Brooke Astor Verdict: Anthony Marshall GUILTY; Faces At Least A Year In Jail

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JENNIFER PELTZ | 10/ 8/09 09:21 PM | AP

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NEW YORK — Brooke Astor's 85-year-old son was convicted Thursday of exploiting his philanthropist mother's failing mind and helping himself to her nearly $200 million fortune.

Anthony Marshall now faces a mandatory jail sentence of at least one year – and perhaps as many as 25 years.

Jurors delivered their verdict on the 11th full day of deliberations, ending a five-month trial that revealed the New York society doyenne's sad decline. She was 105 and had Alzheimer's disease when she died in 2007.

The jury convicted Marshall of 14 counts, including first-degree grand larceny and scheming to defraud, but acquitted him on two charges, falsifying business records and another first-degree grand larceny count. His co-defendant, estate lawyer Francis X. Morrissey Jr., was convicted on all five charges, including scheming to defraud, conspiracy and forgery.

Marshall, wearing a dark suit, looked at the jurors as they were polled. Morrissey, 66, looked down but didn't betray any emotion. They will remain free on bail until their Dec. 8 sentencing. Morrissey faces up to seven years in prison.

"I'm stunned by the verdict," said Marshall's attorney, Frederick Hafetz. "We are greatly disappointed in it, and we will definitely appeal."

After the jury left the courtroom, Marshall's wife, Charlene, stood at the rail with her hand on Marshall's shoulder, her eyes glistening. When reporters asked her for a response, she said only, "I love my husband," and gave him a brief hug. The couple walked out of the courthouse, hand in hand, to a waiting limousine.

The trial offered a peek into high society from Park Avenue to Palm Beach as prosecutors told a Dickensian tale of upper-crust money-grubbing with a deteriorating grande dame at its center.

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The case put Astor's famous friends, including Barbara Walters and Henry Kissinger, on the witness stand and her dark final years on display. Jurors heard how a beau monde benefactor renowned for her elegance and wit became a disoriented invalid fearful of her own shadow.

Marshall "stole from his mother while she suffered from Alzheimer's disease, making her life worse while enriching his own," prosecutor Elizabeth Loewy said after the verdict.

Marshall was accused of a range of tactics – from scheming to inherit millions of dollars to simply stealing artwork off her walls. Morrissey was accused of helping manipulate a confused Astor into changing her will to leave Marshall millions of dollars that had been destined for charity.

Jurors left the courthouse without speaking to reporters.

They rejected only the falsifying business records charge – it alleged that Marshall lied to an accountant about $757,000 he got from Astor – and a grand larceny count that concerned the $10 million sale of one of her favorite paintings. Prosecutors claimed Marshall misled his mother about the state of her finances so he could sell the artwork, Childe Hassam's "Flags, Fifth Avenue."

Astor's last will, created Jan. 30, 2002, left millions of dollars to her favorite charities. Amendments in 2003 and 2004 gave Marshall most of her estate.

Prosecutors portrayed Marshall – a former U.S. ambassador and Tony Award-winning Broadway producer – as a greedy heir who couldn't wait for his mother to die, buying himself a $920,000 yacht with her money but refusing to get a $2,000 safety gate to keep her from falling.

Defense lawyers said Astor was lucid when she bequeathed the money to her only child and that he had legal power to give himself gifts while she was alive. She was keenly focused on her will, and she loved her son, they said.

Morrissey, whose convictions include forging Astor's signature on one of the changes to her will, declined to comment as he left the courthouse. Defense lawyer Thomas Puccio said Morrissey planned to appeal.

The trial delved into Astor's shadowy mental state, health problems, finances and family relations. Jurors got crash courses in topics ranging from estate planning to handwriting analysis.

Prosecutors called some 72 witnesses. Many of them testified about Astor's mental confusion in the last years of her life.

