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THERE were intense and emotional scenes on the grounds of a Holmby Hills mansion in Los Angeles today as dozens of ecstatic women openly wept after finally being released from its grips after their captor died suddenly during the night.

Emergency teams struggled to deal with the tide of barely clothed women as they emerged from various holding areas at the premises, squinting at the hot Californian sun, desperately seeking refuge after years of captivity.

“We’re free, we’re finally free!” one blonde haired woman wearing only a bikini shouted as she ran from a water grotto area at the back of the mansion.

“We’ve never seen anything like this in our lives,” Los Angeles firefighter Todd Hardson told WWN, “there must be 40, maybe 50 women here, all of them very similar in appearance to one another.

“Who knows how long they’ve been kept here like that and what they had to go through”.

Investigators at the scene believe many of the women were initially brought to the property by its owner under the pretense of a modelling career, but fell foul to years of emotional blackmail and promises of fame and fortune.

“Details are sketchy right now and I’m not in the position to comment, but this is one of the worst cases of Stockholm Syndrome I have ever come across in the 35 years I’ve been working as a detective in Los Angeles” said one emotional detective, now covering a female in an aluminium shock blanket outside the house.

Little is known about the owner, apart from being in his later years and quite wealthy from a publishing business.

More as we get it.