[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":960},["ShallowReactive",2],{"category-hollywood":3},[4,134,211,299,395,508,671,821],{"id":5,"title":6,"author":7,"body":8,"categories":104,"date":113,"description":114,"extension":115,"featured":116,"image":117,"images":120,"meta":123,"navigation":116,"path":124,"readingTime":125,"seo":126,"stem":127,"tags":128,"__hash__":133},"articles\u002Farticles\u002Frupert-murdoch-loses-family-trust-case.md","Rupert Murdoch Loses Court Case to Change Family Trust","RFF Editor",{"type":9,"value":10,"toc":94},"minimark",[11,16,20,23,27,34,40,43,46,50,56,61,64,67,71,74,77,81,84,87,91],[12,13,15],"h2",{"id":14},"a-93-year-old-media-titan-just-got-told-no","A 93-year-old media titan just got told no",[17,18,19],"p",{},"Rupert Murdoch, the man who spent half a century bending governments, launching wars on newsprint, and building one of the most powerful conservative media machines on earth, just lost a fight to his own family trust. A Nevada commissioner ruled that Murdoch's attempt to rewrite the terms of that trust and hand sole control to his eldest son Lachlan was conducted in \"bad faith\" -- a phrase that, according to a sealed court document obtained by The New York Times, barely scratches the surface of what actually went down.",[17,21,22],{},"Commissioner Edmund J. Gorman Jr. filed his decision on a Saturday, and the 96-page ruling read less like a legal opinion and more like an indictment. Gorman concluded that Rupert and Lachlan had orchestrated a \"carefully planned charade\" to rewrite the family trust, which currently splits control equally among Murdoch's four eldest children -- Lachlan, James, Elisabeth, and Prudence -- upon Rupert's death. The scheme, Gorman wrote, was engineered to cement Lachlan as the undisputed leader of the media empire, with zero regard for what that meant for the companies or the rest of the family.",[12,24,26],{"id":25},"the-trust-was-never-about-money","The trust was never about money",[17,28,29],{},[30,31],"img",{"alt":32,"src":33},"Illustrated family tree diagram showing the Murdoch family members and their relationships across multiple marriages","\u002Fimages\u002Farticles\u002Frupert-murdoch-loses-family-trust-case\u002FMurdoch-Family-Tree-RichFamilyFeuds-1024x649.jpg",[17,35,36],{},[37,38,39],"em",{},"The Murdoch family tree spanning three marriages and six children, with the four eldest holding equal voting power in the trust (Photo: Rich Family Feuds)",[17,41,42],{},"Here is what makes this fight so volatile: nobody is arguing over a check. The war is over who gets to steer Fox News, The Wall Street Journal, and The New York Post -- a collection of outlets that have shaped American conservatism for a generation. For decades, Rupert, now 93, has been obsessed with ensuring that his empire keeps its right-leaning editorial posture long after he is gone. He has made no secret of wanting Lachlan to be the one holding the wheel. But the trust, with its four-way power split, makes a clean handoff nearly impossible.",[17,44,45],{},"James and Elisabeth, both known for political views that sit well to the left of their father and older brother, have long been seen as the wild cards. If Rupert cannot lock Lachlan into the driver's seat, the editorial direction of the entire empire could drift after his death -- a scenario that keeps the old man up at night.",[12,47,49],{"id":48},"inside-the-reno-courtroom","Inside the Reno courtroom",[17,51,52],{},[30,53],{"alt":54,"src":55},"Rupert Murdoch walking toward a Nevada courthouse entrance flanked by legal advisors","\u002Fimages\u002Farticles\u002Frupert-murdoch-loses-family-trust-case\u002FRupert-Murdoch-arrives-for-court-1024x538.jpg",[17,57,58],{},[37,59,60],{},"Rupert Murdoch arriving at court in Reno, Nevada, where sealed proceedings revealed the depth of the family's internal fractures (Photo: Reuters)",[17,62,63],{},"The drama played out across a series of closed-door sessions in Reno, Nevada, where Rupert and his children each took the stand. What leaked from those proceedings was remarkable. The Murdoch siblings had apparently been discussing their father's eventual death after watching an episode of HBO's Succession -- the fictional show famously inspired by their own family. That revelation prompted a representative for Elisabeth to draft a memo aimed at preventing the Murdochs from stumbling into their own version of the show's scorched-earth finale.",[17,65,66],{},"Gorman's ruling tore into Rupert and Lachlan's strategy with unusual force. He characterized their efforts as a secretive, bad-faith attempt to \"stack the deck\" in Lachlan's favor. He also singled out the representatives Rupert and Lachlan had appointed to the trust, noting that one of them had done little more than Google the Murdoch family and watch Succession as preparation for the role.",[12,68,70],{"id":69},"how-the-trust-was-built-in-the-first-place","How the trust was built in the first place",[17,72,73],{},"Rupert established the family trust in 2006, giving equal voting power to his four eldest children while keeping control for himself during his lifetime. The structure was hammered out during negotiations with his second wife, Anna, and was specifically designed to prevent his younger children with third wife Wendi Deng from gaining control. Those younger kids received equal financial stakes but no voting power.",[17,75,76],{},"In court, Rupert and Lachlan argued that consolidating leadership under Lachlan would protect the empire's conservative editorial direction -- a move they claimed would benefit all beneficiaries. James, Elisabeth, and Prudence fired back, accusing them of trying to disenfranchise three-quarters of the family.",[12,78,80],{"id":79},"what-happens-next","What happens next",[17,82,83],{},"Rupert's camp is not going quietly. Adam Streisand, a lawyer for Rupert and Lachlan, confirmed they plan to appeal the decision. On the other side, James, Elisabeth, and Prudence released a joint statement saying they were pleased with the ruling and hoped the family could now focus on repairing relationships.",[17,85,86],{},"Gorman's ruling is technically a recommendation -- it still needs approval from a district judge, and appeals could drag the case out further. If Rupert and Lachlan ultimately lose, they may explore other avenues to secure Lachlan's control, such as buying out the other siblings' stakes.",[12,88,90],{"id":89},"decades-of-fracture-lines","Decades of fracture lines",[17,92,93],{},"This legal battle did not erupt out of nowhere. The Murdoch family has been publicly splintering for years. During the phone-hacking scandal in Britain over a decade ago, Elisabeth pushed her father to fire James. But the trust fight has elevated those tensions to a different order of magnitude, exposing decades of shifting alliances, competing ideologies, and a patriarch who cannot let go of the empire he built -- even from the far side of a courtroom loss.",{"title":95,"searchDepth":96,"depth":96,"links":97},"",2,[98,99,100,101,102,103],{"id":14,"depth":96,"text":15},{"id":25,"depth":96,"text":26},{"id":48,"depth":96,"text":49},{"id":69,"depth":96,"text":70},{"id":79,"depth":96,"text":80},{"id":89,"depth":96,"text":90},[105,106,107,108,109,110,111,112],"celebs","culture","featured","hollywood","life","relationships","scandal","television","2024-12-29","A Nevada commissioner has made a major ruling against Rupert Murdoch's attempt to shake up his family trust in a way that would secure his eldest son Lachlan's control over their media empire. This mo","md",true,{"src":118,"alt":119},"\u002Fimages\u002Farticles\u002Frupert-murdoch-loses-family-trust-case\u002FRupert-Murdoch.jpg","Rupert Murdoch in a dark suit arriving at a courthouse during his family trust legal battle",[121,122],{"src":33,"alt":32},{"src":55,"alt":54},{},"\u002Farticles\u002Frupert-murdoch-loses-family-trust-case",3,{"title":6,"description":114},"articles\u002Frupert-murdoch-loses-family-trust-case",[129,130,131,132],"family-trust","murdoch","nevada","rupert-murdoch","-JtmsgzhCLVUBQs-wNMi3vxV2J8ilrW6QeQwDlXOPsI",{"id":135,"title":136,"author":7,"body":137,"categories":197,"date":198,"description":199,"extension":115,"featured":116,"image":200,"images":203,"meta":204,"navigation":116,"path":205,"readingTime":206,"seo":207,"stem":208,"tags":209,"__hash__":210},"articles\u002Farticles\u002Fepic-battle-rupert-murdoch-billions.md","An epic battle over Rupert Murdoch's $6 Billion",{"type":9,"value":138,"toc":191},[139,142,145,148,152,155,158,161,165,168,171,175,178,181,185,188],[17,140,141],{},"Picture this: a 93-year-old man who built one of the most powerful media empires on the planet walks into a probate court in Reno, Nevada. Not to gamble — though some might argue he already is. Rupert Murdoch, the titan behind Fox News, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Post, and The Times of London, showed up because his own children dragged the family fortune into the legal arena. The thing he tried to rewrite? An “irrevocable trust.” The thing that blew up in his face? Everything else.",[17,143,144],{},"Murdoch’s