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Woman leaves 12 MILLION to her dog

Featured Replies

This makes me angry for some reason. :dozey:

 

Helmsley Leaves Dog $12 Million in Will

 

 

AP

Posted: 2007-08-29 14:40:57

Filed Under: Business News

NEW YORK (Aug. 29) - Leona Helmsley's dog will continue to live an opulent life, and then be buried alongside her in a mausoleum. But two of Helmsley's grandchildren got nothing from the late luxury hotelier and real estate billionaire's estate.

 

 

Photo Gallery: A Fearsome Figure

 

 

 

20070829072209990001 Jennifer Graylock, AP

 

Famed hotelier Leona Helmsley, who died Aug. 20, left her dog Trouble $12 million in her will. Two of her grandchildren got nothing. Here, she holds the dog in 2003.

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Helmsley left her beloved white Maltese, named Trouble, a $12 million trust fund, according to her will, which was made public Tuesday in surrogate court.

 

She also left millions for her brother, Alvin Rosenthal, who was named to care for Trouble in her absence, as well as two of four grandchildren from her late son Jay Panzirer - so long as they visit their father's grave site once each calendar year.

 

Otherwise, she wrote, neither will get a penny of the $5 million she left for each.

 

Helmsley left nothing to two of Jay Panzirer's other children - Craig and Meegan Panzirer - for "reasons that are known to them," she wrote.

 

But no one made out better than Trouble, who once appeared in ads for the Helmsley Hotels, and lived up to its name by biting a housekeeper.

 

"I direct that when my dog, Trouble, dies, her remains shall be buried next to my remains in the Helmsley mausoleum," Helmsley wrote in her will.

 

 

 

 

 

The mausoleum, she ordered, must be "washed or steam-cleaned at least once a year." She left behind $3 million for the upkeep of her final resting place in Westchester County, where she is buried with her husband, Harry Helmsley, and where the pair have a view of the New York skyline.

 

She also left her chauffeur, Nicholas Celea, $100,000.

 

Everything else, including cash from sales of the Helmsley's residences and belongings, reported to be worth billions, she ordered sold and the proceeds given to the Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust.

 

Her longtime spokesman, Howard Rubenstein, had no comment.

 

Helmsley died earlier this month at her Connecticut home. She became known as a symbol of 1980s greed and earned the nickname "the Queen of Mean" after her 1988 indictment and subsequent conviction for tax evasion. One employee had quoted her as snarling, "Only the little people pay taxes."

one of the more rediculous things i've heard in my life

:laugh3: oh that's funny lol good for the dog!

That poor dog, to have to be buried next to that ugly bitch. He should take the 12 mil and hire his own lawyer to get a better grave site. :laugh3:

so..the worlds covered with poverty and other crisis' and we're letting some dog get 12 million dollars...yep..sounds like the worlds got everything under control.

That poor dog, to have to be buried next to that ugly bitch. He should take the 12 mil and hire his own lawyer to get a better grave site. :laugh3:

 

Don't you mean a pawyer??:rolleyes:

The pet rich list - the world's millionaire mutts and moggies

 

by VICTORIA MOORE - More by this author » Last updated at 00:06am on 1st September 2007 commentIconSm.gif Comments

Last week, New York property billionaire Leona Helmsley died leaving one particular bequest of £6million.

The money was left not to her grandchildren - two of whom were cut out of her will altogether - but to her pet dog, a white toy Maltese terrier called Trouble.

 

Over the years many other doting owners have left large windfalls to their pets, but which is the richest of them all? VICTORIA MOORE reports.

Scroll down for more...

richlist_468x397.jpgA dog inherited £6m last week...but that's loose change to some pet

 

Read more...

1. GUNTHER THE GERMAN SHEPHERD

£90 MILLION

 

richlist9_228x338.jpg

In July 2000, the singer Madonna sold her eight bedroom Miami villa for £5million to agents acting on behalf of a German Shepherd dog called Gunther IV.

Apparently, Gunther IV had inherited his fortune from his father, Gunther III, who had in turn been the sole heir of the estate of his owner, a German Countess by the name of Karlotta Liebenstein who left £43m to her dog when she died in 1992.

Gunther IV soon made headlines again, when he paid £1,000 to buy a rare white truffle in a fiercely contested auction in Turin a year later, this time appearing in person (if that is the right phrase), along with two of his domestic staff.

His property portfolio is also said to include estates in the Bahamas, Italy and Germany.