Walters described using a photo album to help Astor recall guests at her 100th birthday bash during a visit only months later. Kissinger testified that Astor didn't recognize former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan at a party she threw for him in 2002.

Former Brown University President Vartan Gregorian recalled the normally decorous society dame making an awkward toast to Britain's Camilla Parker Bowles in 1999.

But defense lawyer Hafetz pointed to episodes he said showed Astor was cogent at times, citing an impeccably spelled four-page letter she wrote to her close friend Annette de la Renta in November 2002.

Astor's third husband, Vincent Astor, was the son of multimillionaire John Jacob Astor IV. She took charge of her husband's philanthropic work after his death in 1959. Her efforts won her a Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian honor, in 1998.

Marshall is her son from a previous marriage to stockbroker Charles "Buddie" Marshall, who died in 1952.

The criminal case against Marshall and Morrissey came after one of Astor's grandsons asked a court to remove Marshall from handling her affairs.

Philip Marshall accused his father of abusing Astor by letting her live in squalor while he looted her fortune. Anthony Marshall denied the claims but agreed in October 2006 to step aside as his mother's guardian.

De la Renta and longtime Astor friend David Rockefeller, who both backed the grandson's allegations, responded to Thursday's verdict by noting that they had tried to ensure Astor's comfort toward the end of her life.

"Thankfully, that was accomplished," they said through spokesman Fraser Seitel. "But the rest of the story was really very sad."

A civil case concerning Astor's will has been on hold while prosecutors pursued the criminal charges.

___

Associated Press Writer Karen Matthews contributed to this report.

NEW YORK — Brooke Astor's 85-year-old son was convicted Thursday of exploiting his philanthropist mother's failing mind and helping himself to her nearly $200 million fortune. Anthony Marshall ...
NEW YORK — Brooke Astor's 85-year-old son was convicted Thursday of exploiting his philanthropist mother's failing mind and helping himself to her nearly $200 million fortune. Anthony Marshall ...
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Stealing and fraud remain crimes even when they are ebtween family members. Crimes comitted with a family, whether violent or finanacial are still crimes. Until individuals are afraid that they will face jail time the exloitation of the elderly will continue.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:51 AM on 11/16/2009
- zort I'm a Fan of zort permalink

Yes the money legally belonged to Brooke Astor but didn't she herself acquire it through marriage and not by any great accomplishments of her own? Is she so different from Charlene? And once her mind has crumbled to the point that it had, while she technically owned them, she had no need of those funds. She could not enjoy them or control them. She did not need to live lavishly anymore. She needed to be cared for but not necessarilly in luxury. How could luxury matter to her anymore? She needed the Maine house so she could sit on the porch and look at the greenery? Please. Why should her son not be able to use the funds? God knows, in his 80's he didn't have long to enjoy life either. So as between a rich woman who has lost her mind and her son who is old and can enjoy the funds, I say the money should have been enjoyed by him. It is not elder abuse to refuse to buy someone a new dress. And anything that was not done to keep up her property in a way that would have been to her previous standards would not have bothered Brooke as she was mentally gone. So not elder abuse. I think the grandson, for thinking all this was still important, was a real piece of work. Revenge against daddy.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:56 PM on 10/09/2009
- JhNyc I'm a Fan of JhNyc 10 fans permalink

It wasn't his money to enjoy. You're not entitled to steal from someone (even your mother) just because you can enjoy their money more than they can. Marshall was hardly living in poverty. Perhaps his son knows him better than you do.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:24 AM on 10/11/2009
- uneeda I'm a Fan of uneeda 4 fans permalink

sounds like it's time for charlene to move on

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:36 AM on 10/09/2009
- JhNyc I'm a Fan of JhNyc 10 fans permalink