scheme carried the almost satirically optimistic codename “Project Harmony.” The goal was straightforward enough: consolidate voting control of his media empire in the hands of eldest son Lachlan, the sibling who most closely mirrors Rupert’s conservative worldview. Under the existing trust structure, voting power splits evenly among the four children from Murdoch’s first two marriages. Rupert wanted to rewrite that math. Lachlan gets the throne. The other three get sidelined. You can guess how well that landed. The siblings are now locked in open warfare, and “harmony” has become the most ironic word in the Murdoch vocabulary.",[17,146,147],{},"What makes this more than just a delicious spectacle of billionaire dysfunction is the deeper question lurking underneath: can anyone — no matter how rich, how ruthless, how lawyered up — actually control what happens to their fortune after they die? The honest answer is almost certainly not.",[12,149,151],{"id":150},"when-money-meets-feelings","When money meets feelings",[17,153,154],{},"“Most clients say they want to save on estate taxes, but the truth is, their real priorities are usually things like keeping their kids productive, protecting assets from future ex-spouses, or deciding who runs the family business,” says Tasha K. Dickinson, an expert in high-net-worth estate planning. That gap between what the ultra-wealthy say they want and what actually keeps them up at night sits at the heart of nearly every inheritance blowup. Because children — even adult children with trust funds the size of small nations — cannot help but read a will as a final report card. Who got more? Who got less? Who did Dad really love?",[17,156,157],{},"Inheritance wars are as old as wealth itself, and attorney P. Mark Accettura literally wrote the book on them. In Blood and Money: Why Families Fight Over Inheritance, he traces the impulse back to evolutionary psychology. “People are wired to behave in certain ways,” he says. Layer on the learned behaviors that come with growing up in hyper-competitive, high-achieving dynasties, and you get a volatile cocktail. Accettura points to dysfunctional families marked by Cluster B personality disorders — narcissism, histrionics, and worse — as the ones most likely to turn estate disputes into full-blown public spectacles.",[17,159,160],{},"Exhibit A: Sumner Redstone, the late Viacom tycoon. With an estimated $2.6 billion fortune and a personality that could fill a stadium, Redstone spent his final years in open combat with girlfriends, children, and corporate executives alike. He fired off company-wide emails calling his daughter Shari vulgar four-letter names. And yet, after all the chaos, Shari emerged victorious, becoming chairwoman of the rebranded Paramount Global. The dynasty survived. The dignity, less so.",[12,162,164],{"id":163},"billionaires-trying-to-beat-death","Billionaires trying to beat death",[17,166,167],{},"Some of the world’s wealthiest people pour money into plasma transfusions and experimental anti-aging technology, racing against biology with the same intensity they once brought to hostile takeovers. Murdoch’s approach is more old-school: he reaches for lawyers and paperwork. “Ruling from the grave is hard, but it’s possible to build a long-term estate plan,” says Dickinson. The catch is that it requires realistic expectations and advisors brave enough to tell a billionaire that his grand vision has holes in it. That second part, as you might imagine, does not come naturally to the people on Rupert Murdoch’s payroll.",[17,169,170],{},"Even meticulously crafted plans can unravel. Private trusts, unlike their charitable cousins, remain vulnerable to legal challenges and amendments. Charitable trusts tend to hold firm — the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston still operates under the strict terms its founder laid down in 1903. (The only breach came courtesy of the infamous 1990 art heist, not a courtroom.) Private family trusts enjoy no such permanence.",[12,172,174],{"id":173},"drama-worth-billions","Drama worth billions",[17,176,177],{},"If the Murdoch saga sounds extreme, consider the competition. Nina Wang, once Asia’s richest woman, left behind a $4.2 billion estate that descended into a circus of forgery allegations, prison sentences, and the still-unresolved kidnapping of her husband. Leona Helmsley, the notorious “Queen of Mean,” famously bequeathed millions to her dog, Trouble, while cutting two of her grandchildren out entirely. And then there is L’Oreal heiress Liliane Bettencourt, whose $45 billion fortune ignited a sprawling family war that metastasized into a full-blown political scandal in France.",[17,179,180],{},"The lesson from all of these cases is blunt: there is no such thing as an ironclad trust. Attorney Adam Streisand — yes, that is his real name — has handled the estates of Michael Jackson and Marilyn Monroe, so he knows the terrain. In one high-profile matter, he represented Damian Hurley, son of Elizabeth Hurley, in a fight over a trust worth hundreds of millions. Streisand won at trial. Then the decision got reversed on appeal, and Damian walked away with nothing. Courts giveth, and courts taketh away.",[12,182,184],{"id":183},"the-murdoch-legacy-showdown","The Murdoch legacy showdown",[17,186,187],{},"The year 2024 handed Rupert Murdoch a milestone birthday, a fifth marriage, and a courtroom confrontation with three of his six children. The prize at the center of the fight: voting control of the $6 billion family trust, the mechanism that determines who actually steers the media empire. Rupert wants Lachlan at the helm, convinced that his eldest son is the only one who will preserve the conservative editorial direction that made the Murdoch brand a political force. The other siblings disagree. Loudly.",[17,189,190],{},"Back in 2007, a then-79-year-old Murdoch told reporters, “I just want to live forever. I enjoy myself too much.” Nearly two decades later, he is learning what Percy Shelley tried to tell us all in Ozymandias: every empire, no matter how vast, eventually meets the desert. The court filings will keep piling up. The family dinners will stay awkward. And the billions will keep the whole machine grinding forward, because if there is one universal truth about dynastic wealth, it is this — the money outlasts the love, and the lawyers outlast them both.",{"title":95,"searchDepth":96,"depth":96,"links":192},[193,194,195,196],{"id":150,"depth":96,"text":151},{"id":163,"depth":96,"text":164},{"id":173,"depth":96,"text":174},{"id":183,"depth":96,"text":184},[105,106,107,108,109,112],"2024-10-29","For some ultra-rich folks, nothing bruises the ego like the thought of dying. Call it the \"Ozymandias Complex.\" Rupert Murdoch, the media mogul extraordinaire, might soon discover that even a legacy",{"src":201,"alt":202},"\u002Fimages\u002Farticles\u002Fepic-battle-rupert-murdoch-billions\u002Fmurdoch-epic-battle-succession.jpg","Rupert Murdoch surrounded by imagery evoking his media empire and the family succession battle over his billions",[],{},"\u002Farticles\u002Fepic-battle-rupert-murdoch-billions",4,{"title":136,"description":199},"articles\u002Fepic-battle-rupert-murdoch-billions",[130,131,132],"1GBF9UvoaktkxXG7ITTtWaUSDfPxB6k2SYePZyeROuo",{"id":212,"title":213,"author":7,"body":214,"categories":285,"date":286,"description":287,"extension":115,"featured":116,"image":288,"images":290,"meta":292,"navigation":116,"path":293,"readingTime":294,"seo":295,"stem":296,"tags":297,"__hash__":298},"articles\u002Farticles\u002Fmurdoch-family-succession-battle-heads-to-secretive-courtroom-in-nevada.md","Murdoch Family Succession Battle Heads to Secretive Courtroom in Nevada",{"type":9,"value":215,"toc":279},[216,219,222,226,229,232,238,243,247,250,253,256,260,263,266,270,273,276],[17,217,218],{},"Somewhere in the dry sprawl of Reno, Nevada, behind sealed courtroom doors that multiple news organizations -- including The Associated Press -- have been barred from opening, a 93-year-old man is trying to rewrite the rules of his own dynasty. Rupert Murdoch, the architect of a media empire that stretches from The Wall Street Journal to Fox News, showed up to probate court on Monday to argue that the trust governing his family's future should be torn open and reassembled around a single name: Lachlan.",[17,220,221],{},"The evidentiary hearings, scheduled to run through the following week, are the climax of a family rift that has been building for years -- a collision between a patriarch who still wants to call the shots, three of his children who think he shouldn't, and a fortune that shapes what millions of people watch, read, and believe.",[12,223,225],{"id":224},"the-trust-that-launched-a-thousand-arguments","The trust that launched a thousand arguments",[17,227,228],{},"Here is the architecture of the problem. Murdoch's irrevocable family trust was originally designed to split control of his media assets equally among his four eldest children -- Lachlan, James, Elisabeth, and Prudence -- upon his death. Four voices, four votes, a democratic handoff