Extraordinary moment OnlyFans actors dance with cops at notorious Encino mansion

A controversial Encino content house where OnlyFans creators live and film has renewed attention after LAPD officers were spotted dancing with the influencers.
Images obtained by The California Post showed officers dancing with and pretending to arrest some of the creators. Stunned neighbors say the bizarre encounter is just the latest chapter in a years-long battle over the multimillion-dollar property.
Captain Brian Wendling, who oversees the LAPD’s West Valley Division — where the home is located — said he was not familiar with the controversy surrounding the Creators Inc. mansion and declined to discuss what action, if any, had been taken against the officers photographed with the creators.
Asked whether the department had addressed the incident, Wendling replied only that it had “been handled” and declined to comment further.
The captain also revealed that the department had allegedly received only one complaint about the property this year, and suggested the matter was not a priority because officers evidently have “bigger fish to fry.”
The viral footage was shot in April after neighbors described a terrifying swatting incident at the house.
Neighbors received alerts that someone was being held at gunpoint inside the home before helicopters and numerous police officers descended on the upscale residential street.
“There were helicopters overhead and numerous police officers outside the house with weapons drawn,” one neighbor, who asked not to be named over fears of legal retaliation, told The California Post.
“It was extremely alarming for everyone who lives nearby.”
The neighbor said residents later learned the incident was a swatting call involving an influencer.
“What bothered me was that shortly afterward there were social media posts showing models interacting with officers, dancing in the street and posing,” she said.
“Meanwhile, residents were unable to move freely through the area and families were genuinely concerned about their safety,” the neighbor added.
The incident is the latest flashpoint in an ongoing dispute between residents and the home’s occupants, whom neighbors allege have transformed it into an illegal commercial content-production hub smack dab in the middle of a neighborhood.
According to neighbors, the property — located near an Armenian church and school — quickly became a source of frustration.
“They were doing a lot of shoots in the front of the property with girls wearing G-strings and very little clothing,” she said. “I don’t have any issue with women doing what they want to do. That’s not my concern. But this is a family neighborhood.”
“My boys would have friends over and they’d be watching what was happening outside.”
She said filming later moved behind the property’s gates after neighbors began complaining, but alleged the commercial activity continued.
“From what I can tell, the entire house has essentially been converted into content-production space. The garage has been turned into a gym for shoots. There appears to be a podcast studio. It looks like different rooms have been designed for different kinds of content,” she said.
Residents insist their concerns are not about adult content itself but about what they believe is an unpermitted business operating in a residential zone.
“We have people filming in revealing clothing, vaping outside, and a constant stream of strangers coming through the neighborhood.”
“We were repeatedly told that the city simply didn’t have the resources to pursue the matter and that it wasn’t a priority,” one neighbor added.
The dispute eventually escalated, with neighbors hiring an attorney and sending a cease-and-desist letter.
The resident said she was later threatened with legal action by Creators Inc.’s attorney after she was accused of being the neighborhood ringleader.
“They decided I was the ringleader behind all of this, even though I’m not.”
“It felt like an attempt to intimidate me.”
She explained that the house has left residents worried about safety, property values and the future of their once-perfect block.
“Our concern is that they’re making millions of dollars from a property that has negatively affected our neighborhood,” she told The Post.
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