Pubdate: Saturday, December 19, 1998 Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA) Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/ Copyright: 1998 San Francisco Chronicle COPS FINALLY COLLECT ON DRUGPIN'S PROPERTY Lavish home is sold 11 years after arrest Oakland police finally got their payoff a decade after bringing down the city's onetime cocaine kingpin -- money from the sale of his lavish hilltop estate in rural Sonoma County. Federal law enforcement officials who helped Oakland officers arrest Rudy Henderson in 1987, and later seized his ``Sky Castle'' estate, yesterday presented Police Chief Joe Samuels with $359,000 from last year's sale of the 11-acre spread. Despite the 6,400-square-foot home's location and features such as a huge master bedroom suite -- which included a see-through shower with spray heads on each end -- it took the U.S. Marshals office years to find a buyer who wasn't an associate of Henderson, who is serving a 25-year prison sentence. Sonoma accountant Richard Gullotta and his wife bought the place for about $700,000 -- far less than its original price tag of $1 million-plus. ``I can't tell you my motives and I've never met him (Henderson),'' Gullotta said yesterday. ``All my dealings have been with the offices of the U.S. Marshall and the U.S. Attorney General, who seized the house and was given the authority to sell it.'' Gullotta declined to say how he views living in a home owned by a former drug dealer or why he purchased it. Oakland chief Joseph Samuels Jr. said yesterday he doubts the mansion's former owner's life of crime drove away potential buyers. ``A home is a home is a home,'' Samuels said. The chief said his department will use its share of money from the sale -- two thirds of the sale price, minus the cost of needed repairs -- to continue drug-fighting efforts. Federal officials had to fix the estate's swimming pool and deal with several rattlesnakes living on the property before showing the estate to prospective buyers. And before that, they waited from 1991, when the home was put on the market, to 1995 for a judge to dismiss a claim to ownership by an alleged associate of Henderson whose name was on the deed. ``Sky Castle'' is now guarded by barking Dobermans behind a wrought-iron gate, which yesterday sported a holiday wreath. The unmarked private driveway leads from awinding access road dotted with equestrian properties and flanked by oak-studded slopes. Gullotta said he was alerted to the spread by a glossy 22-page brochure mailed to prospective buyers by the General Services Administration. ``I was probably one of millions who got the brochure, and the property was close by,'' Gullotta said in a telephone interview from his Sonoma office. Asked about the condition of the long-vacant house when he moved in, and the area's reputation for rattlesnakes, Gullotta said, ``There weren't ever any rattlesnakes that I saw.'' - --- Checked-by: Rolf Ernst