of a deeply undemocratic empire.",[17,230,231],{},"Murdoch now wants to scrap that blueprint. According to reporting by The New York Times, based on a sealed court document, the mogul is arguing that giving Lachlan sole control is essential to preserving the commercial value of his businesses for all his heirs. The logic, as Murdoch sees it, is straightforward: Lachlan succeeded him as chairman of News Corp. last November, currently serves as CEO of Fox Corp., and is the one child willing to maintain the conservative editorial posture that turned Fox News into a political kingmaker. Letting four siblings steer the ship, Murdoch contends, is a recipe for strategic paralysis.",[17,233,234],{},[30,235],{"alt":236,"src":237},"Rupert Murdoch and his wife walking into the Nevada courthouse surrounded by reporters and photographers","\u002Fimages\u002Farticles\u002Fmurdoch-family-succession-battle-heads-to-secretive-courtroom-in-nevada\u002F89741859-0-image-a-36_1726507249107.jpg",[17,239,240],{},[37,241,242],{},"Rupert Murdoch and his wife enter the Nevada courthouse through a gaggle of reporters (Photo: Daily Mail)",[12,244,246],{"id":245},"three-siblings-one-united-front","Three siblings, one united front",[17,248,249],{},"On the other side of the courtroom sit James, Elisabeth, and Prudence, who have banded together to block their father's move. For them, this is not simply about who gets the corner office. It is about whether one brother gets to lock in the ideological direction of a media empire that shapes elections and public discourse on multiple continents.",[17,251,252],{},"Lachlan has made his position clear through action. He oversees Fox News, Fox Sports, and other key Murdoch properties, and he has leaned into the right-wing political identity his father spent decades cultivating. James Murdoch has gone the opposite direction entirely -- he resigned from the News Corp. board in 2020, citing editorial differences, and has been vocal about his concerns over disinformation, particularly in the wake of the 2020 U.S. presidential election.",[17,254,255],{},"The divide is not just philosophical. Murdoch has argued that leaving equal control to all four children would trigger internal disagreements that could undermine the strategic direction of his companies and potentially shift their editorial slant. In a landscape where Fox News remains a dominant force in conservative politics, the patriarch believes handing the reins to Lachlan alone is the only way to protect both the company's value and its identity.",[12,257,259],{"id":258},"behind-closed-doors-with-commissioner-gorman","Behind closed doors with Commissioner Gorman",[17,261,262],{},"The hearings are being overseen by Probate Commissioner Edmund J. Gorman, the man who will ultimately weigh whether a billionaire's desire to redraw the lines of succession holds up against the legal architecture designed to prevent exactly that. In a ruling this summer, Gorman indicated that Murdoch could amend the trust if he can prove that the changes are being made in good faith and for the benefit of all his heirs.",[17,264,265],{},"That is a high bar. Irrevocable trusts exist precisely because they are supposed to be permanent -- tools for managing estate taxes and ensuring the smooth transfer of wealth without the mess of second-guessing. Any revisions require either the consent of all beneficiaries or a court order. Murdoch has neither the consent nor, yet, the order. What he has is a legal argument: that a divided family would struggle to maintain a cohesive strategy, which could lead to shifts in editorial policy, particularly at Fox News. The court's decision will rest on whether Murdoch can demonstrate that Lachlan's exclusive control is essential to protecting the company's future.",[12,267,269],{"id":268},"what-happens-next-reshapes-more-than-one-family","What happens next reshapes more than one family",[17,271,272],{},"Rupert Murdoch's decision to step down from leadership roles at both Fox and News Corp. last year, leaving Lachlan in charge, set the stage for this confrontation. Now, with the trust dispute heading toward a resolution, the future direction of the Murdoch empire -- and the political influence it wields -- is genuinely up for grabs.",[17,274,275],{},"The stakes reach well beyond the family name. Fox News has become synonymous with right-wing populism in America, and any shift in its leadership structure could send tremors through the political landscape it helped build. The sealed nature of the hearings only deepens the tension: the public is left watching the courthouse doors, waiting to learn the fate of one of the most powerful media empires on the planet.",[17,277,278],{},"As the evidentiary hearings continue, Commissioner Gorman will weigh the arguments from both sides before issuing a recommendation. His decision could either cement Lachlan's grip on the Murdoch empire or crack open the door to a new era of family infighting and strategic uncertainty. One thing is already certain -- this fight over the Murdoch dynasty is nowhere near finished.",{"title":95,"searchDepth":96,"depth":96,"links":280},[281,282,283,284],{"id":224,"depth":96,"text":225},{"id":245,"depth":96,"text":246},{"id":258,"depth":96,"text":259},{"id":268,"depth":96,"text":269},[105,106,107,108,111,112],"2024-09-14","In a closed-door probate court hearing in Reno, Nevada, media mogul Rupert Murdoch, 93, is making his case to alter the terms of his irrevocable family trust, a move that could determine the future co",{"src":289,"alt":213},"\u002Fimages\u002Farticles\u002Fmurdoch-family-succession-battle-heads-to-secretive-courtroom-in-nevada\u002F5904.jpg.webp",[291],{"src":237,"alt":236},{},"\u002Farticles\u002Fmurdoch-family-succession-battle-heads-to-secretive-courtroom-in-nevada",5,{"title":213,"description":287},"articles\u002Fmurdoch-family-succession-battle-heads-to-secretive-courtroom-in-nevada",[130,131,132],"oI7deVenPUaOCekWqhD8hP_zS-mjcY7dfqNGz-zX_U8",{"id":300,"title":301,"author":7,"body":302,"categories":380,"date":382,"description":383,"extension":115,"featured":116,"image":384,"images":387,"meta":388,"navigation":116,"path":389,"readingTime":294,"seo":390,"stem":391,"tags":392,"__hash__":394},"articles\u002Farticles\u002Fmurdoch-family-succession-battle-intensifies-in-secretive-nevada-courtroom.md","Murdoch Family Succession Battle Intensifies in Secretive Nevada Courtroom",{"type":9,"value":303,"toc":373},[304,307,310,314,317,320,323,327,330,333,336,339,343,346,349,352,356,359,362,365,368,370],[17,305,306],{},"Somewhere in Reno, Nevada, behind sealed doors and redacted filings, a 93-year-old man is trying to rewrite the rules of his own dynasty. The man is Rupert Murdoch. The dynasty controls Fox News, the Wall Street Journal, and The Times of London. And the courtroom fight now underway could determine whether one of the most influential media empires on Earth drifts right, drifts left, or tears itself apart entirely.",[17,308,309],{},"This is the Murdoch succession war, and it just got real.",[12,311,313],{"id":312},"the-courtroom-nobody-is-allowed-to-see","The courtroom nobody is allowed to see",[17,315,316],{},"If you were hoping for a dramatic public showdown, bad news. Last week, Nevada judge David Hardy ruled against a petition by several media companies seeking to unseal the case -- cryptically titled Doe 1 Trust, PR23-00813 -- declaring that the trust, despite being a major shareholder in publicly traded companies, is essentially a private legal arrangement.",[17,318,319],{},"So most of the arguments will happen offscreen. Some details have already leaked, of course. In July, The New York Times obtained documents outlining Rupert Murdoch's plan to alter the terms of an irrevocable family trust. The move -- legally known as \"decanting\" the trust -- would transfer voting control of Fox Corporation to his eldest son, Lachlan, stripping his other three children, Prudence, James, and Elizabeth, of their decision-making power in one stroke.",[17,321,322],{},"Murdoch now has to convince Nevada probate commissioner Edmund Gorman that handing Lachlan the keys without interference from his siblings is essential for preserving the company's commercial value. The stakes stretch far beyond one family's Thanksgiving dinner.",[12,324,326],{"id":325},"a-family-split-along-ideological-fault-lines","A family split along ideological fault lines",[17,328,329],{},"The roots of this fight run back to 2023, when Rupert stepped down as chairman of Fox Corporation and News Corp, passing the leadership to Lachlan. That transition came after the $71 billion sale of 21st Century Fox's entertainment assets to Disney in 2019, a deal that netted each of his four older children $1 billion.",[17,331,332],{},"On paper, Lachlan has earned his seat. Under his watch, Fox purchased the streaming service Tubi for $440 million in 2020 and turned down a $2 billion offer for the platform just three years later. More recently, Lachlan announced Venu, a new sports streaming venture in partnership with Disney, Warner Bros. Discovery, and Fox, which he described as \"designed entirely for cord-cutters and cord-nevers.