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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=89TT2368>
<title>
Sep. 11, 1989: Revenge Of The Little People
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
Sep. 11, 1989 The Lonely War:Drugs
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
NATION, Page 27
Revenge of the Little People
</hdr><body>
<p>Hotel queen Leona Helmsley could trade penthouse for pen
</p>
<p> Despite all the hotels, the Empire State Building, the $5
billion fortune, Leona Mindy Rosenthal Helmsley never fully
realized she was rich and didn't have to worry anymore. She may
have married the billionaire boss in 1972, but underneath the
designer clothes she remained the young Chesterfield girl,
hustling cigarettes to make a living. In her two-month trial,
the daughter of a Brooklyn milliner emerged as a penny-pinching
tyrant who tried to stiff just about everybody.
</p>
<p> Last week Leona, 69, was acquitted of extortion but
convicted on 33 counts of tax evasion (husband Harry, 80, was
found incompetent to stand trial). She had bilked the Federal
Government of $1.2 million in taxes between 1983 and 1985 by
billing her business for millions in such personal luxuries as
a $1 million swimming-pool enclosure, a $130,000 sound system
modeled after one at Disney World, a $13,000 barbecue pit, $468
in underwear, even a $58 leg waxing.
</p>
<p> Lots of rich people are chintzy with the help and lavish
with themselves, but few are as proud of it as Leona Helmsley.
Until 1971, Harry Helmsley lived modestly in a suburban ranch
house with his Quaker wife of 33 years. Leona, a divorcee
working in one of his offices, arranged to meet him in 1970.
They married in 1972 and launched a high-profile social career
that included several charity balls a week, an extravagant
annual "I'm Just Wild About Harry" birthday party and endless
public displays of affection. Soon a grinning Leona was featured
in national ads as the imperious queen standing guard at
Helmsley hotels, while at home she played harsh lady of the
manor, refurbishing an $11 million mansion largely at company
expense.
</p>
<p> No amount was too small to fight over. After the sudden
death of her only son at age 40 in 1982, she sued and won the
lion's share of his $149,000 estate, leaving his four children
with $432 each and his widow $2,171.
</p>
<p> As testimony revealed, she was as ferocious with her
employees as a bulldog, albeit one with a face-lift, summoning
workmen with "Hey, you with the dirty fingernails!" and icily
firing a vice president at Christmastime while being fitted by
her dressmaker. Her lawyer tried to turn this around with what
might be called "the bitch defense," arguing that she was so
despised that her underlings would stop at nothing to create a
federal case against her.
</p>
<p> She still does not have much in common with "the little
people," the ones who, she said, "pay taxes," not to mention
scrub her bathrooms and proffer peeled shrimp when she yells,
"Fishy!" As she descended the steps of the courthouse, she
carelessly tossed her jacket to a servant and stepped into her
waiting limousine. That may change after sentencing on Nov. 14.
Though appeals are sure to delay the reckoning, the queen could
theoretically be sent to a federal dungeon for more than 100
years.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>