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  • 30
    Dec
    2012
    6:23am, EST

    Potential heir to $300 million Clark copper fortune found dead, homeless

    By Bill Dedman, Investigative Reporter, NBC News

    A long-lost relative of the reclusive heiress Huguette Clark, who could have inherited $19 million of her $300 million fortune, has been found dead under a Union Pacific Railroad overpass in Wyoming.

    Children sledding found the body of Timothy Henry Gray, 60, Thursday afternoon in Evanston, a small mining town in southwestern Wyoming near the Utah border. The coroner said it appeared he died of hypothermia. The low temperature that day was 10 degrees, and had hit zero in the previous week. Lt. Bill Jeffers of the Evanston Police Department said there was no evidence of foul play, and Gray was wearing a light jacket. Gray's siblings said they hadn't heard from him since their mother's funeral in 1990, when he disappeared without a word.  It wasn't clear whether Gray was living under the overpass, where transients have been known to camp.


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    Tim Gray was an adopted great-grandson of former U.S. Sen. William Andrews Clark, known as one of the copper kings of Montana, a banker, a builder of railroads and the founder of Las Vegas. The senator's youngest daughter, Huguette Clark, was a recluse who died in 2011 in New York City at age 104, after living in hospitals for 20 years while her palatial homes sat unused. Gray was her half great-nephew.

    In her will, Huguette Clark left no money at all to her family, leaving it instead to her nurse, goddaughter, attorney, accountant, hospital, doctor, favorite museum and various employees, as well as  to an art foundation to be set up at her oceanfront estate in Santa Barbara, Calif.  None of her relatives had seen Clark in at least 40 years, though some had been in touch with her through holiday cards and occasional phone calls.

    Nineteen of Clark's relatives have stepped forward to challenge her will in a New York court. A public administrator joined the challenge on behalf of Gray. When lawyers tried to find him to let him know about the Clark estate battle, they found his belongings had been abandoned in a storage locker, according to court records, and private investigators were not able to find him.

    If the relatives win their court challenge, Gray's estate would be entitled to about $19 million before taxes, or 6.25 percent of Clark's copper mining fortune, which has been conservatively estimated at $307 million by the administrator of Huguette Clark's estate. If Gray, who apparently had no spouse or children, died without a will, his siblings would receive his share in addition to their own.

    Gray was not using the money he already had. The coroner said Gray's wallet contained a cashier's check, from 2003, for "a significant amount."

    Gray's older brother, Jerry, said Tim had worked as a cowboy and lived in the Rocky Mountain states. "He was homeless essentially. If we had proper mental health services in this country, we could have been notified and known to do something."

    Huguette Clark attracted the attention of NBC News in 2009 because of her vacant but well-manicured mansions and questions about the management of her money. The battle over her estate could go before a jury in 2013, though settlement talks have begun.

    The archive of Clark stories, photos and videos is at http://nbcnews.com/clark/.

    Do you have information on the Clark family?
    Reporter Bill Dedman is co-authoring "Empty Mansions," a nonfiction book about Huguette Clark and her family. If you have documents or information, you can reach him at bill.dedman@msnbc.com.

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  • 16
    Nov
    2012
    11:48am, EST

    Santa Barbara leaders clamor for Huguette Clark home to serve the arts

    John L. Wiley, http://flickr.com/photos/jw4pix/

    The mysterious oceanfront home of Huguette Clark in Santa Barbara, Calif., could become an arts institution open to the public. Community leaders are siding with her last will and testament, which has been disputed by Clark's relatives.

    By Bill Dedman, Investigative Reporter, NBC News

    Community leaders in Santa Barbara, Calif., have begun a public relations effort to encourage preservation of the oceanfront home of the reclusive heiress Huguette Clark as an arts institution, as provided in her last will and testament.

    Clark's entire estate, which is being contested by her relatives in a New York court, is valued conservatively at $307 million. The case could go to trial in 2013, if it isn't settled first. Attorneys were meeting Friday for preliminary settlement discussions.

    The estate's largest asset is Bellosguardo, her cliffside vacation home above Santa Barbara's East Beach. The property on 23 acres is valued by her executor for tax purposes at $85 million.

    Her will called for creation of a Bellosguardo Foundation as an educational institution "for the primary purpose of fostering and promoting the arts." She left to that foundation most of her works of art, as well as 15 percent of her estate after the payment of other bequests. Clark was a member of the Santa Barbara Museum of Art from the 1940s until her death.

    If the home goes to the foundation, it may someday be opened up for public viewings. Few people have been allowed inside the mysterious home, which has been carefully maintained even though Clark and her immediate family stopped visiting approximately 60 years ago. "It could be a house museum. I believe people would pay to go through it, to see it," said Sheila Lodge, a former Santa Barbara mayor who visited the house about 20 years ago.

    If Clark's relatives are successful in their challenge to her will, the home presumably would be sold so the money could be divided among them.


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    Community leaders speaking out in favor of the Bellosguardo Foundation include Lodge, Mayor Helene Schneider, and leaders of the Santa Barbara Museum of Art, the Music Academy of the West and the Santa Barbara Foundation. The group held a news conference on Oct. 31, and has established a website, which declares, "The Last Will is still being contested by lawyers in New York courts. The participants do not care about Huguette Clark's wishes or about Santa Barbara."

    Huguette (pronounced "oo-GET") Marcelle Clark, born in Paris in 1906, inherited her fortune from William Andrews Clark (1839-1925), a U.S. senator from Montana who was among the richest men of the Gilded Age, a copper miner, banker, builder of railroads and founder of the city of Las Vegas.

    His youngest daughter attracted the attention of NBC News in 2009 because of her vacant but well-manicured mansions and questions about the management of her money. She lived her last 20 years in spartan hospital rooms, dying in May 2011 just weeks before her 105th birthday. The archive of all Clark stories, photos and videos is at http://nbcnews.com/clark/.

    To direct her fortune, at age 98, Huguette Clark signed two wills in 2005.

    The first will left $5 million to her private-duty registered nurse, Hadassah Peri, and the bulk of her estate to her relatives from her father's first marriage. The family members were not named in that will, which left the estate to her "intestate distributees," legal language for the people who would inherit if she died without a will. Because Clark had been married only briefly, and had no children, her closest relatives were the descendants of her father from his first marriage. These were Huguette Clark's half great-nieces and half great-nephews, and their children. Huguette and her four half-siblings had each received one-fifth shares of W.A. Clark's empire in 1925. Huguette's mother, Anna, received Bellosguardo, which then passed down to Huguette when she died.

    Just six weeks passed before Clark signed a new will. It specified that she intentionally left no money to family, with whom the will said she had little contact. The family is claiming that this will was the product of fraud and undue influence by Clark's nurse, attorney, accountant and others. The newer document makes specific bequests to her attorney, accountant, doctor, hospital and several employees, and the remainder is split among the nurse, a goddaughter and the Bellosguardo Foundation. (See the earlier story and read the two documents: A twist: Heiress Huguette Clark signed two wills.)

    The Santa Barbara community leaders are not forming another legal entity or seeking to intervene in the legal case, but said they wanted to make known that the community encourages the prospect of this new cultural institution and wants to make sure that Huguette Clark's wishes are followed.

    Besides the current and former mayors, members of the Santa Barbara committee include Edward Birch, chairman of the board emeritus, Santa Barbara Bank & Trust; Ginny Brush, executive director, Santa Barbara County Arts Commission; Sarah Chrisman, president, Granada Theater; Robert Emmons, former chair, Santa Barbara Museum of Art and Lotusland Foundation; Larry Feinberg, director and CEO, Santa Barbara Museum of Art; Ron Gallo, president and CEO, Santa Barbara Foundation; Karl Hutterer, executive director, Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History; Palmer Jackson, philanthropist ; Robert Light, philanthropist; Peter MacDougall, president emeritus, Santa Barbara City College; Sara Miller McCune, publishing executive and philanthropist; Scott Reed, president and CEO, Music Academy of the West; Lady Leslie Ridley-Tree, CEO and chairman of the boards of Pacific Air Industries and Air-Cert, philanthropist; Andre Saltoun, president, Community Arts Music Association; Michael Towbes, philanthropist; Anne Smith Towbes, former president, Lobero Theatre Foundation; and Sharon Westby, chair of the board, Music Academy of the West.

    More information
    The Santa Barbara Independent, The Los Angeles Times and KEYT TV have reported on the community effort.

    Do you have information on the Clark family?
    Reporter Bill Dedman is co-authoring "Empty Mansions," a nonfiction book about Huguette Clark and her family. If you have documents or information, you can reach him at bill.dedman@msnbc.com.

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    6 comments

    Relatives value at $307 million and executor at $85 million. Greedy much?

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  • 5
    Oct
    2012
    7:07am, EDT

    Up for grabs: the $300 million estate of reclusive heiress Huguette Clark

    W.A. Clark Memorial Library

    Huguette Clark with a doll in the 1910s.

    By Bill Dedman, Investigative Reporter, NBC News

    NEW YORK — The stakes have been set in the battle over the wealth of copper heiress Huguette Clark. More than $300 million is on the table as her extended family prepares for a court fight with her nurse and others for the last whispers of one of the great fortunes from America's Gilded Age.

    At her death on May 24, 2011, in the New York City hospital where she had lived for 20 years, the daughter of one of the copper kings of Montana possessed about $306.5 million, counting all her real estate, stocks, bonds, cash, trusts and personal property. The accounting was filed this week in Surrogate's Court in Manhattan by the office of the public administrator, the temporary executor of her estate.

    Clark's estimated property values:

    • $84.5 million for Bellosguardo, her California beachfront vacation home on 23.5 acres in Santa Barbara. That value was reduced to reflect $502,000 in property tax liens.
    • $53.0 million for her three apartments at 907 Fifth Ave., New York City. Their values are $24 million for apartment 12-W, which has been sold, $19 million for apartment 8-W, which has also found a buyer, and $10 million for apartment 8-E,  still on the market. Each apartment has approximately 5,000 square feet.
    • $14.3 million for La Beau Château, her Connecticut country home on 51.7 acres in New Canaan.
    • $79.3 million in stocks, bonds, cash and trusts, including $4,039 in unclaimed funds received from the state of New York.
    • $75.4 million in personal property. Details are not given, but this includes a Monet and other paintings, jewelry, furniture and her doll collection.

    John L. Wiley, http://flickr.com/photos/jw4pix/

    Bellosguardo, the Huguette Clark summer home in Santa Barbara, Calif. Her executor estimates its value at $85 million. Other estimates have run to $100 million. It could go to a new arts foundation, or to her extended family.

     


    The net value of the estate will be less. Federal and state estate taxes must be paid, and unpaid federal gift taxes are due to the IRS.

    And the estate could increase in value if the executor is successful in efforts to claw back more than $44 million in gifts that were given to Clark's nurses, doctors, hospital and others in her later years.

    Huguette (pronounced "oo-GET") Marcelle Clark, born in Paris in 1906, inherited her fortune from William Andrews Clark (1839-1925), a U.S. senator from Montana who was among the richest men of the Gilded Age, a copper miner, banker, builder of railroads, and founder of the city of Las Vegas.

    His youngest daughter attracted the attention of NBC News in 2009 because of her vacant but well-manicured mansions and questions about the management of her money. She lived her last 20 years in spartan hospital rooms, dying just weeks before her 105th birthday. The archive of Clark stories, photos and videos is at http://nbcnews.com/clark/.