\"",[17,334,335],{},"Then there is James. He resigned from the News Corp board in 2020, citing disagreements over editorial content, and has been publicly critical of Fox News for amplifying disinformation about the 2020 U.S. presidential election. He has supported progressive political causes and pivoted to other ventures, including board seats at Tesla and Rebellion Defense.",[17,337,338],{},"The divide is not just personal. It is ideological, strategic, and deeply tied to the question of what Fox News actually is. For Rupert, the answer is simple: Fox News' value is inseparable from its right-wing positioning. Shift the politics, and you gut the business. His other children, particularly James, see the network's trajectory -- especially in the wake of the rise and fall and potential resurgence of Donald Trump -- as something far more dangerous than a branding decision.",[12,340,342],{"id":341},"the-money-machine-that-makes-the-argument-for-lachlan","The money machine that makes the argument for Lachlan",[17,344,345],{},"Here is where Rupert's case gets its teeth. Fox News is not just a cable network. It is the dominant force in American cable news, pulling an average of 1.3 million daytime viewers and 2 million during prime time. Its 2022 revenue hit $3 billion -- double CNN's haul and well ahead of MSNBC. That kind of market stranglehold does not happen by accident, and Murdoch's argument boils down to a single, uncomfortable truth: the audience is the asset, and the audience skews right.",[17,347,348],{},"Of course, the entire linear TV market is shrinking as viewers cut the cord. Preserving Fox's existing model, built around a dedicated and fiercely loyal conservative audience, becomes the central challenge in a landscape where cable subscriptions are vanishing by the quarter.",[17,350,351],{},"Media analyst Robert Thompson frames it neatly: \"It's a clever argument. Fox figured out early that they didn't need a massive audience to succeed. With a dedicated base, they've consistently dominated the ratings.\"",[12,353,355],{"id":354},"the-media-family-that-does-not-want-you-watching","The media family that does not want you watching",[17,357,358],{},"There is a thick irony coating this entire proceeding. The Murdoch empire -- built on tabloid journalism, phone-hacking scandals, and an unrelenting push for press access -- is now fighting to keep its own family business sealed from public view. A coalition of media organizations argued that sealing the case \"does not pass constitutional muster\" and that the outcome could carry wide-ranging implications for the media industry and beyond.",[17,360,361],{},"The Murdochs, typically on the other side of transparency fights, united to block access. The same media empire that has paid millions to settle claims of press intrusion is now guarding its own secrets with the intensity of a fortress under siege.",[17,363,364],{},"The parallels to Succession, the hit HBO series inspired in part by the Murdochs, are almost too neat. Like the fictional Roy family, the Murdochs are locked in a fight that braids together business strategy, political ideology, and deep personal fracture. But this version has no writers' room, no satisfying finale on the horizon.",[17,366,367],{},"As Thompson puts it, \"Rupert Murdoch made enough money that his kids could comfortably revolt against him. It takes a lot of privilege to tell Dad to go take a hike.\"",[12,369,80],{"id":79},[17,371,372],{},"The future of Fox Corporation and News Corp now sits in the hands of a Nevada probate commissioner, a sealed courtroom, and a family whose internal contradictions have finally become impossible to contain. How this ends -- and what it means for the political media landscape that the Murdochs built and reshaped over decades -- is anyone's guess. The only certainty is that whatever happens behind those closed doors in Reno will ripple far beyond them.",{"title":95,"searchDepth":96,"depth":96,"links":374},[375,376,377,378,379],{"id":312,"depth":96,"text":313},{"id":325,"depth":96,"text":326},{"id":341,"depth":96,"text":342},{"id":354,"depth":96,"text":355},{"id":79,"depth":96,"text":80},[105,107,108,109,111,381],"sports","2024-09-09","The long-running Murdoch family succession drama has entered a new and pivotal phase in a Reno, Nevada courtroom, where patriarch Rupert Murdoch is expected to argue that his children's potential plan",{"src":385,"alt":386},"\u002Fimages\u002Farticles\u002Fmurdoch-family-succession-battle-intensifies-in-secretive-nevada-courtroom\u002F40623192419e38254291511d283e85cc.jpeg","Rupert Murdoch walking in a dark suit, representing the high-stakes family succession battle over his media empire",[],{},"\u002Farticles\u002Fmurdoch-family-succession-battle-intensifies-in-secretive-nevada-courtroom",{"title":301,"description":383},"articles\u002Fmurdoch-family-succession-battle-intensifies-in-secretive-nevada-courtroom",[393,130,131],"empire","9twf7MTj1d8OZo90VScOnzdqJoTq9oUPUWmeUUlRxzc",{"id":396,"title":397,"author":7,"body":398,"categories":487,"date":489,"description":490,"extension":115,"featured":116,"image":491,"images":493,"meta":497,"navigation":116,"path":498,"readingTime":206,"seo":499,"stem":500,"tags":501,"__hash__":507},"articles\u002Farticles\u002Fjeff-bezos-to-finalize-worlds-largest-divorce-settlement-38-billion-to-mackenzie-bezos.md","Jeff Bezos to Finalize World's Largest Divorce Settlement ($38 Billion to MacKenzie Bezos)",{"type":9,"value":399,"toc":480},[400,404,407,410,416,421,425,428,431,437,442,446,449,452,456,459,462,468,473,477],[12,401,403],{"id":402},"thirty-eight-billion-dollars-and-a-clean-break","Thirty-eight billion dollars and a clean break",[17,405,406],{},"Thirty-eight billion dollars. That is what it costs to exit a marriage to the richest man on Earth. This week, a judge is expected to finalize the paperwork that transfers a 4% stake in Amazon from founder Jeff Bezos to his soon-to-be ex-wife, MacKenzie Bezos, sealing what is by any measure the largest divorce settlement in recorded history. The deal will catapult MacKenzie into the ranks of the world's wealthiest individuals, making her the fourth-richest woman on the planet overnight.",[17,408,409],{},"To put that number in perspective: the previous record belonged to Jocelyn Wildenstein, who walked away with $2.5 billion after splitting from art dealer Alec Wildenstein in 1999. MacKenzie's haul makes that look like a rounding error. The staggering sum reflects the fortune generated by Amazon, which Jeff Bezos launched in 1994 -- just a year after the couple married.",[17,411,412],{},[30,413],{"alt":414,"src":415},"Jeff Bezos in a dark suit at a formal event","\u002Fimages\u002Farticles\u002Fjeff-bezos-to-finalize-worlds-largest-divorce-settlement-38-billion-to-mackenzie-bezos\u002F0x0.jpg.webp",[17,417,418],{},[37,419,420],{},"Jeff Bezos, whose fortune remains the world's largest even after the settlement (Photo: Getty Images)",[12,422,424],{"id":423},"mackenzie-pledges-to-give-it-away","MacKenzie pledges to give it away",[17,426,427],{},"Here is the twist nobody saw coming: MacKenzie Bezos does not appear particularly interested in keeping the money. An accomplished author in her own right, she signed the Giving Pledge -- the initiative created by Warren Buffett and Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates that encourages the world's richest individuals to donate at least half their wealth to charity. In her letter to the pledge, MacKenzie wrote that she has \"a disproportionate amount of money to share\" and intends to continue donating \"until the safe is empty.\"",[17,429,430],{},"Meanwhile, Jeff Bezos will remain the richest individual in the world, his fortune still estimated at roughly $118 billion. Unlike his ex-wife, he has not joined the Giving Pledge. His philanthropic contributions to date total approximately $2 billion -- less than 2% of his wealth -- directed to his Bezos Day One Fund, which aims to combat homelessness and improve educational opportunities for children from low-income families.",[17,432,433],{},[30,434],{"alt":435,"src":436},"Jeff Bezos and MacKenzie Bezos together at a public appearance before their divorce","\u002Fimages\u002Farticles\u002Fjeff-bezos-to-finalize-worlds-largest-divorce-settlement-38-billion-to-mackenzie-bezos\u002F190404132823-04-jeff-mackenzie-bezos-file.jpg-1024x576.webp",[17,438,439],{},[37,440,441],{},"Jeff and MacKenzie Bezos before the split that shook Wall Street (Photo: CNN)",[12,443,445],{"id":444},"twenty-five-years-four-kids-one-very-public-unraveling","Twenty-five years, four kids, one very public unraveling",[17,447,448],{},"The couple announced their separation in January after 25 years of marriage and four children together, setting the stage for a financial reckoning unlike anything the courts had seen. According to an April securities filing, MacKenzie will receive 25% of the couple's Amazon stock holdings, translating to a 4% stake in the company valued at around $38 billion. Jeff Bezos will retain voting rights over her shares, ensuring he keeps control of the company. He also holds on to full ownership of The Washington Post and Blue Origin, his private space exploration venture.",[17,450,451],{},"And then things got messy. Shortly after the divorce announcement, the National Enquirer revealed it had been investigating Bezos' personal life for months, alleging he had been traveling with his mistress aboard his $65 million private jet. Bezos fired back with a candid blog post accusing the Enquirer of attempting to extort him, layering tabloid spectacle on top of an already seismic split.",[12,453,455],{"id":454},"an-amicable-ending-at-least-on-the-surface","An amicable ending -- at least on the surface",[17,457,458],{},"Despite the drama, both Jeff and MacKenzie Bezos struck a remarkably civil tone throughout the proceedings. MacKenzie took to Twitter to express her satisfaction with the settlement, saying she was glad to give Jeff voting control over her shares and retain his interests in The Washington Post and Blue Origin, adding that it would \"support his continued contributions with the teams of these incredible companies.