A website dedicated to this most pampered of mutts shows him living in true Playboy mansion style: there are pictures of Gunther surrounded by bronzed girls in gold dresses and gorgeous men in glaring white jeans, as well as splashing about in a blue swimming pool while girls in string bikinis look on adoringly.

But is he for real?

All "serious inquiries" about Gunther's financial affairs are directed to the offices of Messrs Dupuch & Turnquest & Co Chambers, a law firm based in Nassau in the Bahamas. They do exist.

But when the Mail spoke to them yesterday they said: "There was a dog once and Mr Dupuch helped handle his affairs. But Mr Dupuch died some time ago and we haven't heard from Gunther IV."

Yet someone acting on Gunther's behalf did buy that truffle - who is he?

2. KALU THE CHIMPANZEE

£40 MILLION

2Kaluchimp_228x327.jpg

It is the duty of every rich and elderly lady to change her will from time to time, if only to keep her family on their toes.

But pity poor Frank O'Neill. The former Australian swimming champion made a pilgrimage to the Sydney Olympics a few years ago - and while he was away his wife decided to leave her £40million fortune to her pet chimp, Kalu.

Patricia O'Neill, the daughter of the Countess of Kenmore, had been close to Kalu since finding her tied to a tree outside the home of the Argentinian Consul-General in war-torn Zaire.

She took the chimp back to her estate near Cape Town in South Africa and although the animal initially seemed "terrified and traumatised," she soon settled in.

Whether or not the chimp was aware she and Mr O'Neill were rivals is unclear.

"Every time I swam in the pool, she used to run up and down and hit me on the head, but we had a great relationship," said a sporting Mr O'Neill. Kalu also stole his cigarettes and drank his beer.

3. TROUBLE THE MALTESE TERRIER

£6 MILLION

Leona Helmsley, the woman known as New York's "Queen of Mean", who died aged 87 last week, might have been hell to work for but she sure took good care of her snowy white toy Maltese terrier.

"They fed it human food," recalled her former maid, Zamfira Sfara this week.

"Chicken, carrots, spinach and fish - everything fresh.

"The food would come in silver and china trays. Everything was very elegant. The food was chopped very small and we'd feed the dog from our fingers. It wouldn't eat if we didn't."

Scroll down for more...

lhelmsleyDM2908_468x490.jpgThey didn't call her the Queen of Mean for nothing: Leona Helmsley cut her grandkids from her will but left her dog millions

 

Trouble is no sweeter-natured than her tough owner - Sfara sued Helmsley for allowing the pooch regularly to bite her whenever she gave her a bath, causing nerve damage, and said that Helmsley would cheer the dog on, shouting, "Good for you, Trouble!"

Thanks to the £6million bequest from Helmsley's £4billion estate, Trouble will live out the rest of her years in some style. In death, she will be reunited with her owner when she is buried by her side in the Helmsley Mausoleum.

4. TINA AND KATE THE COLLIE CROSSES

£450,000

4TinaandKate_228x202.jpg

It can be traumatic for a dog when their owner dies and they lose their home as well as their human companion. But collie crosses Tina and Kate were spared this indignity.

Nora Hardwell, who died the day before her 90th birthday, ensured her two dogs would live out the rest of their days in luxury by bequesting them the run of her home and five acres of land in Peasedown St John, near Bath, as well as £450,000 to be spent on their every whim.

Her will stipulated that a carer must be employed to look after the two dogs, and that the house must be kept clean at all times.

5. JASPER THE MONGREL

£150,000

5jaspernew_228x331.jpg

 

This is a true rags to riches tale. Jasper, an illegitimate labrador-doberman cross from a broken home, spent his early days in Battersea Dogs' Home.

His glossy black coat and big pink tongue proved irresistible to brewery heiress Diana Myburgh, who rescued him and cared for him until she died, aged 74, in 1995.

Mrs Myburgh left trust funds of £25,000 each to Jasper and her other dog, a whippet called Jason - and when Jason passed away his share was inherited by Jasper.

The dog, aged about 14, now lives in some splendour at Maunsel House in Somerset, with Mrs Myburgh's former son-in-law, Sir Benjamin Slade, who invested Jasper's initial bequest on the stock market and has seen it increase three-fold.

"A dog can't spend that amount of money," says Sir Benjamin.

"He pays me £11 a day to look after him. But what he really likes is tripe. He's mad about tripe. He doesn't like pork. Won't touch it. He has green-lipped mussels and cod-liver oil.

"He also has a diamond collar, but it's not real. That cost him £75 at Chelsea Farmer's Market."

