DIVORCE COURT BLITZ: Black Coffee LAUNCHES SHOCK APPEAL as Girlfriend Flaunts R157-MILLION ‘PENTAGON’ FORTRESS
The billionaire DJ is ATTACKING the legal system to escape his ex. And he’s doing it from a cash-bought palace while his wife fights for her future.
The Supreme Court of Appeal just handed Black Coffee a loaded weapon. They granted him leave to appeal a landmark 2025 ruling that confirmed his customary marriage to actress Enhle Mbali was REAL—and that he must PAY her. This isn’t just a legal move. It’s a DECLARATION OF WAR. He is fighting to erase a marriage the high court already validated, trying to void a multi-million rand maintenance order with one legal strike.
LOOK AT THE EVIDENCE. As his legal team prepares for battle, his girlfriend, model Victoria Gonzalez, is weaponizing Instagram. She bombards followers with cinematic tours of their new fortress—the R157-million Clifton mansion they call “The Pentagon.” Infinity pools. Private cinemas. Panoramic ocean views. Every glamorous post is a SLAP IN THE FACE to the ongoing divorce drama, a blatant display of opulence while the mother of his children fights in court. The contrast is BRUTAL and deliberate.
Who wins if he succeeds? Black Coffee protects his empire. The ultra-wealthy get a playbook to sidestep marital obligations. Who stays silent? The systems that allow a celebrity to flaunt limitless wealth in one breath while challenging a spouse’s right to support in the next. This case could REWRITE the rules for rich men across South Africa, making it harder for women in customary marriages to claim what’s theirs.
He’s building a new life in a cash-bought fortress while dismantling his old one in court.
One law for the rich, another for everyone else—and they’re proving it right in front of you.



