We show experimental and theoretical evidence that BiTeI hosts a novel
disordered metallic state named diffusive helical Fermi liquid (DHFL),
characterized by a pair of concentric spin-chiral Fermi surfaces with
negligible inter-valley scattering. Key experimental observations are extreme
disparity of the mobility between inner and outer helical Fermi surfaces near
the Weyl point and existence of the so called universal scaling behavior for
the Hall resistivity. Although the extreme enhancement of the
inner-Fermi-surface mobility near the Weyl point is quantitatively explained
within the self-consistent Born approximation, the existence of universal
scaling in the Hall resistivity shows its breakdown, implying necessity of mass
renormalization in the inner Fermi-surface beyond the independent electron
picture