\"",[17,460,461],{},"Jeff Bezos responded with gratitude, tweeting his thanks to MacKenzie for her \"support and kindness in this process.\" For a divorce involving $38 billion, a tabloid scandal, and the fate of the world's most valuable company, that counts as downright cordial.",[17,463,464],{},[30,465],{"alt":466,"src":467},"Jeff Bezos speaking at an Amazon corporate event","\u002Fimages\u002Farticles\u002Fjeff-bezos-to-finalize-worlds-largest-divorce-settlement-38-billion-to-mackenzie-bezos\u002F20150224165308-jeff-bezos-amazon.jpeg-1024x576.webp",[17,469,470],{},[37,471,472],{},"Jeff Bezos built Amazon into a trillion-dollar empire -- now his ex-wife owns a sizable piece of it (Photo: Getty Images)",[12,474,476],{"id":475},"what-comes-next","What comes next",[17,478,479],{},"As the settlement becomes final, it closes one of the highest-profile divorces in modern history and opens a new chapter for MacKenzie Bezos. She walks away as one of the wealthiest women alive, armed with a fortune she has already promised to give away. Jeff keeps his throne atop the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, his company, and his rocket ships. Both got what they wanted. Whether the rest of us will ever stop talking about it is another matter entirely.",{"title":95,"searchDepth":96,"depth":96,"links":481},[482,483,484,485,486],{"id":402,"depth":96,"text":403},{"id":423,"depth":96,"text":424},{"id":444,"depth":96,"text":445},{"id":454,"depth":96,"text":455},{"id":475,"depth":96,"text":476},[105,106,107,108,109,488,111,381,112],"music","2024-09-07","Jeff Bezos to Finalize World's Largest Divorce Settlement, Handing $38 Billion Amazon Stake to MacKenzie Bezos This week, the world's biggest divorce settlement is set to become official as Amazon fou",{"src":492,"alt":397},"\u002Fimages\u002Farticles\u002Fjeff-bezos-to-finalize-worlds-largest-divorce-settlement-38-billion-to-mackenzie-bezos\u002Fjeff-bezos-mackenzie-bezos.jpg.webp",[494,495,496],{"src":415,"alt":414},{"src":436,"alt":435},{"src":467,"alt":466},{},"\u002Farticles\u002Fjeff-bezos-to-finalize-worlds-largest-divorce-settlement-38-billion-to-mackenzie-bezos",{"title":397,"description":490},"articles\u002Fjeff-bezos-to-finalize-worlds-largest-divorce-settlement-38-billion-to-mackenzie-bezos",[502,503,504,505,506],"amazon","divorce","jeff-bezos","mackenzie-bezos","settlement","3kqAaGSqaWcOwRCf4_DgyitPPUlUaP5rkcAPu7Xbc6U",{"id":509,"title":510,"author":7,"body":511,"categories":641,"date":642,"description":643,"extension":115,"featured":644,"image":645,"images":648,"meta":655,"navigation":116,"path":656,"readingTime":96,"seo":657,"stem":658,"tags":659,"__hash__":670},"articles\u002Farticles\u002F2024-top-10-billionaire-family-feuds.md","2024 Top 10 Billionaire Family Feuds",{"type":9,"value":512,"toc":630},[513,516,520,523,532,536,539,548,552,555,558,562,565,568,577,581,584,593,597,600,603,607,610,613,617,620,623,627],[17,514,515],{},"Nothing tears a family apart quite like a few billion dollars. Forget holiday arguments over politics or who gets grandma’s china -- when the ultra-wealthy go to war with their own blood, they do it with armies of lawyers, sprawling court filings, and grudges that outlast most marriages. These are the ten most vicious billionaire family feuds tearing through the world’s richest dynasties right now.",[12,517,519],{"id":518},"_1-the-goldman-family","1. The Goldman family",[17,521,522],{},"--> Read more about the Goldman Family here",[17,524,525,529],{},[30,526],{"alt":527,"src":528},"The Goldman family at the center of their ongoing inheritance dispute","\u002Fimages\u002Farticles\u002F2024-top-10-billionaire-family-feuds\u002FGoldman-main-700x438-1.jpg",[37,530,531],{},"The Goldman family’s bitter dispute has become one of the most closely watched inheritance battles in recent memory (Photo: Goldman Family\u002FPublic Record)",[12,533,535],{"id":534},"_2-the-hinduja-family","2. The Hinduja family",[17,537,538],{},"--> Read our full story on the Hinduja Family Feud",[17,540,541,545],{},[30,542],{"alt":543,"src":544},"The Hinduja brothers, heads of one of Britain’s wealthiest families","\u002Fimages\u002Farticles\u002F2024-top-10-billionaire-family-feuds\u002Fhinduja-brothers.jpg",[37,546,547],{},"The Hinduja brothers built a multi-billion-dollar empire together -- then turned on each other (Photo: Hinduja Group)",[12,549,551],{"id":550},"_3-the-safra-family","3. The Safra family",[17,553,554],{},"Joseph Safra was one of the world’s richest bankers. When he died, he left behind a fortune that most people cannot fathom -- and a legal mess that his heirs apparently cannot resolve.",[17,556,557],{},"In 2023, his son Alberto sued his own mother, Vicky, along with his two brothers, David and Jacob, accusing them of diluting his stake in the family’s banking empire. Let that sink in: a son dragging his mother and siblings into court over a multi-billion-dollar fortune. The litigation remains ongoing, and the Safra siblings show zero signs of reaching the kind of peace their father’s legacy probably deserves.",[12,559,561],{"id":560},"_4-the-koch-family","4. The Koch family",[17,563,564],{},"This one is an American classic. In 1980, Bill Koch tried to seize control of Koch Industries, one of the largest private companies in the United States. It did not go well. He got fired.",[17,566,567],{},"Bill and his brother Frederick then sold their shares to their siblings Charles and David -- but later claimed they had been shortchanged on the deal. What followed was an 18-year legal war between brothers, a slow-burning courtroom saga that finally ended in a settlement in 2001. Two decades of litigation between siblings over a company that has since expanded into chemicals, consumer products, and seemingly every other industry on the planet. Koch Industries kept growing. The family bonds did not.",[17,569,570,574],{},[30,571],{"alt":572,"src":573},"The Koch family compound at Cape Winds, symbol of the brothers’ decades-long legal war","\u002Fimages\u002Farticles\u002F2024-top-10-billionaire-family-feuds\u002Fsub-CAPEWINDS-1-superJumbo-v2-1024x687.jpg",[37,575,576],{},"The Koch brothers’ feud stretched across 18 years of courtrooms before a 2001 settlement finally ended the fighting (Photo: The New York Times)",[12,578,580],{"id":579},"_5-the-stronach-family","5. The Stronach family",[17,582,583],{},"--> Read our full story on the Stronach Family Feud",[17,585,586,590],{},[30,587],{"alt":588,"src":589},"Frank Stronach, the Austrian-Canadian auto parts billionaire embroiled in a family feud","\u002Fimages\u002Farticles\u002F2024-top-10-billionaire-family-feuds\u002F960x0.jpg.webp",[37,591,592],{},"The Stronach dynasty’s internal war puts the cutthroat world of auto parts money on full display (Photo: Forbes)",[12,594,596],{"id":595},"_8-the-dovidio-family","8. The d’Ovidio family",[17,598,599],{},"Monaco-based tycoon Manfredi Lefebvre d’Ovidio built Silversea Cruises into a luxury empire. His brother Francesco wanted his piece of it.",[17,601,602],{},"Francesco sued Manfredi over ownership of the family business, alleging that despite reaching an agreement back in 2001, Manfredi never delivered the shares he was owed. The stakes were enormous: Silversea Cruises carried a valuation of $2 billion in 2018. Two brothers, one luxury cruise line, and a handshake deal that apparently meant nothing when the real money showed up.",[12,604,606],{"id":605},"_9-the-gore-family","9. The Gore family",[17,608,609],{},"The Gore family -- founders of W.L. Gore, the company behind Gore-Tex -- designed a trust system that awarded larger shares to family members who had more children. Simple enough, right? Incentivize procreation, distribute the wealth accordingly.",[17,611,612],{},"Then Susan Gore, one of the founders’ children, found a loophole nobody saw coming: she adopted her ex-husband. The move was a brazen attempt to boost her headcount and secure a bigger slice of the inheritance. It backfired spectacularly. A court