    Rahul Kadakia of Christie's Auction House displays jewels discovered in heiress Huguette Clark's safe deposit box, including a pink 9-carat diamond ring that could be worth up to $15 million and a flawless Cartier diamond worth up to $4 million.

    Signed two wills
    To direct her fortune, at age 98, Huguette Clark signed two wills.

    The first will left $5 million to her private-duty registered nurse, Hadassah Peri, leaving the bulk of her estate to her relatives from her father's first marriage. The family members were not named in that will, which left the estate to her "intestate distributees," legal language for the people who would inherit if she died without a will. Because Clark had been married only briefly, and had no children, her closest relatives were the descendants of her father from the first marriage. These were Huguette Clark's half great-nieces and half great-nephews, and their children. Huguette and her four half-siblings had each received one-fifth shares of W.A. Clark's empire in 1925. Huguette's mother, Anna, received Bellosguardo, which then passed down to Huguette.

    Just six weeks passed before Clark signed a new will. It specified that she intentionally left no money to family, with whom the will said she had little contact. The family is claiming that this will was the product of fraud. The newer document leaves the largest share of her fortune to a museum or art foundation to be set up at her oceanfront estate in Santa Barbara. Specific bequests are made to her attorney, accountant, doctor and others, and the remainder is split among the nurse, a goddaughter and the California foundation. (See the earlier story and read the documents: A twist: Heiress Huguette Clark signed two wills.)

    Originally the temporary executors of the Clark estate were her attorney and accountant, but the court revoked the accountant's authority, and suspended the attorney from his role, leaving only the public administrator to manage the estate for now. The judge, Surrogate Kristin Booth Glen, acted after the public administrator's attorney revealed that Clark had not filed gift tax returns from 1997 through 2003, leaving her owing millions in taxes plus interest and possible penalties. (See the earlier story: Judge bounces attorney, accountant.)

    Preparing for trial
    The parties have been collecting evidence in the case through depositions of witnesses. Judge Glen put the attorneys on a fast clock, saying she hoped to begin a jury trial this year, before her term ends on Dec. 31. The judge recently acknowledged in court, however, that such an early trial date seems unlikely, leaving the case for her successor, perhaps early in 2013.


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    Though a criminal investigation was launched in August 2010 into the handling of Clark's finances by her attorney and accountant, no one has been charged with any crime. Both men have maintained that they did nothing more than carry out the wishes of a woman who wanted to protect her privacy. The investigation continues by the Elder Abuse Unit of the New York County District Attorney's Office. The investigation was prompted in part by reports by NBC News about the sale of property owned by Clark, including a Stradivarius violin and a Renoir painting.

    Clark's jewelry collection was sold at auction in April for $18.3 million. That money will be held by the estate during the contest over the wills. Her country estate in Connecticut is for sale, recently marked down to $15.9 million. Her estate in Santa Barbara is being carefully maintained, awaiting the court's decision. 

    Do you have information on the Clark family?
    Reporter Bill Dedman is co-authoring "Empty Mansions," a nonfiction book about Huguette Clark and her family. If you have documents or information, you can reach him at bill.dedman@msnbc.com.

    The full story
    More on the Huguette Clark mystery is at http://nbcnews.com/clark/.

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    123 comments

    Yes!!! As usual the lawyers will be the big “inherited winners”. Everyone will fight over the money and the lawyers will happily encourage the fighting and the lawyers will happily eat up the inheritance.

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  • 23
    May
    2012
    5:15am, EDT

    Staff bled $44 million in gifts from heiress Huguette Clark, suit says

    W.A. Clark Memorial Library

    Huguette Clark with one of her dolls.

    By Bill Dedman, Investigative Reporter, NBC News

    NEW YORK — The nurses, doctors, hospital, attorney and accountant for the reclusive heiress Huguette Clark coerced or influenced her to give them more than $44 million in gifts, the executor of her estate claimed in a remarkable legal petition filed Tuesday in Manhattan. The executor asked the court to order all the money to be repaid.

    The executor doesn't deny that Clark authorized nearly all of these gifts, relentlessly writing hundreds of checks in her own steady hand until her eyesight gave out at the age of 102.

    The accusations were vigorously denied by Clark's attorney, whose representative said, "To suggest that these gifts were not from Mrs. Clark's generous heart is to denigrate the person who gave these gifts, as well as the recipients who cared for her with their love."

    The most-favored object of Clark's generosity was her registered nurse, Hadassah Peri, an immigrant from the Philippines who had been randomly assigned in 1991 by a home healthcare agency. For 20 years Peri was the daytime private nurse, working 12-hour shifts, five or six days a week, taking care of Clark's health, her hygiene and her purchases of dolls at auctions. She was paid at an annual salary of $131,040. In addition, she and her family received $31 million in gifts, including the money to buy five homes, jewelry, dolls and a Stradivarius violin (though not Clark's best Stradivarius).



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    Another $6.3 million, including a $6 million painting by Manet, was given to Beth Israel Medical Center, which allowed Clark to live in the hospital although she was quite healthy for most of her last two decades.

    Clark's two physicians and their families received gifts of $3.1 million.

    The night nurse and her family got $1.1 million.

    The accountant, $375,000.

    The attorney, just $60,000 — in addition to $1,850,000 given after the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, for a security system for the attorney's daughter's Israeli community on the West Bank.

    All of these amounts were gifts on top of salaries.

    If the judge in Surrogate's Court agrees with the executor, all will have to be repaid.

    The legal petition filed late Tuesday afternoon, available here from NBCNews.com, is an attempt to claw back into the estate millions that the executor claims was bled away by undue influence or fraud.

    Update: On Wednesday the executor filed another petition, accusing Clark's attorney of malpractice and breaches of fiduciary duty, possibly opening the door for some of the claims to be covered by professional liability insurance policies. The executor asks the court to require the attorney and his law firm to return all legal fees paid by Clark from 1997 until her death.

    Huguette (pronounced "oo-GET") Marcelle Clark, born in Paris in 1906, inherited her fortune from William A. Clark, a U.S. senator from Montana who was among the richest men of the Gilded Age, a copper miner, a banker, a builder of railroads, and founder of the city of Las Vegas.

    His youngest daughter attracted the attention of NBC News in 2009 because of her vacant but well-manicured mansions and questions about the management of her money. She lived her last 20 years in spartan hospital rooms in New York City, dying in May 2011 just weeks before her 105th birthday. (The archive of Clark stories, photos and videos is at http://clark.msnbc.com/.)

    'Virtually no visitors'
    The executor's petition draws a picture of a woman isolated and controlled by others from 1991, when she was admitted to Doctors Hospital, until 2011, when she died at Beth Israel Medical Center, One of her former attorneys represented her for 20 years without meeting her face to face, instead talking to her on the phone and through a closed door.

    "Mrs. Clark had virtually no visitors other than persons who were on her payroll," wrote Peter S. Schram, outside counsel for the Public Administrator of New York County. That official, Ethel J. Griffin, was appointed by the court as the temporary executor of the Clark estate after questions were raised about the actions of Clark's attorney and accountant, whom Clark had named as executors.

    "Mrs. Clark," Schram wrote, "was completely dependent for her physical and emotional needs on a small group of individuals, who were her only contacts with the world outside of her hospital room."

    The executor claims that this close circle of caregivers exerted undue influence and control over Clark, making her unable to make free and intelligent decisions. The executor claims that the attorney and accountant never fully informed Clark of the tax ramifications of her gift-giving. The executor also says that Clark suffered from various unspecified "physical and mental infirmities," and by 2009, at age 102, she was suffering from severe loss of sight and hearing along with episodes of "hallucinations and confusion."

    Those claims will be countered by documents showing that Clark, while a recluse who saw few visitors, was never diagnosed with any mental illness, paid close attention to her financial affairs through the years, and rebuffed or ignored the advice of attorneys and accountants, even as they warned her that the gifts were making her cash poor, running up a tab of millions in unpaid gift taxes.

    The petition's claims were rejected by Clark's attorney, Wallace Bock, whose own attorney issued a statement.

    The filing by the executor "reflects a total disloyalty and lack of fiduciary care to Mrs. Clark," attorney John D. Dadakis of the firm of Holland & Knight said in a written statement to NBC News. "Our client, Wallace Bock, has honored Mrs. Clark's wishes during his career and handled her affairs with the utmost duty of loyalty to her. Mrs. Clark understood each and every gift she made, and they were made with the love that she had for those who were close to her.

    "To suggest that these gifts were not from Mrs. Clark's generous heart is to denigrate the person who gave these gifts, as well as the recipients who cared for her with their love," Dadakis wrote. "All of the records reflect that Mrs. Clark actively enjoyed her generosity and fully understood what she was giving. Mr. Bock will vigorously defend the acts of Mrs. Clark and we fully expect that the record will prove that all the gifts of Mrs. Clark were made by her, being fully aware of what she was doing."

    Hadassah Peri has not spoken publicly about Clark, but a press agent issued a statement on her behalf in June after she was named in the will: "I saw Madame Clark virtually every day for the 20 years. I was her private duty nurse but also her close friend. I knew her as a kind and generous person, with whom I shared many wonderful moments and whom I loved very much. I am profoundly sad at her passing, awed at the generosity she has shown me and my family, and eternally grateful. Just as Madame Clark demonstrated kindness toward others in her actions, so, too, will I and my family devote a substantial portion of this bequest toward making the world a better place for all people."

    All the parties named in the court papers have until Aug. 8 to respond in Surrogate's Court.

    The gifts claimed by the executor as not valid include the following:

    • $17,117,326.03 given by Clark to the nurse, Peri, in more than 200 personal checks written by Clark from 1991 to 2001.
    • $5 million paid to Peri, funded by a line of credit from JPMorgan because Clark had insufficient liquid assets. The executor acknowledges that the attorney, Bock, had a signed authorization from Clark for this payment and nearly all the others listed here, and by 2009 she had signed over to him a document called a durable power of attorney, giving him authority over certain financial affairs.
    • $3,883,685.78 given to Peri to purchase five homes: a co-op apartment on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, two condos on the Upper East Side, a house in the borough of Brooklyn, and a vacation home in Ocean, N.J., as disclosed by NBC News in 2010.
    • $1,935,200 in other tangible gifts to Peri, including 84 pieces of jewelry worth $667,300, a doll worth $64,400; a Stradivarius violin worth $1.2 million (not Clark's $6 million Strad, which was sold); and three harpsichords worth $3,500.
    • $60,000 in a check written by Clark's attorney in 2009 to Peri.
    • $3.4 million to Peri's family, including $1,503,813 to her husband, Daniel Peri, $706,550 to her son David, $628,250 to her son Abraham, and $632,450 to her daughter, Guela.
    • $685,000 given to Clark's licensed practical nurse on the night shift, Geraldine Coffey, who also worked from 1991 to 2011 at an annual salary of $131,040.
    • $358,327 to help Coffey buy two condo apartments on the Upper East Side.
    • $85,554 for tuition of Coffey's children.
    • $30,000 given to Coffey by the attorney.
    • $10,000 given to Erlinda Ysit, a licensed practical nurse for Clark for seven years.
    • $6 million Manet painting sold to benefit Beth Israel Medical Center, which allowed Clark to live in the hospital, even though for most of her two-decade stay "there was no medical need." This gift, and $295,000 in other gifts, was made on top of the $300,000 to $400,000 a year she paid to the hospital to live there. "At no time did Beth Israel, its staff, or any other physician or expert conduct a neurological examination or psychological examination of Mrs. Clark or otherwise ensure that she possessed the capacity required to make a gift to Beth Israel," Schram wrote.
    • $500,000 given to the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. The executor did not yet ask for this money to be returned, but asked for the court to order an inquiry.
    • $1,168,000 given to Dr. Jack Rudick, one of her physicians, and his wife, Irene Rudick.
    • $1 million lent by Clark to Dr. Rudick, on which he made no payments, and which she forgave.
    • $667,951 given to Dr. Henry Singman, her primary treating physician for 20 years.
    • $33,857 paid by attorney Bock to cover Singman's professional liability insurance premiums. (Not authorized in writing by Clark, the executor said.)
    • $200,000 paid to Singman's family.
    • $1,850,000 paid to an Israeli community on the West Bank where the family of attorney Bock lives. Documents show that Bock asked Clark in 2000 if she wanted to contribute to a security system. The total amount to be raised was $1,850,000, and Clark wrote in that amount, agreeing to pay the entire cost. Only five days earlier, according to the court records, Bock and accountant Irving Kamsler had written letters to Clark, warning that her gifts were out of hand, that she would owe $12.5 million in gift taxes, and that she might have to sell assets to raise cash. The executor accuses Bock of failing to remind her, when he solicited the gift benefiting his family, of this earlier warning about her financial situation, as well as failing to advise her of the right to seek independent counsel, nor arranging a medical evaluation to confirm that she had sufficient capacity to make the gift.
    • A $60,000 check written by Bock to himself in December 2009. Bock testified at his deposition in March that this check was authorized by a letter signed by Clark a month earlier. That letter was prepared by Bock, who gave $48,000 of the gift to his law firm, in line with his partnership agreement. The executor wants that money back as well, claiming that Clark never intended to make any gift to Collier, Halpern, Newberg, Nolletti & Bock.
    • $375,000 in checks written by Clark to Kamsler, a felon and registered sex offender, from 2000 to 2008, on top of his monthly salary, and a $60,000 check written by Bock to Kamsler in 2009, authorized by a letter from Clark. (Bock at the same time wrote checks to nurses, doctors and others, mostly in line with payments that she had made previously.)

    Other gifts are not being challenged by the executor. For example, Clark gave $10 million in 2000 to her friend Suzanne Pierre, now deceased, but Pierre might not be considered to have a confidential or fiduciary relationship with Clark.

    Update: An attorney for Kamsler, the accountant, issued a statement on Wednesday: "Mr. Kamsler provided dedicated service to Mrs. Clark, a very private person, for over 30 years," said the statement by attorney Marci Goldstein Kokalas of the firm Lazare Potter & Giacovas. "Unfortunately, the Public Administrator has misconstrued Mrs. Clark's generosity and made unfair allegations that have, yet again, brought her affairs to public scrutiny. The instant action dishonors Mrs. Clark's memory by casting a shadow on the gifts she bestowed throughout her life to those she cared for and trusted. Mr. Kamsler is confident the facts will reveal that Mrs. Clark always acted of her own volition and free from the influence of others."

    Criminal investigation
    Originally the executors of the Clark estate were Clark's attorney and accountant, but the court revoked the accountant's authority, and suspended the attorney from his role, leaving only the public official to manage the estate. The judge, Surrogate Kristin Booth Glen, acted after the public administrator's attorney revealed that Kamsler failed to file gift tax returns from 1997 through 2003, and falsely claimed on later returns that all taxes had been paid, leaving Clark owing millions in gift taxes plus interest and possible penalties. (See the earlier story.)

    Though a criminal investigation was launched in August 2010 into the handling of Clark's finances by Bock and Kamsler, no one has been charged. Both men have maintained that they did nothing more than carry out the wishes of a woman who wanted to protect her privacy. The investigation continues by the Elder Abuse Unit of the New York County District Attorney's Office. The investigation was prompted in part by reports by NBC News about the sale of property owned by Clark, including a Stradivarius violin and a Renoir painting.

    To direct her $400 million fortune, at age 98 the heiress signed two wills.

    The first will favored the relatives from her father's first marriage. They were not named: The will left the money to the "intestate distributees," legal language for the people who would inherit her money if she died without a will. (Clark had been married only briefly, and had no children.) And the will gave $5 million to the nurse, Peri.

    Just six weeks passed before she signed a new will, cutting out the family, which claims that this will was the product of fraud. The new document  leaves the largest share of her money to a museum for her art collection in her oceanfront estate in Santa Barbara, Calif. Millions more (an estimated $27 million after taxes) and a doll collection will go to Peri, and lesser amounts to a godchild, the hospital, and doctor, as well as $500,000 each to the attorney and accountant. (See the earlier story and read the documents: A twist: Heiress Huguette Clark signed two wills.)

    The $400 million heavyweight battle over the wills is about to begin, with the $44 million in gifts providing the preliminary bout.

    Clark's jewelry collection sold in April for $18.3 million. That money will be held by the estate during the contest over the wills. Her three apartments overlooking Central Park and Fifth Avenue, a total of 15,000 square feet, are on the market for $55 million; one of the three has found a buyer. Her country estate in New Canaan, Conn., is for sale for $17 million. Her $100 million estate in Santa Barbara, which the Clarks had not visited for half a century, is being carefully maintained, awaiting the court's decision on the will's plan for an art museum.

    A twist: If the executor is successful in recovering for the estate millions from the nurse, doctor, hospital, attorney and accountant, and if the second of Clark's written wills is the one to be upheld, those same millions can then be paid out to the beneficiaries, including the nurse, doctor, hospital, attorney and accountant.

    The full story
    More on the Huguette Clark mystery is at http://clark.msnbc.com/.

    Do you have information on the Clark family?
    Reporter Bill Dedman is co-authoring "Empty Mansions," a nonfiction book about the Clark family. If you have documents or information, you can reach him at bill.dedman@msnbc.com.

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    370 comments

    Why is a lawyer taking gifts from their clients, why are doctors taking gifts from their patients? They charge a fee for their services and that shoudl be it. These supposed gifts are not small they are more than generous and looks bad, very bad, taking advantage of an elderly lady.

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  • 7
    May
    2012
    6:09pm, EDT

    Even a $31.5 million bid won't snag Huguette Clark apartments for Qatari P.M.

    Brown Harris Stevens

    The view from Apartment 8W at 907 Fifth Avenue, a view that Huguette Clark gave up for the last 20 years of her life. The 5,000-square-foot apartment could still be yours for $19 million.

    By Bill Dedman, Investigative Reporter, NBC News

    NEW YORK — The prime minister of the Persian Gulf nation of Qatar was rebuffed this weekend in his attempt to spend $31.5 million for two of the New York co-op apartments of the reclusive heiress Huguette Clark.

    A person familiar with the decision said the co-op's board declined to grant the sheikh an interview, concerned primarily that the quiet character of the elegant building would change with the security demands of a foreign leader. He would be replacing, after all, a woman who was the world's quietest neighbor, having lived the last 20 years of her life in New York hospitals.

    Huguette Marcelle Clark, the heir to a Montana copper fortune, has been the subject of a series of reports on msnbc.com about her vacant properties and the management of her fortune. When she died last May at age 104, her properties included three apartments at 907 Fifth Avenue, at East 72nd Street, overlooking Central Park's Conservatory Water, near the statue of Alice in Wonderland.

    Karim Jaafar / AFP-Getty Images

    The prime minister and foreign minister of Qatar, Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim bin Jaber Al Thani, photographed in 2006. He was rebuffed in his effort to buy the New York apartments of the late reclusive heiress Huguette Clark.

    The Qatari prime minister, Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim bin Jaber Al Thani, was selected by the Clark estate after an auction, offering $31.5 million for Clark's two apartments on the 8th floor, a total of 10,000 square feet. That's half a million dollars more than the asking price. Hamad, who reportedly has two wives and 15 children, owns one of the largest yachts in the world, the 133-meter al-Miqab, which cost several hundred million dollars.

    Clark's third apartment, on the top floor, the 12th, found a buyer soon after it was listed, at or near the asking price of $24 million. The buyer is Boaz Weinstein, the well-known hedge fund manager and derivatives trader, formerly of Deutsche Bank and now with Saba Capital Management LP. He has signed a contract and is awaiting an interview with the co-op board.

    The three apartments combined cost Clark (and her estate) $28,500 a month in co-op fees, or $342,000 a year.

     


    The Qatari had not made the highest bid for the 8th floor apartments. He offered $31.5 million, less than the top bid of $33 million, according to a person familiar with the auction. The other bidders were the founder of a private-equity firm and the founder of a hedge-fund firm. It wasn't clear why the estate chose the lower bid.

     

     

     

     

    But the auction became moot after the co-op's board changed its mind, deciding not to allow the two apartments on the 8th floor to be joined into one. Even though the apartments had been listed separately, the estate had accepted bids only for the two together, after the co-op board had signaled that it would look favorably on a combination. But the board changed its mind after the auction, and the board declined to grant an interview to the Qatari, even if he were to purchase only one of the two apartments. Besides the security issues, the board was concerned about the disruption of construction, as well as the long-term imbalance of having a single owner with so large a share of the building. The Qatari had also let it be known that he was willing to pay top dollar for other apartments in the building for staff and relatives.

    Hamad is not only the prime minister but also the foreign minister of the emirate, and is the cousin of the emir, the country's hereditary ruling leader, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, who owns a house just down the block and across 72nd Street, between Fifth Avenue and Madison Avenue.

    Bill Dedman / msnbc.com

    A winter view of 907 Fifth Avenue in New York City, at 72nd Street on the east side of Central Park. The taxis in this view are headed east on 72nd, leaving the park.

    Now the real estate brokers must start over. Perhaps one of the other bidders will want to purchase only the $19 million apartment 8W, facing Central Park, or the $12 million apartment 8E. The apartments are said to need a lot of work, and the kitchens date from before World War II.

    The brokers from Brown Harris Stevens declined to comment, as did the attorney for the public administrator of New York County, who is executor of the estate. Proceeds of the sale will help pay estate expenses, with the remainder held for the winner of the court battle over the $400 million estate of Clark, who left two wills, one favoring her family and the other favoring her nurse, attorney, accountant and a public museum to be established in her oceanfront $100 million home in Santa Barbara, Calif.

    Her country estate in New Canaan, Conn., has been marked down to $17 million from its original price of $23 million.

    The New York Observer reported earlier Monday that the co-op board rejected a bid from an unknown buyer.

    Floor plans for the three apartments are available in our previous story.

    The full story
    More on the Huguette Clark mystery is at http://clark.msnbc.com/.

    Do you have information on the Clark family?
    Reporter Bill Dedman is writing a nonfiction book about the Clark family. If you have information, you can reach him at bill.dedman@msnbc.com.

    Rahul Kadakia of Christie's Auction House displays jewels discovered in heiress Huguette Clark's safe deposit box, including a pink 9-carat diamond ring.

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    119 comments

    I can't blame the coop board for not wanting the headaches of having a senior foreign official living in the building, particularly not one from a muslim country who would need heavy security.

