Chicago Sun-Times

L’OREAL COSMETICS HEIRESS, WORLD’S RICHEST WOMAN

- BY SYLVIE CORBET Associated Press

PARIS — Liliane Bettencour­t, the L’Oreal cosmetics heiress and the world’s richest woman, has died at her home in a chic Parisian suburb. She was 94.

Mrs. Bettencour­t’s daughter, Francoise Bettencour­t Meyers, said in a written statement Thursday that her mother “left peacefully” overnight in Neuilly- sur- Seine.

Liliane Bettencour­t was the only child of Eugene Schueller, who founded L’Oreal in the early 20th century. Forbes magazine estimated her fortune to be worth $ 39.5 billion this year.

L’Oreal Chairman and CEO Jean- Paul Agon expressed “great admiration” for Mrs. Bettencour­t. Agon said she “always looked” after the company and its employees, and “she has personally contribute­d greatly to its success for many years.”

Born in 1922 in Paris, she married French politician Andre Bettencour­t at the age of 27. Her husband notably served as a minister at the end of the 1960s and beginning of the 1970s. He died in 2007.

Liliane Bettencour­t inherited the L’Oreal fortune upon the death of her father in 1957. When the company went public six years later, she continued to own a majority stake.

As the world’s leading beauty company, L’Oreal generated sales amounting to 25.8 billion euros in 2016 and employs 89,300 people worldwide, according to the company.

Mrs. Bettencour­t’s name has been involved in a politico- financial scandal known in France as the “Bettencour­t Affair,” which has wound its way through French courts and newspapers for years.

The case stemmed from a 2007 complaint filed by Mrs. Bettencour­t’s daughter accusing one of her mother’s closest friends, the photograph­er Francois- Marie Banier, of manipulati­ng the elderly widow into giving him artwork and cash.

In 2015, a French court handed Banier a three- year prison sentence on charges of swindling millions of euros from Mrs. Bettencour­t by taking advantage of her weak mental state. The court acquitted a former ally of former President Nicolas Sarkozy in the case.

Sarkozy’s former campaign treasurer, Eric Woerth, was acquitted on charges of “abuse of weakness” and taking donations from Mrs. Bettencour­t during the 2007 presidenti­al election campaign.

Sarkozy himself was cleared in 2013 of preliminar­y charges.

Mrs. Bettencour­t is survived by her daughter, Francoise, who was born in 1953.

 ??  ?? Liliane Bettencour­t inherited the L’Oreal fortune upon the death of her father in 1957.
| THIBAULT CAMUS/ AP
Liliane Bettencour­t inherited the L’Oreal fortune upon the death of her father in 1957. | THIBAULT CAMUS/ AP

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