ruling cut Susan and her children out of the family business entirely. The lesson: when you try to game a billionaire trust fund with a creative adoption scheme, the courts tend to notice.",[12,614,616],{"id":615},"_10-the-albrecht-family","10. The Albrecht family",[17,618,619],{},"The Albrecht family built Aldi into one of the world’s largest discount supermarket chains. Then Theo Albrecht died, and his heirs went to war over who would control Aldi Nord.",[17,621,622],{},"The inheritance dispute dragged on until the family finally reorganized their holdings, placing equal control of the company in the hands of both sides. A tidy resolution on paper. But the scars of a family divided over a grocery empire -- one built on the principle of relentless thrift, no less -- tell a story that no corporate restructuring can fully erase.",[12,624,626],{"id":625},"the-bottom-line","The bottom line",[17,628,629],{},"Billions of dollars. Generations of ambition. And the same ugly truth at the center of every single one of these stories: money does not buy family harmony. If anything, extreme wealth seems to guarantee the opposite -- feuds that burn hotter, last longer, and play out on a stage the rest of us can only watch from the cheap seats.",{"title":95,"searchDepth":96,"depth":96,"links":631},[632,633,634,635,636,637,638,639,640],{"id":518,"depth":96,"text":519},{"id":534,"depth":96,"text":535},{"id":550,"depth":96,"text":551},{"id":560,"depth":96,"text":561},{"id":579,"depth":96,"text":580},{"id":595,"depth":96,"text":596},{"id":605,"depth":96,"text":606},{"id":615,"depth":96,"text":616},{"id":625,"depth":96,"text":626},[105,106,108,109,111,381,112],"2024-09-04","Billionaire family feuds are often high-stakes, with disputes over inheritance, control, and trust funds playing out in public. Legal battles can stretch on for years, creating rifts that are difficul",false,{"src":646,"alt":647},"\u002Fimages\u002Farticles\u002F2024-top-10-billionaire-family-feuds\u002Fscales-sit-on-a-wooden-table-with-a-blurry-background.jpg","Brass justice scales on a wooden table symbolizing legal battles between billionaire families",[649,650,652,654],{"src":528,"alt":527},{"src":544,"alt":651},"The Hinduja brothers, heads of one of Britain's wealthiest families",{"src":573,"alt":653},"The Koch family compound at Cape Winds, symbol of the brothers' decades-long legal war",{"src":589,"alt":588},{},"\u002Farticles\u002F2024-top-10-billionaire-family-feuds",{"title":510,"description":643},"articles\u002F2024-top-10-billionaire-family-feuds",[660,661,662,663,664,665,666,667,668,669],"albrecht","barclay","dovidio","goldman","gore","hinduja","koch","pritzker","safra","stronach","grpg701P6X0rvm66b1I9JLvQIeo6DZiNTpUdr32dJVs",{"id":672,"title":673,"author":7,"body":674,"categories":806,"date":807,"description":808,"extension":115,"featured":116,"image":809,"images":812,"meta":813,"navigation":116,"path":814,"readingTime":815,"seo":816,"stem":817,"tags":818,"__hash__":820},"articles\u002Farticles\u002Fa-legacy-in-limbo-the-sol-goldman-family-feud-and-the-battle-over-a-billion-dollar-empire.md","A Legacy in Limbo: The Sol Goldman Family Feud and the Battle Over a Billion-Dollar Empire",{"type":9,"value":675,"toc":797},[676,679,682,686,689,692,695,698,702,705,708,711,714,718,721,724,727,730,733,736,740,743,746,749,752,756,759,762,765,769,772,775,778,781,785,788,791,794],[17,677,678],{},"Sol Goldman owned a piece of the Chrysler Building. He controlled more than 1,900 properties scattered across New York City. And when he died in 1987, he left behind exactly zero instructions for how his family should divvy it all up. What followed was a multi-decade legal brawl that turned a billion-dollar real estate dynasty into a case study in how not to pass down a fortune.",[17,680,681],{},"The players: Goldman’s estranged wife, Lilian, and their four children -- Jane, Allan, Diane, and Amy. The stakes: one of the largest private property portfolios in Manhattan history. The timeline: five grinding years of courtroom warfare, followed by a brief ceasefire, followed by another eruption when Lilian died in 2002. This family did not do quiet grieving. They did depositions.",[12,683,685],{"id":684},"the-man-who-bought-new-york-on-the-cheap","The man who bought New York on the cheap",[17,687,688],{},"Sol Goldman was born in Brooklyn in 1917 to immigrant parents, and he spent the next seven decades clawing his way to the top of New York’s real estate food chain. His strategy was brutally simple and devastatingly effective: buy when everyone else is panicking.",[17,690,691],{},"While other investors fled during economic downturns, Goldman went shopping. He scooped up distressed properties at bargain prices, then sat on them -- sometimes for years -- until the market caught up to what he already knew. By the time he died at age 70, he had assembled a portfolio of over 1,900 properties, including a stake in the Chrysler Building, that Art Deco cathedral of ambition that practically screams \"I made it in New York.\"",[17,693,694],{},"But the man who could read a real estate market like a poker table was far less adept at reading his own family. His marriage to Lilian had been strained for years, with the two reportedly living separate lives long before his death. Sol ran his empire with a secretive, controlling management style that kept even his own children at arm’s length. He made the deals. He called the shots. And he never bothered to write down what should happen when he was gone.",[17,696,697],{},"That last part turned out to be a spectacularly expensive oversight.",[12,699,701],{"id":700},"the-fight-ignites","The fight ignites",[17,703,704],{},"When Sol Goldman died in 1987, he left a real estate portfolio valued at approximately $1 billion. He also left a 1979 agreement with Lilian that entitled her to 33% of his estate. Legally binding. Mathematically clear. Emotionally? A grenade with the pin already pulled.",[17,706,707],{},"The four Goldman children, led primarily by eldest daughter Jane, moved fast. They challenged Lilian’s 33% stake, arguing that the agreement was unfair and outdated given the complexity and sheer scale of the assets involved. Their position boiled down to this: we helped build this empire, and a decades-old deal between our estranged parents should not dictate who controls it now.",[17,709,710],{},"Lilian was not having it. She hired some of the most powerful attorneys in New York -- the kind of lawyers whose hourly rates could cover a month’s rent on one of Sol’s own buildings -- and dug in. She was entitled to her share, she said, and no amount of legal posturing from her own children would shake her loose.",[17,712,713],{},"The lawsuits that followed dragged on for five years. Five years of filings, motions, and arguments that bled into the tabloids. Neither side blinked.",[12,715,717],{"id":716},"a-family-tears-itself-apart","A family tears itself apart",[17,719,720],{},"Strip away the dollar signs and the Goldman inheritance battle was really a family implosion playing out in slow motion, with court reporters taking notes.",[17,722,723],{},"Jane Goldman, the eldest daughter, had long been considered the most business-savvy of the siblings. She had worked in her father’s real estate ventures before his death and, along with her brother Allan, stepped into leadership roles in the family business after Sol’s passing. Jane saw herself as the natural heir to the empire -- not just its money, but its direction.",[17,725,726],{},"Lilian saw things differently. To her, Jane’s aggressive push for control was a personal betrayal, a daughter choosing a portfolio over her own mother. The tension between the two became increasingly toxic as the litigation wore on.",[17,728,729],{},"Meanwhile, Diane and Amy -- the younger Goldman children -- found themselves stranded in the worst possible position: caught between loyalty to their mother and their own desire for a fair slice of the pie. Every family dinner, assuming they still had them, must have been a masterclass in awkward silence.",[17,731,732],{},"The feud attracted significant media attention as court filings and heated exchanges between family members spilled into public view. New York loves a good dynasty meltdown, and the Goldmans delivered.",[17,734,735],{},"Ultimately, after years of litigation, the family reached a settlement in the early 1990s. Lilian kept her 33% share. The remaining assets were divided among the children. On paper, it was resolved. In practice, the damage was already baked in. The resentment did not dissolve with the signing of a settlement agreement -- it just went underground.",[12,737,739],{"id":738},"round-two-lilians-death-reopens-old-wounds","Round two: Lilian’s death reopens old wounds",[17,741,742],{},"If the Goldman family thought the worst was behind them, they were wrong.",[17,744,745],{},"When Lilian died in 2002, her 33% share of the Goldman real estate empire landed back on the table -- and by now, those properties had appreciated substantially. The Chrysler Building alone had surged in value. New acquisitions, many driven by