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Friday, October 3, 2008

When Money Goes To The Dogs

Jeffrey Toobin's latest New Yorker article is about Leona Helmsely and her dog, Trouble. He spoke about it on Anderson Cooper 360 on September 22, 2008.

Here's an excerpt from the article that appears in the New Yorker:

RICH BITCH

The life of Leona Helmsley presents an object lesson in the truism that money does not buy happiness. Born in 1920, she overcame a hardscrabble youth in Brooklyn to become a successful condominium broker in Manhattan, eventually alighting, in the nineteen-sixties, at a firm owned by Harry B. Helmsley, one of the city’s biggest real-estate developers. The two married in 1972, and Leona became the public face of their empire, the self-styled “queen” of the Helmsley chain of hotels. In a series of ads that ran in the Times Magazine and elsewhere, Helmsley’s visage became a symbol of the celebration of wealth in the nineteen-eighties. She wouldn’t settle for skimpy towels, the ads proclaimed—“Why should you?”

In private, as it turned out, the grinning monarch wasn’t just demanding but despotic. Throughout her life, Leona left a trail of ruin—embittered relatives, fired employees, and, fatefully, unpaid taxes. Knowing that the Helmsleys had used company funds to renovate their sprawling mansion, Dunnellen Hall, in Greenwich, Connecticut, disgruntled associates leaked the records to the Post. Among the charges billed to the company were a million-dollar dance floor installed above a swimming pool; a forty-five-thousand-dollar silver clock; and a two-hundred-and-ten-thousand-dollar mahogany card table. In 1988, the U.S. Attorney’s office charged the couple with income-tax evasion, among other crimes. (Harry Helmsley avoided trial because of ill health; he died in 1997, at the age of eighty-seven.) At the trial, a housekeeper famously testified that Leona had told her, “We don’t pay taxes. Only the little people pay taxes,” and the public warmed itself on a tabloid bonfire built under the Queen of Mean. Leona was convicted of multiple counts and served eighteen months in federal prison. In time, following her release, she became largely a recluse, and she died at Dunnellen Hall on August 20, 2007.

After her husband died, Leona Helmsley got a dog named Trouble, a Maltese bitch. In her will, which she signed two years before her death, Helmsley put aside twelve million dollars in a trust to care for Trouble. Further, she directed that, when Trouble died, the dog was to be “buried next to my remains in the Helmsley Mausoleum,” at Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, in Westchester County. Helmsley made only a handful of relatively small individual bequests in the will, and left the bulk of her remaining estate to the Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust. Based on the figures in court files, that trust may turn out to be worth nearly eight billion dollars, which would make it one of the top ten or so foundations in the United States. (Leona’s estate was so large because Harry left his fortune to her.) According to a “mission statement,” which Helmsley signed on March 1, 2004, the trust was to make expenditures for “purposes related to the provision of care for dogs.” The size of the bequests, to Trouble and to dogs generally, has generated widespread astonishment.

In fact, the clear motivation underlying Leona Helmsley’s will—her desire to pass her wealth on to dogs—is more common than might be expected. Pet-lovers (many of whom now prefer the term “animal companion”) have engineered a quiet revolution in the law to allow, in effect, nonhumans to inherit and spend money. It is becoming routine for dogs to receive cash and real estate in the form of trusts, and there is already at least one major foundation devoted to helping dogs. A network of lawyers and animal activists has orchestrated these changes, largely without opposition, in order to whittle down the legal distinctions between human beings and animals. They are already making plans for the Helmsleys’ billions.

The rest of the article can be found on the New Yorker's website.





Election Express Twitpic‘Election Express Yourself’ Strolls through Nashville for Presidential Debate

CNN’s Election Express Yourself, the network’s customized Airstream trailer designed to give Americans across the nation an interactive political experience, continues its cross country trip with its next stop at the second presidential debate in Nashville, TN. The Election Express Yourself will be at Centennial Park adjacent to Vanderbilt University on Tuesday, Oct. 7, from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. (CT).

As it rolls across the country, the Election Express Yourself offers wide-ranging information on current political issues and allows citizens to express their own political views through “shout out” video portraits, on-line interaction and numerous on-site activities, including political trivia and the chance to design personalized election memorabilia. The tour will continue to visit cities and events leading all the way up to the presidential election.

The Election Express Yourself includes two touch-screen polling stations that allow visitors to answer politically oriented questions. Additionally, the Election Express Yourself provides visitors with access to state-of-the-art iReport video kiosks, self-operated stations that allow users to record up to 60 seconds of video as they respond to a series of topical questions about the upcoming election. The content is automatically uploaded to iReport.com, CNN’s user-generated community Web site. Contributors to iReport.com may gain additional recognition by having the material they submit to the site – once vetted and approved for use – appear on a CNN network or CNN.com.

Election Express Twitpic

The Election Express Bus is also scheduled to appear at the following locations:


10/3 – 10/4
Oktoberfest
St. Louis, MO

10/7
Presidential Debate
Nashville, TN

10/15
Presidential Debate,
Hempstead, NY

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