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  • 17
    Apr
    2012
    6:19pm, EDT

    Sold! Jewels of heiress Huguette Clark bring a surprising $18 million at auction

    Slideshow: A look at Huguette Clark's jewelry collection

    Christie's, New York

    Freed from their bank vault by the executor of the estate, the jewels of copper heiress Huguette Clark were sold on April 17, including a rare pink diamond and these emerald, pearl and diamond ear pendants. See the photos for final sale prices.

    Launch slideshow

    By Bill Dedman, Investigative Reporter, NBC News

    NEW YORK — The jewelry collection of Huguette M. Clark, the mysterious heiress to a copper fortune, was sold at auction Tuesday afternoon at Christie's New York, fetching $18.3 million, far above the pre-sale estimate of $8.5 million to $12 million.

    The jewels had been recovered from the bank vault of the reclusive heiress, who lived the last 20 years of her life in Manhattan hospitals and who had rarely been seen since the 1930s.

    The last surviving child of U.S. Sen. William Andrews Clark (1839-1925), who made his fortune in mining, railroads and other ventures, Huguette Clark has been the subject of a series of reports on msnbc.com about her vacant properties and the management of her fortune. Born in Paris in June 1906, she died in May 2011 at age 104.

    Hundreds of people filed through Christie's at Rockefeller Center to see her jewels over the weekend.

    The highlight was a rare 9-carat purplish-pink diamond ring, with a pre-sale estimate of $6 million to $8 million.

    "Four million dollars," started the elegant auctioneer, Rahul Kadakia.


    "Seven point five million dollars?" Kadakia added, hearing a bid. "All right, why waste time."

    It was hammered home at $14 million, plus commission, for a total outlay of $15,762,500.

    The buyer of the "Clark pink" was identified as Brett Stettner of Stettner Investment Diamonds.

    The pace was set with the first two items, onyx photo frames estimated at about $6,000. They each sold for $60,000.

    A pair of art deco bracelets sold for $90,000 and $480,000.

    The total for all Clark items, with commissions, was $20.8 million.

    See the accompanying slideshow for details on the Clark jewels and their final sale prices.

    "It was like chasing a rainbow and you had this big pot of gold at the end. It was fantastic," auctioneer Kadakia, head of jewelry for Christie's, said on the TODAY TV show about opening the Clark vault. (See the accompanying video.) "They were all in this original boxes, in this bank vault, since the 1940s."

    In addition to bidders at Christie's at Rockefeller Center in New York, bidders were online and on the telephone in Texas, Bahrain, Japan. They were alerted that parties with a potential financial interest were bidding on several of the less-expensive items. Possibly these were Clark relatives.

    Many non-Clark items in the jewelry auction also sold well above their estimates, including a 24.68-carat diamond that sold for $420,000, or more than twice its high estimate.

    An apartment already sold
    One of her three mysterious apartments on New York's Fifth Avenue found a buyer soon after they hit the market in March. The top-floor apartment, listed at $24 million, sold in less than a month for an undisclosed price. The two others remain on the market, at $19 million and $12 million. Each apartment has about 5,000 square feet of space. Also on the market: her country home in New Canaan, Conn., at $19.8 million.

    Rahul Kadakia of Christie's Auction House displays jewels discovered in heiress Huguette Clark's safe deposit box.

    How can anything be sold now?
    Proceeds from the properties and jewelry will be used to pay estate expenses, with the rest held for the eventual winner of the legal battle over her $400 million fortune. On one side are members of the Clark family, grandchildren of her father from his first marriage, whom she included in one will and then cut out of her last. On the other side are her attorney, accountant and nurse, all named in the last will, which left nothing to her relatives.

    Her oceanfront home in Santa Barbara, Calif., with an estimated value of $100 million, is not on the market, because her second will designates it as a public museum and home for her art collection. The fate of that property is tied up in the legal battle. The largest chunk of the estate is left to that museum in the second will.

    Also not for sale: her doll collection, with an estimated value of $4 million, which the second will leaves to her nurse.

    The full story
    More on the Huguette Clark mystery is at http://clark.msnbc.com/.

    Do you have information on the Clark family?
    Reporter Bill Dedman is writing a nonfiction book about the Clark family. If you have information, you can reach him at bill.dedman@msnbc.com.

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    67 comments

    Hugette Clark obviously did not really care about money and wealth. I believe the article said most (if not all) the pieces were in their original boxes locked up in a safe. I would love to see some designers make "copies" of the jewelry to sell - those pieces are just lovely.

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  • 2
    Apr
    2012
    5:24pm, EDT

    One of three Huguette Clark apartments has found a buyer

    Brown Harris Stevens

    The view from Huguette Clark's apartment 8W, which still could be yours. The asking price is $19 million.

    By Bill Dedman, Investigative Reporter, NBC News

    NEW YORK — One of the three mysterious apartments of copper heiress Huguette M. Clark has sold for an undisclosed price. Her top-floor apartment, with 5,000 square feet of space overlooking Central Park, was on the market for $24 million, the most expensive of the three.

    The signing of a contract for apartment 12W was confirmed Monday by broker Mary Rutherfurd of Brown Harris Stevens, an exclusive affiliate of Christie's International Real Estate. The apartments have been on the market for less than a month.

    Still available: apartment 8W, also with a park view, at $19 million, and 8E, listed at $12 million.

    You can see the floor plans and descriptions of the apartments in our earlier story.

    The three apartments cost the reclusive heiress to a Montana copper fortune $28,500 a month in co-op fees, or $342,000 a year, while she lived for two decades in New York hospital rooms. Huguette Marcelle Clark has been the subject of a series of reports on msnbc.com about her vacant properties and the management of her fortune. When she died last May at age 104, she owned three apartments at 907 Fifth Avenue, at 72nd Street, in addition to an oceanfront estate in Santa Barbara, Calif., with an estimated value of $100 million, and a country house in New Canaan, Conn., recently put back on the market by the same broker at $19.8 million.

    The auction of the Clark jewelry collection, at Christie's New York, is scheduled for April 17. A slideshow of the Clark jewels is available at the home page for our Clark mystery series.

    When the apartments and jewelry sell, some of the money will be used to pay estate expenses, with the rest will be held for the eventual winner of the legal battle. On one side are members of the Clark family, grandchildren of her father from his first marriage, whom she included in one will and then cut out of her last. On the other side are her attorney, accountant, nurse and favorite museum, the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, which were all named in the second will, which left the largest portion of her estate to create an art museum in her California home, with the next largest piece going to her nurse.

    Slideshow: A look at Huguette Clark's jewelry collection

    Christie's, New York

    Freed from their bank vault by the executor of the estate, the jewels of copper heiress Huguette Clark go on sale at Christie's New York on April 17, including a rare pink diamond and these emerald, pearl and diamond ear pendants. Which piece do you prefer?

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  • 15
    Mar
    2012
    1:30am, EDT

    The $10 million Degas ballerina, heiress Huguette Clark and the tax man

    Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City

    Detail from "Dancer Making Points," the Degas painting lost by the reclusive heiress Huguette Clark.

    By Bill Dedman, Investigative Reporter, NBC News

    NEW YORK — The mystery itself is a masterpiece. A $10 million painting by Degas — a simple figure of a ballerina in a yellow and red tutu pointing her toe – vanished from the New York City apartments of reclusive heiress Huguette Clark, and wound up, innocently enough, on the living room wall of Henry Bloch, a Kansas art collector better known as the "H" in the tax company H&R Block. How it got there is a multi-layered tale involving one of the more colorful transactions in the history of high-end art.

    For readers who have been following the Clark mystery story on msnbc.com, this episode provides a new piece of evidence that could be important in the legal battle over her $400 million estate. Now we know that her longtime physician, as part of a settlement over the painting, signed a statement swearing to her competency, describing his then-102-year-old patient as "mentally and physically alert." This was in 2008, or three years after she signed a will cutting her family out of any inheritance and planning an art museum in her California home.

    The circumstances in which the Degas ballerina disappeared from Clark’s Fifth Avenue apartments in the early 1990s remain unclear, but for the first time the story can be told of how it ended up in Bloch’s living room, above the sofa, between a Seurat and a Toulouse-Lautrec. And how Bloch was allowed to keep the painting even after the FBI came calling.


    When it was discovered in 2005 that Bloch and his wife had purchased a painting with a tainted past, a quiet dispute over its ownership erupted. It had been taken from Clark's apartment, but it also had been bought in good faith by the Blochs.

    Valuing her privacy more than her possessions, Clark had told her attorney and the FBI in 1992 not to pursue the loss of the painting. She didn't list it on the international registry of stolen art. As a result, in a high-stakes legal version of the children's rhyme "finder's keepers, loser's weepers," she may have lost her claim to the painting. The Blochs' attorney argued that it now belonged to them. 

    After well-mannered wrangling, Clark and Bloch reached a deal. Clark agreed to donate the painting to an art museum in Kansas City, Mo., the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, where Bloch had been a longtime trustee, chairman and benefactor, and where he and his wife had promised to donate all their art when they died. As part of the agreement, the heiress, not America's Tax Man, got the income tax deduction for the gift.

    Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City

    "Dancer Making Points" or "Danseuse Faisant des Pointes," 1879-1880, by Edgar Degas, pastel and gouache on paper mounted on board, from the collection of the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, Missouri. The painting was donated by heiress Huguette Marcelle Clark 16 years after it went missing from her New York apartments.

    The handoff
    To seal the deal, the ballerina needed to change hands. In October 2008, on a clear but crisp Monday at the Bloch home in Mission Hills, Kansas, a museum representative handed the ballerina in the gilded frame to Clark's attorney, who handed it back to the museum, and back onto the Blochs' wall it went. The museum had agreed to lend the painting back to the Blochs, and they will have it as long as they live, renewing the loan every year. Then it will go back to its owner, the Kansas City museum, with the rest of the Bloch collection of Impressionist masterpieces.

    The parties signed a confidentiality agreement, keeping the whole business secret even from the staff of the museum. Only three of its 21 trustees were told.

    When the museum announced in 2010 the promise by the Blochs to donate 30 Impressionist masterpieces at their death, the Degas dancer was featured in The Kansas City Star newspaper, although the museum at that point had already owned the painting for two years.

    Last month, when asked about the ballerina, the museum public relations staff said emphatically that it was not owned by the museum.

    'Stunning'
    "This is a remarkably beautiful work by Degas. Everything about this work is stunning," wrote Joachim Pissarro, curator of the department of painting and sculpture at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, describing the gentle figure of a dancer in bold yellow and orange, set against brown floorboards and a green backdrop of foliage on a stage.

    Edgar Degas, the reluctant Impressionist who preferred to be known as a Realist, painted the ballerina in France in 1879-1880, as his eyesight was failing. It's a seemingly simple work, 19 by 14½ inches, with pastel and gouache applied to paper. It's known as "Dancer Making Points," or in French, "Danseuse Faisant des Pointes."

    The ballerina was sold at a gallery in Paris in 1927, then passed to the French collector Georges Lévy, who brought his collection to America in 1939-1940 to escape the Nazis. Huguette Clark or her mother bought it sometime before 1955.

    The youngest daughter of the former U.S. Sen. William Andrews Clark, known as one of the Copper Kings of Montana, Huguette Marcelle Clark was born in Paris in 1906. In his day, her father could have bought up all the works of all the Impressionists with one week's income from his mines, but he mostly preferred older paintings.

