home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=94TT1343>
- <title>
- Oct. 03, 1994: Feuds:All My Stepchildren?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Oct. 03, 1994 Blinksmanship
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- FEUDS, Page 54
- All My Stepchildren? Or Stepmommie Dearest?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Socialite and Democratic Party stalwart Pamela Harriman is sued
- by her late husband's kin
- </p>
- <p>By Christopher John Farley--Reported by Victoria Balfour/New York and Ann Blackman/Washington
- </p>
- <p> On Halloween night in Washington, D.C., in the 1970s, children
- out for trick-or-treat stopped by the elegant N Street townhouse
- of Averell and Pamela Harriman. They were greeted by a maid
- in a white apron holding a silver tray full of dimes. How novel!
- The wealthy Harrimans--Pamela was the daughter of a British
- baron, Averell a financier and former Governor of New York--were handing out money instead of candy. But not a lot. The
- maid cautioned: "Just one dime each."
- </p>
- <p> Pamela Digby Churchill Hayward Harriman, Democratic Party power
- hostess, widow of multimillionaire Averell, and currently U.S.
- Ambassador to France, has always been fiercely protective of
- her wealth--every last dollar, every last dime. Now, money
- is at the heart of a legal battle between Harriman and Averell's
- descendants by his first marriage--two daughters, six grandchildren
- and 11 great-grandchildren. The scions of the late Governor
- charge that his second wife, who inherited most of his estimated
- $65 million legacy, has wasted the $30 million of their trust
- funds on ill-advised investments, leaving them with a relatively
- paltry $3 million.
- </p>
- <p> Also named in the suit are luminaries in the Democratic Party
- firmament: attorneys Clark Clifford and Paul Warnke. Such Washington
- power brokers were the company of choice for Pamela Harriman.
- (In fact, White House counsel Lloyd Cutler signed on as her
- adviser after the suit was filed.) President Clinton once called
- her "the first lady of the Democratic Party." Indeed, her house
- and her parties were a haven for Democratic loyalists during
- the Reagan-Bush epoch. Over the years, she raised more than
- $12 million for Democratic candidates. Clifford, 87, whose name
- was muddied by the Bank of Credit and Commerce International
- (B.C.C.I.) scandal, denies any wrongdoing or mismanagement.
- "Mrs. Harriman didn't profit one dime," says Clifford. "I didn't
- either, and neither did Paul Warnke. Paul and I feel very badly
- that we have gotten drawn into a family imbroglio."
- </p>
- <p> In 1984, Clifford says, Harriman asked him and Warnke, both
- old friends, to serve as trustees for nine trusts for his children
- and grandchildren. After her husband's death in 1986, Pamela
- became a general partner in the enterprise. Within four years
- the initial $12 million investment had grown to $25 million.
- Clifford says the heirs complained they were not getting enough
- income, so the partnership overseeing funds diversified beyond
- securities. Some of the new investments were money losers. Clifford
- says more than $4.5 million was invested in a New Jersey resort
- that he admits "didn't develop in the manner we had hoped."
- The resort reportedly is partly owned by Robert Brennan, former
- head of a now-defunct securities firm whose business practices
- have been under investigation by federal and state regulators.
- Clifford says, "I didn't know that at the time."
- </p>
- <p> Money matters have always soured Pamela Harriman's relations
- with her stepchildren. "Pam did not do me any great favors as
- a stepmother," says Brooke Hayward, whose father Leland Hayward
- was Pamela's second husband. (Averell was her third; her first
- was Winston Churchill's son.) "She's greedy beyond the usual
- human greed." Clifford says Averell's family were deeply unhappy
- in 1971 when Pamela, then 51, married Averell, then 80. Adds
- Clifford: "He was generous to Mrs. Harriman during his lifetime,
- and in his will. That was resented by members of his family."
- </p>
- <p> Not entirely so, say sources close to the Harrimans. Apart from
- the usual strains, they say, relations were civil. In 1992,
- however, the heirs were alerted to questionable investments
- by an accountant who had prepared tax returns for the trusts.
- At one point, a family representative flew to Paris to discuss
- the matter with the new ambassador. Today no one is talking.
- The Harrimans, says Brooke Hayward, are "as close to an aristocratic
- family as you get in this country. They did not want to air
- the feud in public. That was a lot of money to lose in that
- period of time. They sat on their hands for years and went to
- her with every kind of emissary and deal." A source says the
- funds' remaining $3 million will be earmarked for the fight
- with the trustees.
- </p>
- <p> Harriman should be able to match that. She has her inheritance
- and more. (Her Georgetown residence and adjoining office are
- on the market for $5 million.) Furthermore, Pamela Harriman
- has always known how to keep hold of what she believes is hers.
- According to Life of the Party, a biography of Harriman by TIME's
- Christopher Ogden, she staged Averell's 1986 funeral at the
- gravesite where his father, mother, sister and first wife had
- been interred. What most of the mourners did not know is that
- Averell was not buried there that day. After the ceremony, the
- widow had his body moved and refrigerated while another site
- was prepared where she and her husband could eventually be buried
- side by side.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-