Kanye West wanted to remodel $57M Malibu home into ‘BOMB SHELTER’ with NO WINDOWS or ELECTRICITY… as he’s sued by project manager who claims he was fired for not complying

Kanye West wanted to remove the windows and electricity from his $57 million Malibu home in order to turn it into ‘a bomb shelter from the 1910s’ according to a new lawsuit.

The I Wonder rapper, 46, is being sued by the former manager of the remodel project, Tony Saxon, who claims he was fired after he ‘expressed concerns about the extreme danger of such actions’ as per TMZ.

According to Saxon’s lawsuit, filed on Wednesday in Los Angeles County Superior Court, he was hired for the project in September 2021, and worked 16-hour days on the Tadao Ando-designed beach house.

Saxon claims he was sleeping on the floor of the home as he worked as ‘project manager, caretaker and 24/7 security’ for the property.

Saxon alleges that West only paid him for one week of work and ignored all his concerns, until finally he was fired in November 2021, after refusing to remove the home’s windows and electricity.

Kanye proposed moving large generators inside the house, but Saxon was worried about it being a fire hazard.

Saxon alleges that Kanye then threatened him and said he would be considered ‘an enemy’ if he did not fulfill Kanye’s vision.

When Saxon continued to disagree, Kanye told him to ‘get the hell out’ according to the suit.

Saxon also claims the hip hop mogul told him, ‘If you don’t do what I say, you’re not going to work for me, I’m not gonna be your friend anymore and you’ll just see me on TV.’

After he told the father-of-four he doesn’t watch TV, he was promptly fired on the spot.

In the lawsuit Saxon said the rapper’s vision for the home was to make something like ‘a bomb shelter from the 1910s’, according to NBC News, and demolish the marble bathrooms, as well as remove the windows, plumbing and electricity.

He also reportedly wanted to replace the stairs with slides.

Saxon is now suing Kim Kardashian’s ex husband for a number of labor code violations, more than $1 million in unpaid wages, and damages.

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