    Estate of Huguette M. Clark

    An undated photograph of copper heiress Huguette Clark, 1906-2011.

    In 1991, at age 84, Huguette Clark moved from her 42-room apartments on New York's Fifth Avenue, and would live the remaining 20 years of her life in hospital rooms. She left behind a Monet, a Renoir and many other treasures.

    Documents and interviews show that it didn't take long for one treasure to go missing.

    In 1992 or early 1993, her attorney, Donald Wallace, learned that the Degas ballerina was lost. There was talk that a member of the building staff had taken it, or that doormen had seen it next to a trash bin in the building. In any case, the ballerina was gone. Wallace informed his client, whom he never met face to face in 20 years of representation. Clark discouraged him from pursuing the matter, maintaining her longstanding policy of not doing anything that would generate publicity, even if it cost her millions.

    But her attorney, or the building manager, called the FBI. Wallace explained that Clark saw no visitors, but the FBI agents barged into her hospital room anyway. She discouraged them from investigating. She didn't file an insurance claim. She didn't register the painting with the Art Loss Register, a company founded in 1991 that was becoming the de facto place to check for stolen art.

    'Seemingly from a good family'
    Later in 1993, a well-dressed man walked into the Peter Findlay Gallery, about a 15-minute stroll down Fifth Avenue from Clark's apartment.

    "Many years ago," Findlay told msnbc.com in an email, "I had a gallery on Madison Avenue and sold good things of a European taste, particularly Impressionist works such as Degas, etc. Naturally people would stop in to look and to chat. Among them was a European gentleman, seemingly from a good family, who visited New York from time to time and would occasionally visit the gallery.

    "At some point he told me that he had inherited a work by Degas that had been in his family for many years and asked if I would help him sell it. Eventually the work was brought to the gallery. It had the aura of a work that had been in a family for a long time."

    Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City

    Henry and Marion Bloch, benefactors of the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City. Henry Bloch and his brother founded H&R Block in Kansas City in 1955. The Henry Bloch biography, by their son, is entitled, "Many Happy Returns: The Story of Henry Bloch, America's Tax Man."

    At this time, Henry and Marion Bloch were shopping in New York for paintings. Henry and his brother, Richard, had founded a tax accounting firm in Kansas City in 1955, calling it H&R Block, changing the spelling slightly from their last name. They built a nationwide business after the Internal Revenue Service stopped helping people fill out their tax returns. Henry Bloch, 89 today, had been a navigator on American B-17 bombers during World War II, and by all accounts is a hard-working, humble man. He and Marion, who have been married for 60 years, built a collection of Impressionists, eventually acquiring works by Renoir, Monet, van Gogh.

    To buy one of Degas' famous series of dance paintings, for an undisclosed price, the Blochs sold a lesser Degas, of three dancers. Bloch later told The Kansas City Times, "This was so much finer."

    Findlay said he did everything he could to confirm the provenance of the painting, checking with the Art Loss Register. "I was shocked when I heard from the FBI that the Degas was stolen."

    Christopher A. Marinello, executive director and general counsel for the Art Loss Register in London, said in an interview that buyers should do their own checks on the authenticity and good title of art. "It costs less than $100 to check the ownership of a $5 million painting. People will buy a used car and they'll take it around the corner and put it up on a lift and check it out, and they'll get a Carfax report. They'll spend millions on art, and do nothing."

    The Blochs mostly kept their collection at home, but in the summer of 2007, the Degas held center stage at the Nelson-Atkins when the Marion and Henry Bloch Collection highlighted the opening of the Bloch Building, named for its benefactors. The exhibition was sponsored by the H&R Block Foundation. The museum displayed a close-up of the Degas ballerina as a signature image of the collection, and notecards with the image are still for sale today in the museum gift shop.

    Two years earlier, the museum and the Blochs had learned from the FBI that the Degas ballerina might belong to someone else.

    In 2005 an auction house in New York had noticed that a Degas owned by Clark (known then as "La Faisant des Pointes" or "Making Points") was apparently the same one sold to Henry Bloch.

    "I believe I may have been first contacted in late 2005," Henry Bloch said in a written answer to questions from msnbc.com, "by the FBI, who indicated that they were conducting an art investigation and wanted to confirm their information that we had purchased the Degas." The FBI, Bloch said, "did not give any indication that it had been stolen and gave us assurances there was nothing to worry about. I nevertheless shared the inquiry with my attorney at the time who discussed it with the Director of the Nelson-Atkins. I do not believe I was contacted again by them until late 2007."

    In late 2007, the Blochs received a subpoena from the U.S. Attorney's Office, asking them to turn the painting over to the federal court during the investigation. A round of meetings began with the FBI, the U.S. Attorney, and the attorney for Clark.

    Nobody wanted a lawsuit
    The attorney for the Blochs took the position that the painting was theirs, fair and square.

    Attorney John R. Phillips represented both the Blochs and the Nelson-Atkins. "The law is clear that the Blochs were – and the Nelson-Atkins Museum now is – the rightful owner of the work," he said in written answers to msnbc.com.

    The two sides couldn't agree whether the painting had actually been stolen. Clark's attorney argued that the FBI file clearly showed that the painting had been reported as stolen. The attorney for the Blochs argued that the FBI never concluded for sure whether the painting had been given away, lost or stolen.

    Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City

    The living room in the home of Henry and Marion Bloch in Mission Hills, Kansas, showing some of their collection of Impressionists. The Degas pastel of a ballerina is to the left of the sofa.

    Even if it had been stolen, the Bloch claim cited legal cases requiring diligence by the loser of property to try to recover it. The idea is that unreasonable and inexcusable delay puts an unfair burden on the later possessor of the property. The doctrine is called laches (from the Old French word for "slack"). Failing to exercise your rights can cause you to forfeit them. One of the well-known cases involved the artist Georgia O'Keefe, who never reported to police the loss of a painting. Moreover, a Kansas law (and the Degas ballerina was then in Kansas), called a statute of repose, sets a 10-year limit on a lawsuit to recover an item.

    Most people in Clark's position would have fought for their property, and Clark, a painter herself, did want her Degas to be returned. Documents show that her attorney, Wallace "Wally" Bock, advised her that she had the option to sue for the painting or its value. But she abhorred lawsuits, and a 102-year-old recluse was never going to sit for a deposition.

    The main goals for the Blochs were to keep possession of the painting during their lifetimes, and to make sure it then went to the Kansas City museum. Their attorney made a proposal: If Clark were to donate the painting to the Nelson-Atkins, the Blochs would give up ownership immediately, and cede possession after they died.

    Before the handoff, Sotheby's appraised the painting at $10 million. Clark would be able to claim that amount as a charitable deduction on her income tax return.

    On Oct. 7, 2008, in her recognizable handwriting, now a bit shaky, 102-year-old Huguette Clark signed a deed giving her ballerina to the Nelson-Atkins Museum. (Read the document in PDF form.)

    'Mentally and physically alert'
    There was one more hitch, which could play a large role in the court fight now beginning over Huguette Clark's $400 million estate. The museum would not accept the gift from the centenarian, particularly one whom they couldn't meet, unless Clark provided a doctor's statement affirming she was competent to make the gift.

    On Oct. 10, 2008, Clark's longtime physician signed a sworn statement. The affidavit by internist Dr. Henry S. Singman began by explaining that he was semi-retired, and had only the one patient.

    "I am and have been personal physician to Madame Clark, who resides at 907 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York, since 1991. As such, and because of her advanced age, I visit her on an almost daily basis."

    He said he had seen her just the day before. "At that time, and on all previous visits, I found her, although slightly hard of hearing, to be mentally and physically alert, able to read and comprehend written and printed material as well as verbal communications, competent to understand and execute documents and to sign her name thereto without assistance." (Read the document in PDF form.)

    Huguette Clark died at age 104 in May 2011, having signed two wills in 2005, when she was 98. The first will left nearly everything to her family, the great-grandchildren from her father's first marriage. The second will, signed just six weeks later, was more detailed, excluding her family entirely, making plans for an art museum in her Santa Barbara oceanfront home, and leaving about $36 million to her nurse ($27 million after taxes), a $40 million Monet to the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., with substantial gifts to a godchild, her doctor, her attorney, her accountant and others.

    If Clark was mentally competent in 2008 to make a stunning act of generosity, ceding any claim to a $10 million painting that had been taken from her, then it may be harder for her family to prove that she was incompetent in 2005 to sign that second will.

    The attorney for the family, John R. Morken, said he would first question Dr. Singman's independence. The doctor is not only a beneficiary in that second will, named to receive $100,000, but also received gifts from Clark of $60,000 to $115,000 a year in her last years, over and above his payment for medical services, similar to the large gifts she gave others in her tight circle. "Obviously he wouldn't say that she lacked capacity, or else these gifts would be invalid," Morken said yesterday. "All I can say is, I look forward to his deposition."

    Singman also signed a similar statement of her competency in 1995, as required by one of her banks for a financial transaction, long before she signed a will. He declined to comment this week.

    The family has made a second argument, contending that Clark was unduly influenced by the nurse, attorney and accountant to sign the second will. The attorney and accountant have said that it was drafted according to her explicit instructions.

    "In this transaction," said Morken, the family attorney, "I would question what was told to her, whether she knew what she was giving up."

    The temporary executor of her estate, the public administrator of the city of New York, has challenged certain gifts paid from Clark's accounts, including a $5 million gift to her nurse, but has not challenged the gift of the Degas. That silence could indicate that the executor found the gift to be well documented. The attorney for the public administrator, Peter Schram, declined to comment.

    'Strict confidentiality'
    On Oct. 27, 2008, the painting changed hands outside the Bloch home in Mission Hills, a suburb of Kansas City. The museum's director, Marc F. Wilson, now retired, was present for the round-robin hand-off, as was Phillips, the attorney for the Blochs and the museum. Clark was represented by her attorney, Bock, and accountant, Irving Kamsler. The 128-year-old painting was walked out to the car, handed around gently like a newborn baby, and back inside it went.

    The U.S. Attorney's Office withdrew its subpoena. No one was charged with taking the painting. The FBI said this month that the case remains open.

    W.A. Clark Memorial Library

    A childhood photograph of copper heiress Huguette Clark, 1906-2011.

    The exchange was kept secret. The Blochs and Clark signed a confidentiality agreement. The museum told only three of its 21 trustees, the three who serve as an executive committee. Even the museum's curators of European paintings were not told. No entry for the painting was created in the museum's records.

    "We have consistently worked to honor our donors’ wishes for privacy and to respect the strict confidentiality requested by Ms. Clark at the time of the gift to the museum," explained the new director of the Nelson-Atkins, Julián Zugazagoitia, who joined the museum in 2010, in written answers to msnbc.com.

    Was the museum's decision to lend the painting back to the Blochs, secretly, the ethical choice? The Nelson-Atkins is open free to the public, which would be able to enjoy the Degas today, if the museum staff knew that it owned the painting.

    If the Blochs had fought for ownership and won, the painting wouldn't have come to the museum any sooner, staying at the Bloch home as part of their collection until their deaths. If they had fought and lost, the painting would probably have remained hidden away in the Clark apartment until after she died in May 2011, and would be headed for her proposed art museum in California if her last will is upheld.

    "Despite a highly unusual course of events," museum direcdtor Zugazagoitia wrote, "and thanks to Ms. Clark's role as an additional benefactor to the museum, Mr. Bloch has been steadfast in ensuring that the work ends up in the museum's collection for the benefit of the public. We are extremely grateful for the generosity of both the Blochs and Ms. Clark."

