the sale. They claim the sellers fraudulently misrepresented the luxury home by failing to disclose an alleged series of threatening visits to the property — happening daily, at times — by those looking for Pleterski before Gilgeous-Alexander bought it.

"The defendants knew that if the history of threatening visits to the property, and ongoing risk of same, was disclosed, then no reasonable person looking at properties of that type, quality, and price would purchase it,"

Read more on cbc.ca