2023年2月24日金曜日

クリントン夫妻と親しかった著名ユダヤ系投資家のThomas Haskell Lee氏 767 Fifth Avenue6階のオフィスで拳銃自殺

 Thomas Haskell Lee (March 27, 1944 – February 23, 2023) was an American businessperson, financier, and investor credited with being one of the early pioneers in private equity and specifically leveraged buyouts. Thomas H. Lee Partners (THL), the firm he founded in 1974, is among the oldest and largest private equity firms globally. At the time of his death, he was the managing partner of Lee Equity Partners, a private equity firm he founded in 2006 after leaving Thomas H. Lee Partners. According to Forbes, he had a net worth of $2 billion at the time of his death.

Early career

Lee was born in 1944 to a Jewish family, the son of Herbert C. Lee (formerly Leibowitz) and Mildred "Micki" Schiff Lee.[1][2][3][4] His father worked for the Shoe Corporation of America, founded by his father-in-law, Robert Schiff and later was chairperson of Shoe Corporation of Canada and Clark International Corp.[4] He had two brothers: Richard S. Lee and Jonathan O. Lee.[4] Lee attended Belmont Hill School and graduated from Harvard College in 1965, quickly going to work as an analyst in the institutional research department of L.F. Rothschild in New York City. The next year, Lee went to work for the First National Bank of Boston, where he spent eight years ultimately rising to the rank of vice president in 1973.[5]

Lee is said to have begun investing with a $150,000 inheritance.[6]


Personal life

Lee was married twice.[7] He divorced his first wife, Barbara Fish Lee, in 1995,[18][19] after he made public the fact that he had an affair with a woman who was later tried for extortion.[20][21] Lee's second wife was Ann Tenenbaum of Savannah, Georgia.[16] Lee had five children.[22] Lee was an avid art collector and a friend of Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton and Monica Lewinsky . In June 2008, at the conclusion of Hillary's unsuccessful presidential run, she and Bill were reported to have stayed at his East Hampton, New York beach front home for a few days for the period when she was out of the public eye.[23]

At the time of his death, Forbes estimated his net worth at $2 billion.[24]

Death

On February 23, 2023, Lee was found dead of a self-inflicted gunshot wound at his office in Manhattan, at the age of 78.[24]



 The General Motors Building (also the GM Building) is a 50-story, 705 ft (215 m) office tower at 767 Fifth Avenue at Grand Army Plaza on the southeast corner of Central Park, in Manhattan, New York City. The building occupies an entire city block between Fifth Avenue, Madison Avenue, 59th Street, and 58th Street on the site of the former Savoy-Plaza Hotel. It was designed in the International Style by Edward Durell Stone & Associates with Emery Roth & Sons and completed in 1968.

The GM Building was developed by London Merchant Securities and was half occupied by General Motors (GM) upon its opening. The building's facade is made of vertical piers of white Georgia marble, alternating with strips of glass. The building has about 1.7 million square feet (160,000 m2) of space, and the lobby originally contained a GM showroom, later an FAO Schwarz department store. The public plaza outside the building on Fifth Avenue was originally below grade but, after two renovations, contains the Apple Fifth Avenue entrance and a seating area above ground level. Architecture critics, including Paul Goldberger and Ada Louise Huxtable, widely disapproved of the building upon its completion.

All of the space in the building had been leased by January 1967, over a year prior to opening. General Motors relocated most of its employees and announced their intention to sell the building in 1981. Ultimately, Corporate Property Investors (CPI) bought an option on the building in 1982 and conducted a renovation in 1990. Conseco and Donald Trump purchased the General Motors Building from CPI in 1998. Five years later, it was sold to Macklowe Organization for $1.4 billion, then the highest price for a North American office building. Macklowe sold the building in 2008 to the joint venture of Boston Properties, Zhang Xin, and the Safra banking family for $2.8 billion. The joint venture continues to own the building as of 2022.


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2 件のコメント:

匿名 さんのコメント...

アレアレどうしたのでしょう 地殻変動でも起こってるのでしょうか

匿名 さんのコメント...

以前リーマンショックがありましたが、今度はゴールドマンショックなのでしょうか?李男、金男だと朝鮮みたいですね。