Back in the Saddle Again
Dear Reader,
It has been some time since I wrote to you, and it is good to be back in the literary saddle again.
One reason I was silent is that I was busy being employed, and for the first time I was in a position that my writing could cause a conflict with my work.
I have avoided that situation in the past by simply being unemployed, or self-employed, if you will, and I did pretty much as I pleased, provided it would please me to starve.
So my employment, although welcome, does present the possibility for a conflict of interest, which I acknowledge. Heretofore I have conducted this operation on an ethical level that transcended even that of the New York Times, I like to think.
I think that all except a few journalists will accept that my source of income does not come from this website but does come from an organization that is paid to influence public opinion. Of course there are thousands of writers and bloggers out there who have similar potential conflicts, and a few of them are right here in town, and they apparently have not let the conflicts trouble them, from what I have read.
So, if you catch me writing about things like methyl(bis)di-isocyanate, labor negotiations in the meatpacking industry or the insults heaped upon the paper companies by their insurers, then you’ll know that they got to me.
Instead, I’ll continue writing about the stuff you and I know.
I will also call this a blog from now on, and it will develop characteristics of a blog. I will no longer be able to wear the lily-white mantle of the conflict-free journalist which has fitted me so well for lo, these many years.
But there are so many stories out there, and even some good ones that well-paid journalists with regular jobs miss, that I feel obliged to share with you. Plus, it’s less work than writing to all of the people who have wondered what the hell happened to me.
Also, none of the above means that milwaukeeworld.com will continue to run without financial support. I will have to get to work on that – yet another potential conflict; that between writing and selling advertising. Again, there are some in the Milwaukee media market who do not see this as a conflict as I do. I am a writer, not an advertising salesperson, so we’ll have to figure out something there, too.
Enough of this noise.
Okay, this week we do have some interesting stories. Michael Lord has been arrested again, Russ Feingold has to pay his ex-wife $48,000 per year, Ald. Bob Bauman is getting divorced and the Marilyn Karos sentencing has been delayed. Short and Sweet.Thanks for reading, please subscribe and buy an advertisement!
Michael Horne
Editor / Publisher
horne@milwaukeeworld.com
1 414 978-8039
Art Dealer Acted as Middleman in
Bud Selig’s $200,000 Matisse Purchase
River Hills Doctor Out $180,000
Disgraced art dealer Michael H. Lord made an initial appearance in Milwaukee County circuit Court Branch 42 on September 1st, when he was charged with two counts of “Theft in a Business Setting >$2,500,” a Class C felony.
September 1st was also, coincidentally, the first day that Lord was compelled to begin making annual $20,000 payments to settle a judgment in a case where he pled guilty to a charge of stealing $105,000 from the estate of a deceased relative.The most recent charges stem from activities as far back as 2000. The first count stems from an earlier civil lawsuit in which River Hills surgeon Dr. James Leibsohn claimed Lord never paid him $180,000 for a Matisse drawing entitled Femme Allongée.
Leibsohn had known Lord for twenty years and considered him a friend, according to the complaint. The two met at Elsa’s sometime between September and November of 1999, when Leibsohn told Lord he was looking for an investment opportunity.According to the complaint, “Dr. Leibsohn and the defendant discussed the idea of having the defendant locate a quality piece of artwork at a fairly low cost with the expectation that they would resell the artwork at a later date for profit.”
Leibsohn would buy the artwork and split the profits with Lord fifty-fifty.
Lord located the Matisse, which had sold in London in 1995 for $36,536, and had somehow come into his hands. Leibsohn paid $165,000 for the drawing by December 25, 1999. Leibsohn never took custody of the artwork, which was left in Lord’s hands for resale.The drawing was briefly on display at Lord’s gallery, but over the years it disappeared from view. When Leibsohn went looking for it, he was told it was at the Pacific Asian Museum (of all places) in Pasadena, California. Leibsohn checked with the museum, which denied any knowledge of the piece or of Lord.
Here is where the story becomes so uniquely Milwaukee. (Civic Motto: You Can Run; But You Can’t Hide):
Leibsohn was chatting with Susan Selig, a housewife from Bayside, Wisconsin. During the course of their conversation, Lord’s name came up, and Leibsohn asked if Ms. Selig had ever had any trouble with the Michael Lord Gallery.
Ms. Selig said that she and her husband, Allen H. “Bud” Selig had, in fact, purchased a Matisse from Michael H. Lord on October 18th, 2000 for $195,000. With tax, the total came to $205,920. The Matisse was the missing Femme Allongée. Can you say, “awkward moment?” The investigator for the District Attorney inspected the check that Selig had written and noted that it had been deposited into Lord’s bank account at M&I bank.
So much for count one of the complaint.
On the second count, a Milwaukeean named Lawrence Demmer paid $33,792 for a Dale Chihuly glass blowing entitled “Sky Blue Basket with Black Lip Wraps.” He paid for the piece by check to Lord onMarch 4, 2002. According to the terms of a contract with the Seattle glassblower, Lord was to have paid Chihuly Studio $16,000 for the artwork on March 14, 2002. As the complaint states, “as of July of 2005, this money has not been paid to Chihuly Studio, Inc.
A preliminary hearing has been scheduled for September 21st at 1:30 p.m.
FEINGOLD MUST PAY
Senator Russell Feingold’s position as perhaps the poorest United States Senator seems secure now that his divorce is final. He has been ordered to pay $4,000 per month, in $2,000 installments, to his ex-wife, Mary Feingold. Senator Russ keeps the house in Middleton, she gets the one in Rockford, Illinois, poor dear.
Click for document.
WIFE SAYS:
“RECALL MY HUSBAND!”
Pamela Malone was on the radio not long ago haranguing listeners of WMCS to recall Alderman Robert Bauman. Funny thing, since the downtown alderman is Dr. Malone’s husband.
But Bauman filed for divorce against Malone, which might explain a few things. The matter comes before Judge Sullivan next month for a preliminary hearing.
KAROS SENTENCING DELAYED
Art fraudster Marilyn Karos was to have been sentenced in Federal Court for her guilty plea on charges that she “did corruptly endeavor to influence, obstruct and impede the due administration of justice in the case of Richard O’Hara v. United States.” The maximum term of imprisonment for the offense is ten years and $250,000. she agreed in April to a lesser fine of $2,100 and no prison time. However, the sentencing, scheduled for late August, has been delayed until October.
1 Comments:
"Back in the Saddle Again" is posted on here twice. I think you should delete the top one!
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