Leona Helmsley: Difference between revisions
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| birth_place = [[Marbletown, New York|Marbletown]], [[Ulster County, New York]] |
| birth_place = [[Marbletown, New York|Marbletown]], [[Ulster County, New York]] |
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| death_date = {{death date and age|2007|8|20|1920|7|4|df=y}} |
| death_date = {{death date and age|2007|8|20|1920|7|4|df=y}} |
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| death_place = [[ |
| death_place = [[Greenwich, Connecticut]] |
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| occupation = Hotel operator, real estate investor |
| occupation = Hotel operator, real estate investor |
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Revision as of 01:04, 10 March 2008
- "Queen of Mean" redirects here. For the British presenter and game show host, see Anne Robinson.
Leona Helmsley | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | 20 August 2007 | (aged 87)
Occupation(s) | Hotel operator, real estate investor |
Spouse(s) | Leo Panzirer (m. 1938, div. 1952) Joseph Lubin (Twice divorced) Harry Helmsley (m. April 8, 1972 - d. 1997) |
Leona Mindy Rosenthal Helmsley (July 4 1920 – August 20 2007) was a billionaire New York City hotel operator and real estate investor. She was a flamboyant personality and had a reputation for tyrannical behavior that earned her the nickname "Queen of Mean." The image of Helmsley was sealed when a former housekeeper testified that she heard Helmsley say: "We don't pay taxes. Only the little people pay taxes." She was convicted of federal income tax evasion and other crimes in 1989 and served 19 months in prison (and two more months under house arrest), after receiving an initial sentence of 16 years.
Biography
Her first husband was attorney Leo Panzirer, whom she divorced in 1952. Their only son was Jay (1940–1982), who had four children with his wife, Mimi. Leona was twice married to and divorced from her second husband, garment industry executive Joseph Lubin. After a brief stint at a sewing factory, she joined a New York real estate firm, where her sales prowess eventually won her a promotion to vice president.
Hotel career
Leona was a condominium broker in 1968 when she met and began her involvement with the then-married multi-millionaire real estate investor Harry Helmsley. In 1970, she joined one of Harry Helmsley's brokerage firms — Brown, Harris, Stevens — as a senior vice president. At that time, she was already a millionaire in her own right. Harry Helmsley divorced his wife of 33 years and married Leona on April 8, 1972. Leona's marriage to Harry may well have saved her career. Late in 1971, several of Leona's tenants sued her for forcing the tenants of one of the apartments she managed to buy condominiums. They won, and Leona was not only forced to compensate the tenants, but give them a three-year lease. Her real estate license was also suspended, but she focused on running Harry's growing hotel empire.
Supposedly under her influence, Harry Helmsley began a program of conversion of apartment buildings into condos. He later concentrated on the hotel industry, building the Helmsley Palace on Madison Avenue. Together the Helmsleys built a real estate empire in New York City including 230 Park Avenue, the Empire State Building, the Tudor City apartment complex on the East Side of Manhattan, and Helmsley-Spear, their management and leasing business. The couple also developed properties that included the Park Lane Hotel, the New York Helmsley Hotel and the Helmsley Palace Hotel, and hotels in Florida and other states.
Leona Helmsley was featured in an advertising campaign portraying her as a demanding "queen" who demanded nothing but the best for her guests. However, in real life she was known for being a tyrannical boss whose petulance seemed ill-suited to the hospitality industry. The slightest mistake was usually grounds for firing.
On March 31, 1982, Leona's only child, Jay Panzirer, died of a heart attack. Leona sued her son's estate for money and property that she claimed he had borrowed; Mimi, her son's widow, (who lived in a property Leona owned) received an eviction notice. Mimi later said the legal expenses wiped her out and "to this day I don't know why they did it."
Tax evasion conviction
Despite the Helmsleys' tremendous wealth (between them, they were worth well over a billion dollars), they were known for disputing payments to contractors and vendors. One of these disputes would prove to be their undoing.