Jane’s leadership, had expanded the family’s holdings even further. The fortune was bigger than ever, which meant the arguments about who deserved what were louder than ever.",[17,747,748],{},"Lilian’s will stipulated that her estate be divided equally among her four children. Simple enough, right? Not for the Goldmans. The sibling tensions that had never fully cooled after the first legal battle reignited almost immediately. Jane, who had assumed a dominant role in managing the family business, clashed with her siblings over the direction of the company and the handling of the estate.",[17,750,751],{},"It was the same fight with a different catalyst. Control versus fairness. Leadership versus inclusion. The ghost of Sol Goldman, who never wrote a succession plan, continued to haunt every conference room and courtroom where his heirs gathered.",[12,753,755],{"id":754},"the-real-cost-of-no-plan","The real cost of no plan",[17,757,758],{},"Here is the brutal arithmetic of the Goldman saga: Sol Goldman spent decades building one of the most impressive private real estate empires in American history. He bought smart, held patient, and accumulated a portfolio that most developers would trade a kidney for. Then he died without a coherent succession plan, and his family spent the next fifteen-plus years tearing each other apart over it.",[17,760,761],{},"The inheritance battles exposed every fault line in the family. Mother against children. Siblings against siblings. Five years of litigation after Sol’s death turned what could have been a smooth transition of generational wealth into a prolonged legal nightmare that enriched a small army of Manhattan attorneys.",[17,763,764],{},"And even after the settlement, the wounds never fully closed. Lilian’s death in 2002 proved that much. The Goldmans were not a family that forgot grievances -- they catalogued them.",[12,766,768],{"id":767},"power-control-and-the-weight-of-a-name","Power, control, and the weight of a name",[17,770,771],{},"What made the Goldman feud so intractable was that it was never just about money. It was about identity.",[17,773,774],{},"For Jane, who had carved out a leadership role in the family business, the fight was about proving herself as the rightful steward of her father’s legacy. She did not just want her inheritance -- she wanted the wheel. For her siblings, the battle was about making sure they were not frozen out of decisions that affected their own financial futures. They wanted a seat at the table, not just a check in the mail.",[17,776,777],{},"Lilian occupied the most complicated position of all. She fought for her 33% share not out of greed but out of a determination to assert her own independence and claim what she believed was rightfully hers -- even when her own children lined up against her. Whatever else you can say about the Goldman matriarch, she did not back down.",[17,779,780],{},"The family’s story illustrates something that plays out again and again in the world of extreme wealth: a fortune built by one person’s singular vision becomes a battleground the moment that person is no longer around to enforce it. Sol Goldman’s empire was not just a collection of buildings. It was the physical manifestation of his life’s work, and everyone in the family wanted to be the one holding the keys.",[12,782,784],{"id":783},"what-the-goldmans-teach-the-rest-of-us","What the Goldmans teach the rest of us",[17,786,787],{},"The Goldman family feud is a textbook illustration of what happens when estate planning falls off the to-do list. Sol Goldman was brilliant at acquiring real estate. He was terrible at planning for the day he would no longer be around to manage it. That failure -- more than any personality clash or family grievance -- set the stage for everything that followed.",[17,789,790],{},"The feud also shows how money amplifies dysfunction. The Goldman family’s personal tensions existed long before Sol died, but a billion-dollar inheritance turned simmering resentments into full-blown warfare. When the stakes are that high, every old grudge gets a second life.",[17,792,793],{},"And then there is the human cost, the part that does not show up on a balance sheet. The Goldman family’s relationships were fundamentally and permanently altered by these disputes. Legal settlements can redistribute assets, but they cannot undo years of accusations, betrayals, and public airing of private pain. The rifts that opened during the Goldman feud never fully healed.",[17,795,796],{},"Sol Goldman built his empire from nothing, one shrewd deal at a time. He went from a Brooklyn kid with immigrant parents to a man who owned a piece of the Chrysler Building. That is a remarkable American story. But the chapter that came after -- the one he never planned for -- turned a legacy of ambition into a cautionary tale about what happens when the dealmaker leaves the table without telling anyone what comes next.",{"title":95,"searchDepth":96,"depth":96,"links":798},[799,800,801,802,803,804,805],{"id":684,"depth":96,"text":685},{"id":700,"depth":96,"text":701},{"id":716,"depth":96,"text":717},{"id":738,"depth":96,"text":739},{"id":754,"depth":96,"text":755},{"id":767,"depth":96,"text":768},{"id":783,"depth":96,"text":784},[105,106,107,108,109,111],"2024-09-02","When Sol Goldman, one of New York City’s wealthiest and most prominent landlords, passed away in 1987, he left behind not only a sprawling real estate empire but also a tangled web of family disputes ",{"src":810,"alt":811},"\u002Fimages\u002Farticles\u002Fa-legacy-in-limbo-the-sol-goldman-family-feud-and-the-battle-over-a-billion-dollar-empire\u002FGoldman-main-700x438-1.jpg","Aerial view of New York City skyscrapers representing Sol Goldman's vast real estate empire",[],{},"\u002Farticles\u002Fa-legacy-in-limbo-the-sol-goldman-family-feud-and-the-battle-over-a-billion-dollar-empire",8,{"title":673,"description":808},"articles\u002Fa-legacy-in-limbo-the-sol-goldman-family-feud-and-the-battle-over-a-billion-dollar-empire",[393,663,819],"sol-goldman","wmVYDV-3LPKFdmSVJOLsaOvpxIP8c4YXlNCw3q9JsYc",{"id":822,"title":823,"author":7,"body":824,"categories":943,"date":944,"description":945,"extension":115,"featured":116,"image":946,"images":949,"meta":952,"navigation":116,"path":953,"readingTime":954,"seo":955,"stem":956,"tags":957,"__hash__":959},"articles\u002Farticles\u002Fthe-hinduja-family-feud-the-bitter-battle-for-control-of-a-33-billion-empire.md","The Hinduja Family Feud: The Bitter Battle for Control of a $33 Billion Empire",{"type":9,"value":825,"toc":935},[826,829,832,836,839,842,845,851,856,860,863,866,869,872,878,883,887,890,893,896,900,903,906,909,913,916,919,922,926,929,932],[17,827,828],{},"The Hinduja family owns everything and nothing at the same time. That is not a riddle. It is the actual philosophy -- \"everything belongs to everyone and nothing belongs to anyone\" -- that once held together a $33 billion empire spanning 40 countries, anchored by heavyweights like IndusInd Bank and commercial vehicle giant Ashok Leyland. It is also the phrase that would eventually blow the whole thing apart in a London courtroom. Britain's wealthiest family did not need enemies. They had each other.",[17,830,831],{},"At the storm's center stood Srichand Hinduja, the eldest of four brothers and the patriarch whose steady hand had guided the group to global dominance. When dementia began dismantling his mind in the early 2010s, it did not just remove a leader from the boardroom. It detonated a succession crisis that exposed every fault line the family had spent decades papering over. A 2022 court settlement brought a brief ceasefire. Then Srichand died in 2023, and the war started all over again.",[12,833,835],{"id":834},"from-sindh-traders-to-a-global-dynasty","From Sindh traders to a global dynasty",[17,837,838],{},"The Hinduja story begins in the early 20th century in Sindh, then part of British India and now Pakistan, where Parmanand Deepchand Hinduja built a trading operation linking India, Iran, and Iraq. It was scrappy, ambitious, cross-border commerce -- the kind of hustle that scales.",[17,840,841],{},"And scale it did. Over the following decades, the Hinduja Group ballooned into a conglomerate touching banking, finance, energy, automotive manufacturing, healthcare, and media across multiple continents. IndusInd Bank became one of India's largest private sector banks. Ashok Leyland grew into a major manufacturer of commercial vehicles. Gulf Oil added petroleum muscle. The four brothers running the show -- Srichand, Gopichand, Prakash, and Ashok -- were celebrated as a model of sibling cooperation, a unit so tight they governed the entire operation under that shared mantra: everything belongs to everyone and nothing belongs to anyone.",[17,843,844],{},"For years, the system worked. Joint decisions, shared profits, a single organism moving in lockstep. But philosophies built for a scrappy trading house do not always survive the pressures of a multinational juggernaut, aging founders, and a next generation hungry for their own seat at the table. As the brothers grew older