    A memento
    Before the transaction was concluded, Huguette Clark made two requests.

    Though Clark gave the painting without restriction to the Nelson-Atkins, in a side letter she asked that her beloved Corcoran Gallery, where most of her father's art is on display, should be allowed to borrow the painting up to three times in 25 years. If it were shown there, she would receive credit by name. But in Kansas City, the painting is listed as an anonymous gift.

    After the Degas was deeded to the museum, the heiress also asked for, and received, a full-size color photograph of her ballerina.

    ---

    Reporter Bill Dedman is writing a nonfiction book about the Clark family. If you have information, you can reach him at bill.dedman@msnbc.com.

    Here's a video companion piece from KSHB in Kansas City:

    Degas masterpiece has its secret story of ownership revealed with ties to heiress Huguette Clark and Henry Bloch of H&R Bloch. KSHB's Christa Dubill reports.

     

    Previous stories in the Huguette Clark mystery series on msnbc.com:

    Archive of all stories, photos and videos.

    Photo narrative, "The Clarks: An American story of wealth, scandal and mystery," Feb. 26, 2010.

    Printable version of the photo narrative, Feb. 26, 2010.

    Clark family notes and sources, Feb. 26, 2010.

    Investigative report, part one, "At 104, the mysterious heiress Huguette Clark is alone now: Relatives are kept away. Only her accountant and attorney visit. Who protects HuguetteClark, with 3 empty homes and no heirs?" Aug. 19, 2010.

    Investigative report, part two, "Who is watching Huguette Clark's millions? Reclusive heiress's assets are sold by two advisers, one an accountant with a felony conviction. Another elderly client signed over his property to the same accountant and attorney," Aug. 20, 2010.

    "Criminal probe begins into the finances of reclusive heiress Huguette Clark: Manhattan DA's Elder Abuse Unit is on the case. The same unit prosecuted the Brooke Astor case; Clark has about four times the wealth," Aug. 24, 2010.

    "Report sparks welfare check on heiress Huguette Clark," Aug. 25, 2010.

    "Generosity of an heiress: four homes for a nurse, gifts for attorney's family," Sept. 1, 2010.

    "Huguette Clark, the reclusive heiress, has signed a will, attorney says," Sept. 2, 2010.

    "Family of copper heiress asks court to protect her from attorney, accountant," Sept. 3, 2010.

    "Attorney for 104-year-old heiress defends his handling of her finances," Sept. 7, 2010.

    "Judge leaves pair under investigation in control of heiress Huguette Clark's fortune," Sept. 9, 2010.

    "Huguette Clark, the reclusive copper heiress, dies at 104," May 24, 2011.

    "Family excluded from Huguette Clark burial," May 26, 2011.

    "Heiress Huguette Clark's will leaves $1 million to advisers," June 22, 2011.

    "The 1 percent of the 1 percent: How Huguette Clark's millions were spent," Nov. 19, 2011.

    "A $400 miillion twist: Huguette Clark signed two wills, one to her family," Nov. 28, 2011.

    "Tax fraud alleged in estate of heiress Huguette Clark; accountant resigns," Dec. 21, 2011.

    "Nurse, in line to inherit millions, battles family of heiress Huguette Clark," Dec. 22, 2011.

    "Judge bounces attorney and accountant from estate of heiress Huguette Clark," Dec. 23, 2011.

    "Book coming on reclusive heiress Huguette Clark and her family," Feb. 3, 2012.

    "You can move into heiress Huguette Clark's building, for $25 million," Feb. 6, 2012.

     "Family of heiress Huguette Clark claims fraud by nurse, attorney, accountant," Feb. 15, 2012.

     

     "Heiress Huguette Clark's apartments hit the market, listed at $55 million," March 9, 2012.

     

     "The jewels of reclusive heiress Huguette Clark go on auction," March 13, 2012.

     

    142 comments

    Somebody stole the darn thing and made some money from it.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: art, theft, featured, degas, huguette-clark, henry-bloch
  • 8
    Mar
    2012
    6:38pm, EST

    Heiress Huguette Clark's apartments hit the market, listed at $55 million

    Brown Harris Stevens

    The view from one of reclusive heiress Huguette Clark's three apartments, 12W, on the top floor of 907 Fifth Avenue by Central Park. At right is the pond where Stuart Little, the fictional mouse, sailed boats in the E.B. White classic. Clark occupied this apartment from the 1920s until just after her mother died in 1963. She then renovated her mother's apartment on the 8th floor and moved into it. She left in 1992 for a hospital, and died in 2011 at age 104.

    By Bill Dedman, Investigative Reporter, NBC News

    NEW YORK —The three New York City apartments owned by the mysterious heiress Huguette Clark have been listed for sale, with a total asking price of $55 million, even as the legal contest over her $400 million estate is just beginning.

    "Butterfield 8 - the exchange number found on the old dial telephone - sets the tone for what this apartment represents: timeless grace; high style and prime location," the listing brokers wrote in their description, marketing the apartments as a time capsule from New York's Gilded Age. The apartments are listed by Brown Harris Stevens, an exclusive affiliate of Christie's International Real Estate.

    The apartments will need significant work. They are described as "a diamond in the rough."


    The three apartments cost the reclusive heiress to a Montana copper fortune $28,500 a month in co-op fees, or $342,000 a year, while she lived for two decades in New York hospital rooms. Huguette Marcelle Clark has been the subject of a series of reports on msnbc.com about her vacant properties and the management of her fortune. When she died last May at age 104, she owned three apartments at 907 Fifth Avenue, at 72nd Street, overlooking Central Park's Conservatory Water, the sailboat pond where the mouse Stuart Little sailed in the E.B. White story, near the statute of Alice in Wonderland.

    Her three apartments have a total of 42 rooms. Two of her apartments make up the entire eighth floor, or about 10,000 square feet, with another 5,000 square feet in an apartment that occupies half of the top floor, the 12th. (She also owned an oceanfront estate in Santa Barbara, Calif., with an estimated value of $100 milliion, and a country home in New Canaan, Conn., which has been on the market for $24 million.)

    No photos of the inside of the apartments are available yet — they are still being cleared of her property, including her collections of dolls and fine paintings.

    But floorplans were released by the brokers at Brown Harris Stevens. And the listings are here, for apartment 8E, apartment 8W, and apartment 12W.

    Here are the three apartments:

    Apartment 8W, listed at $19 million, is where Huguette Clark lived from 1964 until she moved out in 1992 to a hospital, leaving the furnished apartment without an occupant. With 5,000 square feet of space, this apartment has 100 feet of frontage on Fifth Avenue and 10 rooms, including a sitting room that is 20 by 26, and an entry gallery that is 12 by 37. There are "expansive views above the trees of Central Park through 9 enormous windows."

    Brown Harris Stevens

    Apartment 8E, listed at $12 million, has no frontage on Central Park, but has 12 rooms and 5,000 square feet. "The extraordinary windowed gallery, 47 feet by 13 feet, with beautiful herringbone floors, opens to the 29-foot corner living room; the library; the reception room and the formal dining room. All rooms are generously proportioned and flooded with light through enormous windows. The ceilings are high; the walls are expansive and in great condition - an art collector's dream."

    Brown Harris Stevens

    Apartment 12W, on the market for $24 million, also has 5,000 square feet. Huguette Clark and her mother, Anna, moved here in the 1920s. The daughter lived here from her divorce in 1930 until 1964, shortly after her mother died. It has 14 rooms with most of the main rooms looking west at Central Park. "The apartment stretches the full length of the Fifth Avenue facade of the building, offering over 100 feet of frontage on the Avenue and exceptional views of Central Park and the West Side skyline. Light streams through the nine oversized windows on the Fifth Avenue exposure. The magnificent 37-foot gallery features 11-foot ceilings, stone door surrounds, linen-fold panel doors and beautiful herringbone floors. From the corner master bedroom, one enjoys views over the model sailboat pond all the way north to the George Washington Bridge. While one needs to envision the apartment brought up to date for today's lifestyle, the bones are here for a unique and fabulous residence."

     

    Brown Harris Stevens

    The view from 8W, a view that Huguette Clark gave up for the last 20 years of her life.

    Earlier estimates by real estate agents put the value of the apartments at about $70 million, $15 million more than they were listed for. The value of the two apartments on the 8th floor would increase, the brokers said, if the co-op board allowed them to be combined.

    When the apartments sell, some of the money will be used to pay estate expenses, with the rest will be held for the eventual winner of the legal battle.

    Clark signed two wills when she was 98. The first will left nearly everything to her family, the children of her father's first marriage. The second will, signed just six weeks later, was more detailed, excluding her family entirely and making plans for an art museum in her California oceanfront home (with $100 million in real estate, $100 million in artwork, and $10 million in cash), and leaving about $36 million to her nurse ($27 million after taxes), a $40 million Monet to the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, with smaller gifts to a godchild, her doctor, her attorney, her accountant and others. The family has accused Clark's nurse, attorney and accountant of colluding, while the attorney and accountant have said that Clark's wishes were expressed specifically in the second will.

    Clark and her mother moved into the building in 1927 or 1928 after the death of Huguette's father, the former Sen. William Andrews Clark, in 1925. The mother and daughter moved down Fifth Avenue from the family's enormous home, with 121 rooms at 962 Fifth Avenue, which was being demolished. Just a five-minute walk away, the Italian palazzo-style apartment building at 907 Fifth Avenue was designed by renowned architect J.E.R. Carpenter.

    It had the most expensive apartments in the city when it opened in 1915. The head of Standard Oil, Herbert L. Pratt, rented the entire 12th floor. As The New York Times tells it, the architect, "Mr. Carpenter, who was described as 'the father of the modern large apartment' in New York City, was one of the building’s first residents. In the 1920s, he lived alongside oil barons, a tinplate king, a president of the New York Stock Exchange, and a Russian prince." After Pratt moved out, the Clark mother and daughter moved into the 12th floor. The mother later moved to the 8th floor. After she died in 1963, Huguette Clark moved down to 8, leaving 12 for storage of her dollhouses and other furnishings.

    Guests enter the limestone building through a canopy-protected doorway on 72nd Street into a lobby with a coffered ceiling and a striking stone staircase. Amenities include full-time doormen, a full gymnasium and a landscaped rooftop garden.

    Photos of other apartments in the building are availble in a previous story, You can move into heiress Huguette Clark's building, for $25 million.

    ---

    Reporter Bill Dedman is continuing to report on the Clark story, and is writing a nonfiction book about the Clark family. If you have information, you can reach him at bill.dedman@msnbc.com.

    Previous stories in the Huguette Clark mystery series on msnbc.com:

    William Andrews Clark Memorial Library

    The young copper heiress Huguette Clark with one of her dolls. She died in May 2011 at age 104. Her apartments, said to be the largest in New York City, are now for sale.

    Archive of all stories, photos and videos.

    Photo narrative, "The Clarks: An American story of wealth, scandal and mystery," Feb. 26, 2010.

    Printable version of the photo narrative, Feb. 26, 2010.

    Clark family notes and sources, Feb. 26, 2010.

    Investigative report, part one, "At 104, the mysterious heiress Huguette Clark is alone now: Relatives are kept away. Only her accountant and attorney visit. Who protects HuguetteClark, with 3 empty homes and no heirs?" Aug. 19, 2010.