In 1983, the Helmsleys bought a 21-room mansion in Greenwich, Connecticut to use as a weekend retreat. The property cost $11 million, but the Helmsleys wanted to make it even more luxurious than it had been before. The remodeling bill came to $8 million, but the Helmsleys were wary of paying it--or paying the taxes due on the effort. A group of contractors had to go to court to get most of the money; the Helmsleys eventually paid off most of the debt. In 1985, during these proceedings, the contractors found out that most of their work was being billed to the Helmsleys' hotels as business expenses--a very common and illegal practice. Enraged, the contractors sent a stack of invoices to the New York Post to prove that the Helmsleys were trying to write their work off in this manner. The resulting Post story led to a federal criminal investigation. In 1988, United States Attorney Rudy Giuliani indicted the Helmsleys and two of their associates on several tax-related charges, as well as extortion.[1]
The trial was delayed until the summer of 1989 due to numerous motions by the Helmsleys' attorneys—most of them related to Harry's health. He had begun to appear enfeebled shortly after the beginning of his relationship with Leona Helmsley years before, and had recently suffered a stroke on top of a pre-existing heart condition. Ultimately, he was ruled mentally and physically unfit to stand trial, and Leona had to face the charges alone.[1]
At trial, a former Helmsley-Spear executive, Paul Ruffino says that he refused to sign phony invoices illegally billing the company for work done on the Helmsely's Connecticut mansion. Ruffino, originally engaged to assist Helmsley through the Hospitality Management Services arm, says that Leona fired him on several different occasions for refusing to sign the bills, but Harry would usually tell him to ignore her and to come back to work. Another one of the key witnesses was a former housekeeper at the Helmsley home, Elizabeth Baum, who recounted having the following exchange with Leona Helmsley four to six weeks after being hired in September, 1983, :
I said : You must pay a lot of taxes. She said : We don't pay taxes. Only the little people pay taxes.[2]
Helmsley denied ever saying this. Helmsley's former employees testified at trial "about how they feared her, with one recalling how she casually fired him while she was being fitted for a dress."[3] Most legal observers felt that Mrs. Helmsley's personality and wealth alienated the jurors.[4]
On August 30, Helmsley was convicted and sentenced of one count of conspiracy to defraud the United States,[5] three counts of tax evasion,[6] three counts of filing false personal tax returns,[7] sixteen counts of assisting in the filing of false corporate and partnership tax returns,[8] and ten counts of mail fraud.[9] (See United States v. Helmsley, 941 F.2d 71, 91-2 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) paragr. 50,455 (2d Cir. 1991), cert. denied, 502 U.S. 1091 (1992).)
She was, however, acquitted of extortion--a charge that could have sent her to prison for the rest of her life. She was sentenced to 16 years in prison, but eventually had that sentence significantly reduced when all but eight of the charges were dropped.[1] Nonetheless, when it was clear she was going to jail, she collapsed outside of the courthouse, later diagnosed with a heart irregularity and hypertension.
Although Helmsley's reputation as the "Queen of Mean" is sealed, Helmsley was generous in her charitable contributions after her prison term. After September 11, 2001, she donated $5 million to help families of New York firefighters. Among other contributions, she also gave $25 million to New York's Presbyterian Hospital for medical research.
After prison
Helmsley served 18 months in federal prison. Her later years were apparently spent in isolation, especially after Harry died in 1997, leaving her and his entire fortune, estimated to be worth well in excess of $5 billion, she almost had no friends but Dr. Patrick Ward, Rodrigo Handall from Mexico, and Kathy And Rick Hilton.[10] A 2001 Chicago Sun-Times article depicted her as estranged from her grandchildren and with few friends, living alone in a lavish apartment with her dog [11] In 2002, Helmsley was sued by Charles Bell, a former employee who alleged that he was discharged solely for being homosexual. A jury agreed and ordered Mrs. Helmsley to pay Bell $11,200,000 in damages. A judge subsequently reduced this amount to $554,000.[12]
Death
Leona Helmsley died from congestive heart failure, at the age of 87, on August 20 2007, at her summer home in Greenwich, Connecticut.[13][14] Cardiovascular disease ran in her family, claiming the lives of her father, son and a sister.[15][16][17] After a week at the Frank E. Campbell Funeral Chapel, she was entombed next to Harry Helmsley in a mausoleum constructed for $1.4 million[18] and set on 3/4 acre in Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, Westchester County, New York.
Helmsley left the bulk of her estate — estimated at more than $4 billion — to the Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust.[19] She also left her Maltese, Trouble, a $12 million trust fund.[20] She left $15 million for her brother Alvin Rosenthal. Helmsley had four grandchildren. Two of them each will receive $5 million in trust and $5 million outright, under the condition that they visit their father's grave site once each calendar year. Her other two grandchildren, Craig and Meegan Panzirer, received nothing.
