The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

World’s richest woman dies at 94

- WASHINGTON POST

Liliane Bettencour­t, a French heiress to the L’Oréal cosmetics fortune who became embroiled in a family feud that exploded into a financial and political scandal involving former French president Nicolas Sarkozy, died Sept. 20 at her home near Paris. She was 94.

Her daughter, Françoise Bettencour­t Meyers, announced her death but did not disclose the cause. Bettencour­t had been reported to have dementia and Alzheimer’s disease and had been under the guardiansh­ip of her family since 2011.

In recent years, Forbes magazine had ranked Bettencour­t as the richest woman in the world, with an estimated net worth of about $45 billion. As of 2015, she had a 33 percent stake in L’Oréal, the world’s largest cosmetics firm.

The only child of French chemist Eugène Schueller, Bettencour­t began working at her father’s Paris-based beauty and hair-care company as an apprentice at 15 and modeled for the firm’s early labels. She inherited the company after her father’s death in 1957 and retained a controllin­g stake in L’Oréal after it went public on the Paris stock exchange in 1963.

Alongside L’Oréal chief François Dalle, she expanded the firm’s reach, adding cosmetics and fragrance lines and acquiring other beauty businesses, including Lancôme, Kiehl’s, Maybelline and Garnier.

Other than being photograph­ed for luxury magazines and society pages, Bettencour­t remained largely out of the media limelight until details about her troubled relationsh­ip with her daughter, Françoise Bettencour­t-Meyers, became public.

In 2007, her daughter sued François-Marie Banier, a celebrity photograph­er and playboy 25 years Bettencour­t’s junior, for allegedly exploiting her mother’s mental frailty to obtain gifts totaling more than $1 billion, including cash payments, Picasso and Matisse paintings and a private island in the Seychelles.

Bettencour­t-Meyers decided to take legal action against Banier after her mother made him the sole heir to her fortune. She blamed Banier for the strained relationsh­ip between mother and daughter.

By most accounts, the friendship between Banier and Bettencour­t began in 1987, after he took photos of her for the French photo magazine Egoïste. He said his companions­hip motivated Mrs. Bettencour­t’s largesse.

“Liliane wanted to do things for me, to ease my life,” he said in court. “I refused things like a mansion. But she took it so poorly. It’s really hard to cross that extraordin­ary woman.”

Dubbed the “Bettencour­t Affair,” the soap-opera-like court proceeding­s made headlines for years. For some time, the L’Oréal matriarch and her daughter communicat­ed exclusivel­y through frosty television and newspaper interviews, which added to the tabloid fodder.

“I can’t understand what fly bit my daughter,” Bettencour­t told the French weekly Le Journal du Dimanche in 2008. “Maybe jealousy. My daughter is rather introverte­d, and someone who puts himself out there like FrançoisMa­rie Banier, well, it might be very annoying.”

The family feud became a full-blown legal and political drama in June 2010, when a series of secret tapes, recorded by Bettencour­t’s former butler, were passed to the police and later leaked to the French investigat­ive website Mediapart.

The recordings, made between May 2009 and May 2010, captured members of Bettencour­t’s staff exploiting her for personal gain and discussing tax avoidance, secret Swiss bank accounts and illegal campaign donations.

In the weeks following the tapes’ release, a former accountant to Bettencour­t claimed that her job entailed handing out cash-stuffed envelopes to conservati­ve politician­s. She said that Éric Woerth, Sarkozy’s former budget minister, had accepted donations amounting to 150,000 euros from Bettencour­t for Sarkozy’s 2007 presidenti­al campaign, far exceeding the 4,600 euro legal limit on individual campaign contributi­ons.

The accountant also claimed that Sarkozy sought and accepted regular cash envelopes from Bettencour­t’s office while he was mayor of Neuilly.

Sarkozy denied the allegation­s, but his approval ratings tumbled amid several other inquiries into his election to the presidency in 2007. Public scrutiny heightened when it was revealed that Bettencour­t had received a tax rebate worth 30 million euros from the French treasury in 2008 while Woerth was budget minister. French investigat­ive magistrate­s ultimately dropped charges against Sarkozy in 2013 and Woerth in 2015 for lack of evidence.

In May 2015, eight employees, including Banier, were found guilty of swindling more than $1 billion from Bettencour­t. Banier was sentenced to three years in prison, fined and ordered to pay damages equivalent to $178 million.

Several years earlier, Bettencour­t told Paris Match magazine that she was aware of Banier’s controllin­g ways but had no regrets about their friendship.

“I do not want to devalue the irresistib­le friendship we have had. It’s in the past,” she told the magazine. “François-Marie is madly talented, but he is such a muddler. I couldn’t live with him for more than five minutes, but that muddle in our friendship brought me intense pleasure.”

 ?? Thibault Camus / Associated Press ?? In this Thursday March 3, 2011, file photo, L’Oreal heiress Liliane Bettencour­t, right, and L’Oreal new chief executive Jean-Paul Agon arrive at the L’Oreal-UNESCO prize for the women in science in Paris. Bettencour­t died at the age of 94 at her home,...
Thibault Camus / Associated Press In this Thursday March 3, 2011, file photo, L’Oreal heiress Liliane Bettencour­t, right, and L’Oreal new chief executive Jean-Paul Agon arrive at the L’Oreal-UNESCO prize for the women in science in Paris. Bettencour­t died at the age of 94 at her home,...

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