    Investigative report, part two, "Who is watching Huguette Clark's millions? Reclusive heiress's assets are sold by two advisers, one an accountant with a felony conviction. Another elderly client signed over his property to the same accountant and attorney," Aug. 20, 2010.

    "Criminal probe begins into the finances of reclusive heiress Huguette Clark: Manhattan DA's Elder Abuse Unit is on the case. The same unit prosecuted the Brooke Astor case; Clark has about four times the wealth," Aug. 24, 2010.

    "Report sparks welfare check on heiress Huguette Clark," Aug. 25, 2010.

    "Generosity of an heiress: four homes for a nurse, gifts for attorney's family," Sept. 1, 2010.

    "Huguette Clark, the reclusive heiress, has signed a will, attorney says," Sept. 2, 2010.

    "Family of copper heiress asks court to protect her from attorney, accountant," Sept. 3, 2010.

    "Attorney for 104-year-old heiress defends his handling of her finances," Sept. 7, 2010.

    "Judge leaves pair under investigation in control of heiress Huguette Clark's fortune," Sept. 9, 2010.

    "Huguette Clark, the reclusive copper heiress, dies at 104," May 24, 2011.

    "Family excluded from Huguette Clark burial," May 26, 2011.

    "Heiress Huguette Clark's will leaves $1 million to advisers," June 22, 2011.

    "The 1 percent of the 1 percent: How Huguette Clark's millions were spent," Nov. 19, 2011.

    "A $400 miillion twist: Huguette Clark signed two wills, one to her family," Nov. 28, 2011.

    "Tax fraud alleged in estate of heiress Huguette Clark; accountant resigns," Dec. 21, 2011.

    "Nurse, in line to inherit millions, battles family of heiress Huguette Clark," Dec. 22, 2011.

    "Judge bounces attorney and accountant from estate of heiress Huguette Clark," Dec. 23, 2011.

    "Book coming on reclusive heiress Huguette Clark and her family," Feb. 3, 2012.

    "You can move into heiress Huguette Clark's building, for $25 million," Feb. 6, 2012.

     "Family of heiress Huguette Clark claims fraud by nurse, attorney, accountant," Feb. 15, 2012.

     

    Show more
    Explore related topics: investigation, real-estate, featured, huguette-clark
  • 15
    Feb
    2012
    4:24pm, EST

    Family of heiress Huguette Clark claims fraud by nurse, attorney, accountant

    W.A. Clark Memorial Library

    Huguette Clark as a child, with one of her dolls. Her family is battling her nurse for the lion's share of her $400 million fortune.

    By Bill Dedman, Investigative Reporter, NBC News

    NEW YORK — The relatives of copper mining heiress Huguette Clark have gone to court to challenge her last will and testament, claiming fraud by her attorney, accountant and nurse.

    The longtime private registered nurse, Hadassah Peri, already received about $26 million from Clark while she lived, according to court documents, and is left more than $30 million more in Clark's last will. The attorney and accountant were left $500,000 each.

    A previous will, signed just six weeks earlier, left $5 million to the nurse, and all the rest to Clark's family. The family was cut out of the second will entirely. Despite years of pleading from attorney after attorney, Clark had reached age 98 without directing who should inherit one of America's great fortunes from the Gilded Age, estimated to be at least $400 million.

    Her nurse, an immigrant from the Philippines, had been assigned to Clark by a home care agency almost 20 years ago. Now she owns a $200,000 Bentley Arnage luxury sedan and five houses. Money for four of those houses was given to her through the years by Clark, who died last May at age 104.

    The reclusive Clark has been the focus of a series of a series of reports on msnbc.com about her vacant properties and the management of her fortune. She lived out her last decades in modest hospital rooms in New York City, leaving empty a $100 million home on the Pacific coast in Santa Barbara, Calif., a $20 million country estate in New Canaan, Conn., and three apartments with a total of 42 rooms at 907 Fifth Avenue in New York City, soon to go on the market at about $75 million.

    Nineteen of Clark's relatives filed an objection to the second will this week in Surrogate's Court in Manhattan.

    Clark "was not competent to make a Will," argues the family attorney, John R. Morken, "in that she did not know the nature, extent or value of her assets, was not of sound mind or memory and was not mentally capable of making a Will." He goes on to argue that the will "was not freely and voluntarily made," that it was "procured by the undue influence of [attorney] Wallace Bock, [accountant] Irving Kamsler, Hadassah Peri, and/or by other persons acting in concert," and that the same people obtained the will by fraud.

    Document: Read the family's objections to the will (PDF file).

    A key issue in the case will be the close timing of the two wills, just six weeks apart. If Clark was not competent to sign a will in March 2005, then how was she competent to sign a will in April 2005? Of course, from the family's perspective, it doesn't matter if the judge throws out both wills. In that case, if she dies without a valid will, the family inherits everything under state law.

    Another key issue will be the extent of contact between the relatives and the reclusive Clark. Her attorney and accountant portray the relatives as distant, having no contact with Clark. The relatives have said they and their older relatives had contact with Clark through the years, exchanging letters and telephone calls while respecting her desire for privacy, and that those contacts were cut off abruptly by her attorney about the same time as the wills were signed.

    The second will tells a different story, attempting to foreclose any claim by family. "I intentionally make no provision in this my Last Will Testament (sic) for any members of my family, whether on my paternal or maternal side, having had minimal contacts with them over the years. The persons and institution named herein as beneficiaries of my Estate are the true objects of my bounty."

    The 19 relatives are descended from the first marriage of Clark's father, the former U.S. Sen. William Andrews Clark (1839-1925).

    Huguette Clark, born in 1906, was married only briefly and had no children. Her only full sister died at age 16 and had no children. Her mother had no other children. Under state law that leaves 21 "intestate distributees" — the relatives who would inherit her estate if she left no will or if the court chooses to uphold the earlier will instead of the later one. Of those 21, 19 are challenging the will in court.

    A public official investigating Clark's finances, the Public Administrator of the city of New York, has accused the attorney and executive of fraud in handling Clark's taxes. The attorney and accountant, also the subject of a criminal investigation by the Manhattan district attorney, have said they handled Clark's finances appropriately and according to her wishes. No criminal charges have been filed. A judge has suspended thm from being executors, a role which would have earned them about $8 million each.

    Speaking for nurse Peri, attorney Harvey E. Corn argued in court documents on Dec. 7 that Clark gave the money, and her doll collection, to her out of "gratitude for Ms. Peri's devoted service." Corn says that "Ms. Peri saw or communicated with the Decedent almost every day" during her nearly 20 years of service. And he says that hospital records from the six months around the signing of the wills show that Clark was in good health, "conversant, cheerful, well read and engaged in taking care of her personal affairs."

    Hadassah Peri has not spoken publicly about Clark, but a press agent issued a statement on her behalf in June after she was named in the will: "I saw Madame Clark virtually every day for the 20 years. I was her private duty nurse but also her close friend. I knew her as a kind and generous person, with whom I shared many wonderful moments and whom I loved very much. I am profoundly sad at her passing, awed at the generosity she has shown me and my family, and eternally grateful. Just as Madame Clark demonstrated kindness toward others in her actions, so, too, will I and my family devote a substantial portion of this bequest toward making the world a better place for all people."

    The public administrator's office has said in court papers that it might seek to "claw back" into the estate some of the gifts given from Clark's accounts while she lived. The administrator said the powers of attorney that Clark signed over to her attorney and accountant did not include the authority to give gifts, including a $5 million check written to Peri in 2009, after Clark herself stopped writing checks on her account. 

    If that clawback effort is successful, and if the second will is thrown out, Peri could not only lose the large bequest but could also have to pay back some of what she now has. The public administrator also has filed challenges with the court, objecting to gifts and bills paid out by Clark's attorney and accountant, suggesting that a judgment could later be sought against them for return of that money to the estate.

    The New York attorney general has also entered the case, representing the interests of charities that could be helped or hurt by the decision —those include the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, which is named in the second will to receive one of Monet's "Water Lilies" series of paintings, and the yet-unborn Bellosguardo Foundation, the art museum to be set up at her California home under the second will.

    Huguette (pronounced "oo-GET") Marcelle Clark lived quietly, secluded under fake names in a hospital room for more than two decades despite being in relatively good physical health. Intensely shy, she was almost entirely alone, aside from her private nurse, other helpers and occasional visits by her accountant. One of her former attorneys represented her for 20 years without meeting her face to face, instead talking to her on the phone and through a closed door.

    In the last year of her life, after her three empty mansions drew the attention of a reporter for msnbc.com in late 2009, she became a subject of public fascination, a trending topic of searches on Google and Yahoo, pictured on the cover of the New York tabloids, with fan pages on Facebook, a biography on Wikipedia, and her story read by tens of millions — though the last known photograph of her was made in 1930. 

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    Previous stories in the Huguette Clark mystery series on msnbc.com:

    Archive of all stories, photos and videos.

    Photo narrative, "The Clarks: An American story of wealth, scandal and mystery," Feb. 26, 2010.

    Printable version of the photo narrative, Feb. 26, 2010.

    Clark family notes and sources, Feb. 26, 2010.

    Investigative report, part one, "At 104, the mysterious heiress Huguette Clark is alone now: Relatives are kept away. Only her accountant and attorney visit. Who protects HuguetteClark, with 3 empty homes and no heirs?" Aug. 19, 2010.

    Investigative report, part two, "Who is watching Huguette Clark's millions? Reclusive heiress's assets are sold by two advisers, one an accountant with a felony conviction. Another elderly client signed over his property to the same accountant and attorney," Aug. 20, 2010.

    "Criminal probe begins into the finances of reclusive heiress Huguette Clark: Manhattan DA's Elder Abuse Unit is on the case. The same unit prosecuted the Brooke Astor case; Clark has about four times the wealth," Aug. 24, 2010.

    "Report sparks welfare check on heiress Huguette Clark," Aug. 25, 2010.

    "Generosity of an heiress: four homes for a nurse, gifts for attorney's family," Sept. 1, 2010.

    "Huguette Clark, the reclusive heiress, has signed a will, attorney says," Sept. 2, 2010.

    "Family of copper heiress asks court to protect her from attorney, accountant," Sept. 3, 2010.

    "Attorney for 104-year-old heiress defends his handling of her finances," Sept. 7, 2010.

    "Judge leaves pair under investigation in control of heiress Huguette Clark's fortune," Sept. 9, 2010.

    "Huguette Clark, the reclusive copper heiress, dies at 104," May 24, 2011.

    "Family excluded from Huguette Clark burial," May 26, 2011.

    "Heiress Huguette Clark's will leaves $1 million to advisers," June 22, 2011.

    "The 1 percent of the 1 percent: How Huguette Clark's millions were spent," Nov. 19, 2011.

    "A $400 miillion twist: Huguette Clark signed two wills, one to her family," Nov. 28, 2011.

    "Tax fraud alleged in estate of heiress Huguette Clark; accountant resigns," Dec. 21, 2011.

    "Nurse, in line to inherit millions, battles family of heiress Huguette Clark," Dec. 22, 2011.

    "Judge bounces attorney and accountant from estate of heiress Huguette Clark," Dec. 23, 2011.

    "Book coming on reclusive heiress Huguette Clark and her family," Feb. 3, 2012.