At one point Sir Benjamin explored the possibility of having Jasper's DNA cloned to create a replica dog.

But that enraged the trustees to whom Jasper's money will revert on his death, "there was a screaming row and they all got on the phone to their lawyers. They're all waiting for him to turn up his toes".

6. TINKER THE CAT

£100,000

6tinker_228x361.jpg

 

After befriending an elderly widow, Margaret Layne, who died in 2003 aged 89, Tinker the stray, then eight, ensured he would never want for cat biscuits or chocolate drops again.

Under the terms of her will, Layne stipulated that the black cat would have the run of her threebedroom house in Harrow, Middlesex, as well as a £100,000 trust fund, with trustees appointed to deliver him food and milk daily.

The house will remain open to Tinker for 21 years, or until he dies, whichever comes sooner, after which it passes to the trustees charged with his care.

As Tinker soon discovered though, being rich is not without its perils: just months after his owner died, Tinker was moved to a safe house in mid-Wales after a series of death threats and calls from people jealous of his money.

7. PORGY, PRIDE, JOY & RONALD THE CATS

£17,500 EACH

The late bookshop queen Christina Foyle - owner of Foyles in Charing Cross Road - who died in June 1999, left a £59million estate that included two animal bequests (see below for the second).

"I've always been an avid cat lover and Miss Foyle left me all her nine cats," explains her former housekeeper Maureen Harding.

"And I've still got four of them left."

The £;70,000 cottage Harding was left to live in with the cats was sold and the money used to buy a new home for the feline family in Essex. Porgy, a tortoiseshell and at 17 the oldest, sleeps in Harding's bedroom; then come Pride and Joy (both tabbies) and Ronnie, the youngest.

"Ronnie's a bit of a bully, I'm afraid. Quite a character although he can be spiteful. But they're all sweethearts really," says Harding.

8, SILVERSTONE THE TORTOISE

£16,667

8silverstone_228x177.jpg

 

Aged over 50, this tortoise got his name when he was set down on a lawn on Grand Prix day and proceeded to make extremely pacy progress across the grass.

He was another beneficiary of Christina Foyle.

She left £100,000 to handyman Anthony Scillitoe and his wife Eileen to look after her six tortoises plus a collie cross, who died shortly after his mistress.

While five of the tortoises remained in Scillitoe's care, Silverstone lives with Miss Foyle's former housekeeper, Maureen Harding.

 

9Matilda_228x271.jpg

9. TOP CAT AND MATILDA

£10,000 EACH

 

This pair became aristocats when their owner, a retired librarian in Aberdeen called died in October 2004 leaving £10,000 for the care of each of her cats.

The minister's daughter had been parsimonious when it came to her own creature comforts - she travelled everywhere by bus and saw no need to have central heating - but clearly felt her cats were worth a little more.

10. ANGUS THE COW AND LARRY THE LAMB

£7,957 EACH

Thanks to a £3million trust created by the Queen Mother before she died, the herd of 150 Aberdeen Angus cattle and 200 North Country Cheviot sheep on the Castle of Mey Farm can claim to be perhaps the wealthiest set of animals in Britain.

 

10Angus_228x226.jpg

We calculate each of the animals can boast a personal fortune of almost £8,000.

The money from the trust is also shared by a small menagerie in the Castle of Mey visitor centre (comprising two goats, two piglets, six rare breed sheep, six rare poultry, three call ducks, two male rabbits and two lovebirds called Jeremy and Julia).

The Queen Mother had a longstanding interest in the Aberdeen Angus breed.

Along with George VI she became joint patron of the Aberdeen-Angus Society in 1937, a post she retained until her death 65 years later in 2002.

I wouldn't mind being Gunther.

...minus the girls in swimsuits.

at least the dog looks like a normal dog, not like an stupid one....

 

doesn't those dog's owners feel they are like torturing their pets, with the clothes and stupid things they make them wear? :thinking:

when i saw those pics, i would thought that the owner is a kid not an adult...

at least the dog looks like a normal dog, not like an stupid one....

 

doesn't those dog's owners feel they are like torturing their pets, with the clothes and stupid things they make them wear? :thinking:

when i saw those pics, i would thought that the owner is a kid not an adult...

 

Yup - as I've said before, it could quite easily be regarded as a form of animal cruelty IMO, and it's also yet another way for the owners to "show off". ;)

Is this what they mean by "doggy fashion"??:rolleyes:

  • Author

Aw, I would put a sweater on my little doggy once in a while :nice:

 

but I wouldn't give it twelve million dollars!!

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