and Srichand's health started its slow collapse, the cracks did not just appear. They widened fast.",[17,846,847],{},[30,848],{"alt":849,"src":850},"The four Hinduja brothers standing together in formal attire during their years of unified business leadership","\u002Fimages\u002Farticles\u002Fthe-hinduja-family-feud-the-bitter-battle-for-control-of-a-33-billion-empire\u002F1660213099-0458.jpg.avif",[17,852,853],{},[37,854,855],{},"The Hinduja brothers during the era of unified leadership, before the family's internal fractures became public (Photo: Bloomberg)",[12,857,859],{"id":858},"the-patriarch-fades-and-the-knives-come-out","The patriarch fades and the knives come out",[17,861,862],{},"Srichand Hinduja was not just the oldest brother. He was the axis around which the entire empire rotated. His leadership had propelled the Hinduja Group onto the world stage, and his presence alone kept the delicate balance of collective ownership from tipping into chaos.",[17,864,865],{},"By the mid-2010s, that axis had crumbled. Diagnosed with dementia, Srichand could no longer manage the daily machinery of a global business. His daughter, Vinoo Hinduja, who had been handling his personal affairs, stepped forward as his advocate, watching over his interests as his cognition deteriorated. But a family that had always governed by consensus suddenly had no mechanism for what happens when the consensus-maker cannot think straight.",[17,867,868],{},"Vinoo fired the opening salvo. She accused her uncles -- Gopichand, Prakash, and Ashok -- of systematically shutting out her side of the family from decision-making and control over key assets. The brothers, she alleged, were consolidating power in their own hands, sidelining Srichand and his descendants from the empire he had helped build.",[17,870,871],{},"Then the letter surfaced. Dated 2014 and allegedly signed by Srichand, it restated the family credo: \"everything belongs to everyone and nothing belongs to anyone.\" The brothers pointed to it as proof the collective ownership model still held. Vinoo called it a weapon. Her father's mental state at the time he supposedly signed it, she argued, rendered the document invalid -- a convenient piece of paper wielded by relatives who wanted to justify cutting her branch off the family tree. The letter became the flashpoint, two sides telling irreconcilable stories about a single signature on a single page.",[17,873,874],{},[30,875],{"alt":876,"src":877},"The Hinduja brothers at a family business gathering before the feud fractured their public image of unity","\u002Fimages\u002Farticles\u002Fthe-hinduja-family-feud-the-bitter-battle-for-control-of-a-33-billion-empire\u002Fimg_138339_hindujafamily.jpg",[17,879,880],{},[37,881,882],{},"The Hinduja brothers pictured together before the legal battle shattered the family's carefully maintained image of solidarity (Photo: AFP)",[12,884,886],{"id":885},"family-values-go-on-trial-in-london","Family values go on trial in London",[17,888,889],{},"In 2020, Vinoo took her uncles to court. The lawsuit alleged the brothers had acted in bad faith, exploiting Srichand's declining health to seize control of the group's holding companies and financial institutions. For a dynasty that had built its reputation on discretion, the filing was the equivalent of kicking the front door off its hinges.",[17,891,892],{},"The courtroom proceedings read like a script pitched somewhere between a Shakespearean tragedy and a corporate thriller. Vinoo accused her uncles of orchestrating a deliberate scheme to isolate her father from the family business and block her from any leadership role. The brothers countered that every move had been made in the best interests of the family, consistent with the Hinduja tradition of collective ownership.",[17,894,895],{},"As the case wound through the British courts, the once-impenetrable Hinduja image disintegrated in real time. Media coverage turned the family's vast wealth and sprawling business interests into tabloid spectacle. A clan that had prided itself on unity and privacy was now being dissected on front pages, its internal wounds laid open for public consumption.",[12,897,899],{"id":898},"the-2022-settlement-a-ceasefire-not-a-peace","The 2022 settlement -- a ceasefire, not a peace",[17,901,902],{},"Two years of acrimonious litigation ended in 2022 with a confidential settlement. The precise terms were never disclosed, but reports indicated the parties had reached an agreement on the management of family assets and the future direction of the Hinduja Group.",[17,904,905],{},"On paper, it looked like resolution. In practice, it was a tourniquet on a wound that had not stopped bleeding. The settlement extinguished the legal fire but did nothing to rebuild the personal relationships incinerated by years of accusations and counter-accusations. Vinoo remained wary about the fate of her father's legacy and her own standing within the business. Her uncles, meanwhile, pressed ahead with plans for the group, including potential restructuring and global expansion.",[17,907,908],{},"For a fragile moment, it appeared the Hinduja empire might hold together. The family had dodged further courtroom exposure, and there was cautious hope that time might do what lawyers could not. That hope had a short shelf life.",[12,910,912],{"id":911},"srichand-dies-and-the-old-wounds-reopen","Srichand dies and the old wounds reopen",[17,914,915],{},"Srichand Hinduja's death in 2023 did not bring closure. It brought gasoline. With the patriarch gone, the balance of power inside the Hinduja Group lurched into uncertainty once more. The succession question -- always simmering, never satisfactorily answered -- boiled over as the remaining brothers moved to tighten their grip on the business.",[17,917,918],{},"For Vinoo, the loss was double-edged: personal grief compounded by the disappearance of her most powerful ally. Without Srichand in the picture, preserving her family's position within the labyrinthine Hinduja power structure became an exponentially harder fight. The 2022 settlement had provided a temporary framework, but her father's passing blew new holes in whatever stability it had offered.",[17,920,921],{},"Publicly, Srichand's death was met with tributes recognizing the man who had transformed a family trading operation into one of the most successful business empires on the planet. Behind the curtain, the divisions were metastasizing. Insiders whispered that unresolved tensions could trigger another round of litigation -- or, in the worst case scenario, a full fracture of the business itself.",[12,923,925],{"id":924},"what-happens-to-a-33-billion-empire-built-on-a-philosophy-nobody-believes-anymore","What happens to a $33 billion empire built on a philosophy nobody believes anymore",[17,927,928],{},"The Hinduja saga is a case study in the collision between generational wealth and generational change. The Hinduja Group has survived economic upheavals, geopolitical shifts, and decades of global competition. Whether it can survive the people who own it is a different question entirely.",[17,930,931],{},"The next generation of Hindujas -- sons and daughters spread across different branches of the family -- will determine whether the empire consolidates or splinters. For Vinoo, the mission is clear: protect her father's legacy while navigating a family political landscape that has proven hostile. For her uncles, the challenge is governing a global conglomerate while managing the ambitions and grievances of relatives who increasingly view unity as a word, not a practice.",[17,933,934],{},"The Hinduja Group, with its vast holdings and influence, is not going anywhere. Its $33 billion footprint across banking, automotive, energy, and beyond guarantees it will remain a force in the global business landscape for years to come. But the family that built it is balanced on a knife's edge, the heirs to an extraordinary fortune locked in a struggle over power and control that their founding philosophy was never designed to resolve.",{"title":95,"searchDepth":96,"depth":96,"links":936},[937,938,939,940,941,942],{"id":834,"depth":96,"text":835},{"id":858,"depth":96,"text":859},{"id":885,"depth":96,"text":886},{"id":898,"depth":96,"text":899},{"id":911,"depth":96,"text":912},{"id":924,"depth":96,"text":925},[105,106,107,108,109,111],"2024-09-01","In the world of billionaires, where immense wealth often brings immense challenges, few family feuds have captured as much public attention as that of the Hinduja family. As Britain's wealthiest famil",{"src":947,"alt":948},"\u002Fimages\u002Farticles\u002Fthe-hinduja-family-feud-the-bitter-battle-for-control-of-a-33-billion-empire\u002F1x-1.jpg","Hinduja Brothers - Family Feud",[950,951],{"src":850,"alt":849},{"src":877,"alt":876},{},"\u002Farticles\u002Fthe-hinduja-family-feud-the-bitter-battle-for-control-of-a-33-billion-empire",7,{"title":823,"description":945},"articles\u002Fthe-hinduja-family-feud-the-bitter-battle-for-control-of-a-33-billion-empire",[393,665,958],"srichand","2WNvfxqQOrYbP9qJggamkADUMxsOZflkTKtnCl4gESg",1774809005248]