    "You can move into heiress Huguette Clark's building, for $25 million," Feb. 6, 2012.

     

    100 comments

    The administrator said the powers of attorney that Clark signed over to her attorney and accountant did not include the authority to give gifts, including a $5 million check written to Peri in 2009, after Clark herself stopped writing checks on her account. This stinks, the money should go to her f …

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  • 6
    Feb
    2012
    6:34am, EST

    You can move into heiress Huguette Clark's building, for $25 million

    Brown Harris Stevens

    A living room in the combined apartments. The buyer will be one floor below the mysterious apartment of heiress Huguette Clark.

    By Bill Dedman, Investigative Reporter, NBC News

    NEW YORK — Curiosity seekers hoping for a glimpse of the New York apartment of the reclusive heiress Huguette Clark will have to make do for now with an extraordinary apartment for sale just one floor below hers in the same elegant co-op. The 18-room, 6,500-square-feet apartment, on the market for $25 million, will be created by combining the seventh-floor apartments of three owners at 907 Fifth Avenue, the historic building at 72nd Street overlooking Central Park's model boat pond.

    Even at that size, the apartment would be dwarfed by the property of Clark, the late copper heiress, who has been the subject of a series of reports on msnbc.com about her vacant properties and the management of her fortune. When she died last May, she owned three apartments at 907 Fifth Avenue, with a total of 42 rooms. Two of her apartments make up the entire eighth floor, or about 10,000 square feet, with another 5,000 in an apartment that occupies half of the top floor, the 12th. It's estimated that in today's market her three apartments would sell for roughly $70 million. Though a court fight has begun over her $400 million estate, the executor could choose to sell the Clark apartments soon, perhaps this year.


    Clark and her mother moved into the building in 1927 or 1928 after the death of Huguette's father, the former Sen. William Andrews Clark, in 1925. The mother and daughter moved down Fifth Avenue from the family's enormous home, at 962 Fifth Avenue, which was being demolished. Just a five-minute walk away, the Italian palazzo-style apartment building at 907 Fifth Avenue was designed by renowned architect J.E.R. Carpenter. It had the most expensive apartments in the city when it opened in 1915.

    As The New York Times tells it, "Mr. Carpenter, who was described as 'the father of the modern large apartment' in New York City, was one of the building’s first residents. In the 1920s, he lived alongside oil barons, a tinplate king, a president of the New York Stock Exchange, and a Russian prince."

    Martha Stewart, the design entrepreneur, also has an apartment in the building.

    Brown Harris Stevens

    The library in the combined apartments.

    Brown Harris Stevens

    A living room in the combined apartments offers a view of Central Park. One can see all the way from Central Park South to, at the north, glimpses of the George Washington Bridge.

     

    Many of the apartments at 907 were eventually subdivided into smaller units. The combination will put three of those back together roughly as originally designed, replacing the servants area with more modern bedrooms. Two kitchens would need to be removed, and air conditioning installed. The new owner would face a co-op fee, including upkeep and taxes, of $12,618 a month, or $151,416 a year. (The Clark apartments cost her $28,500 a month, or $342,000 a year, while she lived for two decades in New York hospital rooms.)

    A proposed floor plan for the three apartments.

    Those prices bring apartments with light and high ceilings virtually unknown in the city. Guests enter the limestone building through a canopy-protected doorway on 72nd Street into a lobby with a coffered ceiling and a striking stone staircase. Amenities include full-time doormen, a full gymnasium and a landscaped rooftop garden.

    You can see the real estate listing and more photos of the apartments here on the site of the real estate agent, John Burger of Brown Harris Stevens.

     

    Previous stories in the Huguette Clark mystery series on msnbc.com:

    Archive of all stories, photos and videos.

    Photo narrative, "The Clarks: An American story of wealth, scandal and mystery," Feb. 26, 2010.

    Printable version of the photo narrative, Feb. 26, 2010.

    Clark family notes and sources, Feb. 26, 2010.

    Investigative report, part one, "At 104, the mysterious heiress Huguette Clark is alone now: Relatives are kept away. Only her accountant and attorney visit. Who protects HuguetteClark, with 3 empty homes and no heirs?" Aug. 19, 2010.

    Investigative report, part two, "Who is watching Huguette Clark's millions? Reclusive heiress's assets are sold by two advisers, one an accountant with a felony conviction. Another elderly client signed over his property to the same accountant and attorney," Aug. 20, 2010.

    "Criminal probe begins into the finances of reclusive heiress Huguette Clark: Manhattan DA's Elder Abuse Unit is on the case. The same unit prosecuted the Brooke Astor case; Clark has about four times the wealth," Aug. 24, 2010.

    "Report sparks welfare check on heiress Huguette Clark," Aug. 25, 2010.

    "Generosity of an heiress: four homes for a nurse, gifts for attorney's family," Sept. 1, 2010.

    "Huguette Clark, the reclusive heiress, has signed a will, attorney says," Sept. 2, 2010.

    "Family of copper heiress asks court to protect her from attorney, accountant," Sept. 3, 2010.

    "Attorney for 104-year-old heiress defends his handling of her finances," Sept. 7, 2010.

    "Judge leaves pair under investigation in control of heiress Huguette Clark's fortune," Sept. 9, 2010.

    "Huguette Clark, the reclusive copper heiress, dies at 104," May 24, 2011.

    "Family excluded from Huguette Clark burial," May 26, 2011.

    "Heiress Huguette Clark's will leaves $1 million to advisers," June 22, 2011.

    "The 1 percent of the 1 percent: How Huguette Clark's millions were spent," Nov. 19, 2011.

    "A $400 miillion twist: Huguette Clark signed two wills, one to her family," Nov. 28, 2011.

    "Tax fraud alleged in estate of heiress Huguette Clark; accountant resigns," Dec. 21, 2011.

    "Nurse, in line to inherit millions, battles family of heiress Huguette Clark," Dec. 22, 2011.

    "Judge bounces attorney and accountant from estate of heiress Huguette Clark," Dec. 23, 2011.

    Book coming on reclusive heiress Huguette Clark and her family," Feb. 3, 2012.

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    Explore related topics: investigation, featured, huguette-clark
  • 2
    Feb
    2012
    5:19pm, EST

    Huguette Clark book coming from Random House

    Associated Press

    Huguette in her last published photograph, in 1930, on the day of her divorce in Reno, Nevada. The heir to a copper fortune died in 2011 at 104.

    A nonfiction book on the mysterious heiress Huguette Clark and her family is being written by an NBC News reporter and one of Clark's cousins.

    Ballantine Bantam Dell, a division of Random House Publishing Group, has acquired "Empty Mansions," by Bill Dedman and Paul Clark Newell Jr.


    Bill Dedman is a Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter for NBC News who introduced the public to heiress Huguette Clark and her empty mansions through his series of narratives on NBCNews.com and NBC's TODAY Show. He lives in suburban Connecticut, where he discovered the first of Clark's three vacant palaces. His narratives on the Clark family have been the most popular story in the history of NBCNews.com, topping 100 million page views. He received more than 1,000 letters and emails from readers of the Clark series, many of them confessing to an obsession with the mystery heiress. As a young woman in New York, actress Kimberly Belflower, explained to her Twitter followers: "Don't mind me, I'll just be reading about Huguette Clark for the rest of my life."

    Paul Clark Newell Jr., a grandnephew of W.A. Clark, has researched the family history for 20 years, gathering a unique collection of Clark family photographs, letters and memoirs. He shared many conversations with Huguette Clark about her life and family, and accepted her invitation for a rare private tour of Bellosguardo, her $100 million oceanfront estate in Santa Barbara, Calif. A grandson of W.A. Clark's sister, Newell is Huguette Clark's cousin, not a descendant of her father, and he therefore is not a party to the legal action by relatives to inherit her fortune. He lives in the mountains of San Diego County, Calif.

    Executive Editor Pamela Cannon made the deal for North American rights with agent Michael Carlisle of Inkwell Management.

    Though she inherited one of the great mining fortunes of the 19th century, Huguette Marcelle Clark lived quietly into the 21st century, secluded under fake names in hospital rooms for more than two decades. Intensely shy, she was almost entirely alone. One of her attorneys represented her for 20 years without meeting her face to face, instead talking to her through a closed door.

    Her father, William Andrews Clark, was one of the Copper Kings of Montana and a controversial U.S. senator, believed to be as wealthy as John D. Rockefeller in his day but largely forgotten since his death in 1925.

    His youngest daughter, the reclusive heiress Huguette, became a well-known name again in the last year of her life, after her three empty mansions and sales of her personal property drew the attention of investigative reporter Dedman. Clark soon became a subject of public fascination, a trending topic of searches on Google and Yahoo, with fan pages on Facebook, though the last published photograph of her was made in 1930.

    When she died in May 2011 at age 104, her obituary appeared on the front page of The New York Times. A legal battle has begun for her $400 million fortune, even as criminal investigations continue of the men who managed her money.

    Previous stories in the Huguette Clark mystery series on NBCNews.com:

    Archive of all stories, photos and videos

    Photo narrative, "The Clarks: An American story of wealth, scandal and mystery," Feb. 26, 2010.

    Printable version of the photo narrative, Feb. 26, 2010.

    Clark family notes and sources, Feb. 26, 2010.

    Investigative report, part one, "At 104, the mysterious heiress Huguette Clark is alone now: Relatives are kept away. Only her accountant and attorney visit. Who protects HuguetteClark, with 3 empty homes and no heirs?" Aug. 19, 2010.

    Investigative report, part two, "Who is watching Huguette Clark's millions? Reclusive heiress's assets are sold by two advisers, one an accountant with a felony conviction. Another elderly client signed over his property to the same accountant and attorney," Aug. 20, 2010.

    "Criminal probe begins into the finances of reclusive heiress Huguette Clark: Manhattan DA's Elder Abuse Unit is on the case. The same unit prosecuted the Brooke Astor case; Clark has about four times the wealth," Aug. 24, 2010.

    "Report sparks welfare check on heiress Huguette Clark," Aug. 25, 2010.

    "Generosity of an heiress: four homes for a nurse, gifts for attorney's family," Sept. 1, 2010.

    "Huguette Clark, the reclusive heiress, has signed a will, attorney says," Sept. 2, 2010.

    "Family of copper heiress asks court to protect her from attorney, accountant," Sept. 3, 2010.

    "Attorney for 104-year-old heiress defends his handling of her finances," Sept. 7, 2010.

    "Judge leaves pair under investigation in control of heiress Huguette Clark's fortune," Sept. 9, 2010.

    "Huguette Clark, the reclusive copper heiress, dies at 104," May 24, 2011.

    "Family excluded from Huguette Clark burial," May 26, 2011.

    "Heiress Huguette Clark's will leaves $1 million to advisers," June 22, 2011.

    "The 1 percent of the 1 percent: How Huguette Clark's millions were spent," Nov. 19, 2011.

    "A $400 miillion twist: Huguette Clark signed two wills, one to her family," Nov. 28, 2011.

    "Tax fraud alleged in estate of heiress Huguette Clark; accountant resigns," Dec. 21, 2011.

    "Nurse, in line to inherit millions, battles family of heiress Huguette Clark," Dec. 22, 2011.

    "Judge bounces attorney and accountant from estate of heiress Huguette Clark," Dec. 23, 2011.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: investigation, book, wealth, featured, huguette-clark
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