Anchored Tiny Homes shuts down leaving customers with unfinished projects and questions about where all their money went.On his podcast and frequent social media posts, a Northern California man dreamed of becoming a billionaire by selling tiny homes. But now, his offices are closed and hundreds of customers across the country are wondering where their money went.
Simpson hired Anchored Tiny Homes to build the ADU and gave them $28,000 to start, but it's all gone.Their offices in Fair Oaks closed before she could even break ground. Last week, Noyes spotted tiny home plans sitting on the floor and missed delivery notices at the door."She stays in my bedroom. I sleep here.""In the chair. So, that's fine but the ADU was supposed to solve that.
No one came to the gate at the father's house in Granite Bay. Austin Paulhus's house nearby was freshly rehabbed; still had construction materials in the driveway. Anchored's former chief operating officer Chris Pace tells us, that the father and sons often used the company's subcontractors for personal projects when they were supposed to be building tiny homes.
"To me, this is about two-thirds arrogance and overconfidence and ego," Pace said. "And it's a third really bad business practice." He said on one social media post from an LA car dealer, "One day, I'll trade in the Bentley for that."