Move on where? Doubtful she's in great demand.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:42 PM on 10/09/2009
- lisaman I'm a Fan of lisaman 32 fans permalink
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The rich never have enough, do they? Too bad he can't be forced to live a year in poverty so he would be more grateful for what he already has. I actually think though that anyone who could do this to their own mother deserves much more than 1 year!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:06 AM on 10/09/2009
- Brooklyn49 I'm a Fan of Brooklyn49 24 fans permalink
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Very, very wrong decision.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:17 PM on 10/08/2009
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This guy has enough $$$ to tie this up in appeals until HE'S 105. Remember in the USA you get just as much justice as you can afford.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:13 PM on 10/08/2009
- Bitsko I'm a Fan of Bitsko 542 fans permalink
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F. Scott Fitzgerald was right, the rich are different from you and me. They're a lot dvmber.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:11 PM on 10/08/2009
- thaneb I'm a Fan of thaneb 13 fans permalink
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He had the legal power to give himself gifts [from her estate]? Sounds like a laughable defense.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:48 PM on 10/08/2009
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Come to think of it, if someone gives me his creds -- I already have a press pass -- financial assets and opportunity, I'll take over. ;-)

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:20 PM on 10/08/2009
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I agree with whoever summoned the spirit of Dominick Dunne to report on this. This is a perfect story for him. I hope another diarist (or several) surfaces to continue the kind of detailed, personal observations he provided. Not that anyone could take his place, only that I'd appreciate having someone with his access to the rarified atmosphere of the high society and the mega-rich to offer perspectives that those of us regular folks don't have.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:19 PM on 10/08/2009
- hotseat I'm a Fan of hotseat 21 fans permalink
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Agreed. This case is beyond pathetic. Have the rich no moral compass?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:43 PM on 10/08/2009
- HisPetGoat I'm a Fan of HisPetGoat 70 fans permalink
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But it isn't just the rich.

If things do not change, at least 1/4 of you reading this will suffer exploitation as Astor did, with or without suffering Alzheimer's.

Consider this article as a starting point for anyone interested in the subject of elder exploitation: http://communities.justicetalking.org/blogs/day17/archive/2007/09/14/elder-abuse-the-crime-of-the-21st-century.aspx

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:53 PM on 10/08/2009

I guess some rich people have none at all. The greed of it all!
How much money does a person need to feel secure? How many places can a rich person visit, how much can he/she consume? The trouble with all of that dough is that it corrupts a person. Not many folk can handle that amount wihout it driving them insane!
And the lawyer! He has lost everything! He lost his honor, and his career! He lost his license to practice the law; something he had studied so much to achieve! he pissed away his honor for gold!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:14 PM on 10/08/2009
- jtjsrch I'm a Fan of jtjsrch 12 fans permalink

Her grandson Philip was horrified by her degraded state. He knew it was wrong.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:21 PM on 10/09/2009
- Chubbster I'm a Fan of Chubbster 36 fans permalink

It's not as if Brooke Astor (Mom) needs the money, thinks the son....

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:02 PM on 10/08/2009
- JhNyc I'm a Fan of JhNyc 10 fans permalink

He didn't need it either. He just wanted it.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:44 PM on 10/09/2009
- old lady I'm a Fan of old lady 85 fans permalink
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Too bad Dominick Dunne didn't live long enough to see this verdict, the world is sorely denied a final right on analysis.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:53 PM on 10/08/2009
- kk78 I'm a Fan of kk78 5 fans permalink

What a horrible man! he deserves to live poor the rest of his life and work manual labor in a factory or plant after that year.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:46 PM on 10/08/2009
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"Money is like manure; it's not worth a thing unless it's spread around" Brooke Astor.

I guess her son felt that she meant spread around to him. Sad.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:32 PM on 10/08/2009

That quote didn't originate with Brooke Astor. It is attributed to the late playwright Thornton Wilder who used the line in his play "The Merchant of Yonkers", which was later turned into the musical "Hello Dolly."

Even Wilder's play was not original. It came from an older Viennese play called "Einen Jux will er sich machen" by Johann Nestroy.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:11 PM on 10/08/2009
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