Category: Philanthropy

  • For Patricia Cornwell, philanthropy has its price

    Crime novelist Patricia Cornwell has learned that even generosity can need an explanation.

    Cornwell donated $1 million to the John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York City this month.

    But worried that some of her remarks about the gift might be read as demeaning police officers, Cornwell last week spent $250,000 to set the record straight. (Story continues below interactive map.)

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    In an full page ads in the Feb. 15 editions of The New York Times, The Washington Post and USA Today, Cornwell wrote that she was “dismayed by recent news accounts” concerning her gift to establish a Crime Scene Academy at John Jay.

    She went on to write, “what has been publicized certainly does not accurately reflect my deep respect and admiration for … hardworking law enforcement professionals.”

    Her concern was caused by a quotation from her that appeared in an Associated Press story on her gift. The quotation could have been read to imply that Cornwell had seen police officers doing their jobs badly.

    “I’ve seen cops walk through blood,” the AP reported her as saying. “I’ve seen them leave their fingerprints on a window. I’ve seen bloody clothing put in a plastic bag, instead of a paper bag, so it decomposes.”

    Cornwell told the Post in an interview that her words were taken out of context.

    She said she had been talking with the AP reporter about what she had seen citizens do at crime scenes and a “misunderstanding” had developed.

    And she also stressed to the Post that she was donating to John Jay in the interest of giving police officers the necessary training they need to avoid mistakes at crime scenes.

    Cornwell told the Times that she purchased the newspaper ads as “a quarter-of-a-million-dollar pre-emptive strike.”

    “I went into emergency mode,” she said. “I said, ‘You know what, this is going to be a disaster. It is going to be everywhere. Who knows what else is out there because these articles are all over the world.’”

    A former crime reporter and a worker in a medical examiner’s office, Cornwell, 51, gained fame through her series of novels featuring Kay Scarpetta, a medical examiner.

    The second-highest-selling female novelist after J.K. Rowling, Cornwell has written other crime novels that don’t feature Scarpetta.

    Before she began the Scarpetta series, Cornwell was the author of A Time for Remembering, a biography of Ruth Bell Graham, the wife of the Rev. Billy Graham.

    She also wrote Portrait of a Killer: Jack the Ripper – Case Closed. The 2002 non-fiction work argues that painter Walter Sickert was Jack the Ripper.

    Cornwell is reported to be the subject of the forthcoming Twisted Triangle, a non-fiction account of her alleged 1990s relationship with Marguerite Bennett, an FBI agent and instructor.

    Bennett’s husband, FBI agent Eugene Bennett, was convicted in 1997 of attempting to murder his wife. He was sentenced to 23 years in prison. His lawyers had argued that his discovery of an affair between his wife and Cornwell lead him to lose his sanity.

    In 2005, Cornwell married Dr. Staci Gruber of the Harvard Medical School, soon after same-sex marriages were permitted in Massachusetts.

    Cornwell’s gift to John Jay echoes earlier gifts by her in support of forensic science to the Virginia Institute of Forensic Science and Medicine and to the National Forensic Academy at the University of Tennessee.

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  • Blackstone’s Peterson starts doling out a fortune

    The Nuclear Threat Initiative may soon receive a big boost from the deep-pocketed Peter Peterson.

    Peterson today announced the establishment of a foundation whose aims include stopping the proliferation of nuclear weapons. (Story continues below interactive map.)

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    Peterson reaped $1.8 billion through the IPO of Blackstone Group, which he chairs. After a career that included a stint as commerce secretary under Richard Nixon, he is now ready to start giving away the bulk of his fortune.

    He has committed $1 billion to the foundation, which will be headed David Walker, who is currently U.S. comptroller general.

    Peterson is a former chair of the Nuclear Threat Initiative, which was founded by two Georgians – former Sen. Sam Nunn and CNN founder Ted Turner, who is a major contributor to the group.

    The organization’s aim is to strengthen global security by preventing the spread of nuclear, biological and chemical weapons. Its board is made up of high-profile figures from the U.S. and abroad, including former defense secretary William Perry, Sen. Richard Lugar and Prince El Hassan bin Talal of Jordan. Warren Buffett is an adviser.

    The group has raised awareness about the issue through projects such as a film called Last Best Chance, which described how terrorists might buy or steal the materials to make a nuclear bomb, assemble it and smuggle it into the U.S. The movie featured Fred Thompson playing a sage and somber president, described by the New Yorker in 2005 as “the one jarringly unrealistic note in the picture.”

    Last month, the Google Foundation announced a $2.5 million grant to the initiative, for a program addressing infectious disease in southeast Asia.

    Prior grants to the organization include $7 million from the Susan Thompson Buffett Foundation, $3.2 million from the Better World Fund and $750,000 from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

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    • #1.   Kim 02.15.2008

      Prince El Hassan bin Talal is the antichrist and will soon become the ruler of the world.

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  • Wexner’s prize, Victoria’s Secret

    While visiting his West Coast Limited stores in the late 1970s, Leslie Wexner was intrigued by a shop that sold women’s underwear. It was called Victoria’s Secret.

    It was brothel Victorian, he once said in an interview. Not erotic, but very sexy.

    Wexner, who left his family’s general clothing store to specialize in women’s casual wear, saw the possibilities. He bought the store and catalog in 1982 for $1 million. (Story continues below interactive map.)

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    He studied European attitudes toward lingerie and, yes, even got some advice from girlfriends. In the process, he made underwear fun. Once, Brazilian supermodel and Leonardo DiCaprio ex, Gisele Bundchen even wore a bra and briefs studded with 300 carats worth of Thai rubies, valued at $15 million.

    In 2007, Victoria’s Secret accounted for more than half of Limited Brands nearly $9.5 billion in revenue. Wexner is a multi-billionaire with strong ties to the arts (Wexner Center for the Arts and the Wexner Prize), philanthropy (Wexner Foundation) and Ohio State University.

    Wexner is a trustee of the University and Ohio State President E. Gordon Gee is a director of Limited Brands. The Wexner Center is located at the University. Wexner’s wife, Abigail Wexner, a Barnard-educated lawyer and community activist, is also on the Limited Brands board.

    Limited Brands’s other stores include Bath & Body Works, La Senza, C.O. Bigelow, Henri Bendel and the White Barn Candle Co.

    Loyal customers swear the Victoria’s Secret bras fit better (that troublesome strap never strays) and while many will still go to Costco to buy practical, everyday underwear, they go to Victoria’s Secret for special occasions.

    One such customer is Orange County, Calif., civil engineer Agnes Villanueva, 46. She introduced this writer to Victoria’s Secret several years ago and once picked up half a dozen cotton thongs as an unusual party favor. Her guests were middle-aged women she met at a private Catholic school in the 1970s.

    By email, Villanueva recently explained her motivation: “Wearing sexy, skimpy, almost non-existent underwear was such a taboo. We were raised to be modest and conservative, but I wanted to encourage that naughty beast in each of us to break free.”

    Sexy sophisticate is more what Wexner had in mind when he invented the story of Victoria as the fictional founder of the store and conceived of her as finely bred lady of French and English descent. Her lingerie reflected that refinement.

    And Wexner gambled on women paying a little more money for the cache of a “brand” name, one equated with quality, beauty and comfort. That gamble paid off for the company and for him. Forbes lists Wexner’s net worth at $2.8 billion.

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  • Heinz Prechter Leaves a Legacy

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