Overview
- Last Friday Gino D'Acampo listed his seven-bedroom Grade II-listed Georgian mansion in Hertfordshire with a £4.2 million asking price.
- The decision followed his restaurant empire accruing £7.3 million in debts and going into administration earlier this year.
- In February ITV dropped him from all programmes after an investigation found dozens of former staff alleged lewd and inappropriate conduct over a 12-year period.
- D'Acampo has consistently denied the claims and said he would never behave in ways that distress his colleagues.
- As he seeks a return to television with a travelogue to be filmed later in 2025, he has faced fresh criticism for making sexualised comments about women’s bodies in a recent radio interview.