It has been alleged that they were omitted from the will because they failed to name any of their children after her late husband. Her choice to leave $12m to her white Maltese, Trouble, was branded 3rd in Fortune's "101 Dumbest Moments in Business" of 2007.[21] She also left her chauffeur, Nicholas Celea, $100,000.[22][23]
Popular culture
Helmsley was lampooned by Nora Dunn on several episodes of Saturday Night Live in the late 1980s,[24] and was a recurring character in the comic strip, Zippy the Pinhead.[25] Her dog has appeared in a 2007 series of Mother Goose and Grimm comics. The nickname of "Queen Of Mean" has since been adopted by insult comic Lisa Lampanelli.
Queen of Mean
- "Lawyer Alan Dershowitz said he once had breakfast with Leona at one of the Helmsley hotels and the waiter brought him a cup of tea with a tiny bit of water spilled on the saucer. Alan says Leona grabbed the cup from him and smashed it on the floor, then demanded that the waiter get down on his hands and knees and beg for his job."[1]
- Former maid Elizabeth Baum testified in court that she had once overheard Mrs. Helmsley say, "We don't pay taxes; the little people pay taxes."
In film
The story of her adult life was dramatized in the 1990 TV movie Leona Helmsley: The Queen of Mean, which starred Suzanne Pleshette as Leona and Lloyd Bridges as Harry. Pleshette was nominated for an Emmy Award and a Golden Globe Award for the portrayal.[26]
Further reading
- Guilty of Being Rich - Victimization of Hotel Magnate Leona Helmsley by Paul Craig Roberts
- "Leona Helmsley". CourtTV. Retrieved 2007-05-15.
- Steve Peacock, Hotel Dick: Harlots, Starlets, Thieves & Sleaze, a memoir by former Helmsley Palace security officer. ISBN 0595304648
- Michael Moss, Palace Coup (1989) ISBN 038524973X
- Richard Hammer, Unreal Estate (1991) ISBN 0451168720
References
- ^ a b c The Queen of Mean from Court TV's Crime Library
- ^ "Maid Testifies Helmsley Denied Paying Taxes: Says She Told Her 'Only the Little People Pay,'" Associated Press (AP), carried in New York Times, July 12, 1989, pg. B2. See also "Number 27743," The Columbia World of Quotations (Columbia University Press, 1996).
- ^ Leona Helmsley, Hotelier and Real Estate Icon, Dies Bloomberg News (August 20, 2007)
- ^ "U.S. v. Helmsley: 1989 - "We Don't Pay Taxes. Only The Little People Pay Taxes."". Retrieved 2007-05-15.
- ^ 18 U.S.C. § 371.
- ^ 26 U.S.C. § 7201.
- ^ 26 U.S.C. § 7206.
- ^ 26 U.S.C. § 7206.
- ^ 18 U.S.C. § 1341.
- ^ "Guilty of being rich—victimization of hotel magnate Leona Helmsley,"] Paul Craig Roberts, Ph.D., National Review, November 15, 1993.
- ^ < "Empty riches of the 'queen of mean'"
- ^ "Metro Briefing". New York Times. March 5, 2003. Retrieved 2007-05-15.
{{cite web}}
: Text "New York: Manhattan: Judge Reduces Award Against Helmsley" ignored (help) - ^
"Leona Helmsley, The "Queen Of Mean," Has Died At 87". Post Chronicle. 2007-08-20. Retrieved 2007-08-20.
{{cite news}}
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(help) - ^ http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070820/ap_on_re_us/obit_helmsley
- ^ USNews update, August 16, 2004.
- ^ Leona Helmsley Dies, Obituary from WCBS Newsradio 880 (WCBS-AM New York).
- ^ Hotelier Leona Helmsley dies at 87, AP, 8/20/2007
- ^ (Reuters) "New York's Helmsley to rest in $1.4 mln mausoleum" 21 August 2007
- ^ Leona Helmsleys Unusual Last Will - City Room - Metro - New York Times Blog
- ^ James Clench Rich bitch leaves £6m to dog The Sun - August 30, 2007
- ^ CNN Money (Dec. 19, 2007). "101 Dumbest Moments in Business".
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(help) - ^ Helmsley's Dog Gets $12 Million in Will - washingtonpost.com
- ^ Joanna Grossman (Sep. 18, 2007). "Last Words from the "Queen of Mean": Leona Helmsley's Will, The Challenges That Are Likely to Be Posed to It, and the Likely Fate of the World's Second Richest Dog".
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help) - ^ Saturday Night Live Archives
- ^ Zippy the Pinhead.
- ^ Leona Helmsley: The Queen of Mean at IMDb