"Dirty Windows" de la série "#26 Windows" de Merry Alpern (1994) à l'exposition “Julien Mignot, le Photographe & son Double" à l'Hôtel Fontfreyde de Clermont-Ferrand, Auvergne, France, juin 2020.
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"Dirty Windows" de la série "#26 Windows" de Merry Alpern (1994) à l'exposition “Julien Mignot, le Photographe & son Double" à l'Hôtel Fontfreyde de Clermont-Ferrand, Auvergne, France, juin 2020.
Photograph by Alpern; Courtesy Daniel Cooney Fine Art SCARLET MUSE - PHOTOGRAPHY AND PROSTITUTION
So far, prosecutors have not indicated plans to indict Ruth she has not even been questioned in association with the fraud. But that could change at any time. The government and victims could also come after what money Ruth has left. Just before Bernie’s sentencing, prosecutors announced a settlement that leaves Ruth far too well off to satisfy most people but with only a fraction of what she was hoping for: She gets to keep $2.5 million, a number that corresponds to a portion of Ruth’s share of the couple’s older real-estate holdings. She must give up all the houses, including the Manhattan penthouse where she’s been living and the $39,000 Steinway piano, the $1.6 million art collection, and her $36,000 Russian sable-fur coat. Now that Ruth has given up most of her assets, the government will try to retrieve some of the money taken out of the company by Bernie’s brother, Peter, and sons, Mark and Andy Bernie made millions of dollars in loans to them in recent years, according to court documents. Ruth was desperate to put an end to the financial limbo she’s been living in. For the last six months, the U.S. Attorney’s office has controlled every cent she could spend, rejecting her New York Times subscription as too extravagant, along with TV service above basic cable. Meanwhile, the only money Ruth had coming in each month was a Social Security check. Her $2.5 million nest egg could throw off a more-than-comfortable $150,000 in interest each year. It will save her from taking a greeter job at a Palm Beach Wal-Mart, but it’s still a big adjustment for a woman who once spent $29,887.94 in one month on her husband’s Platinum American Express card.
Sheelah Kolhatkar
Elliot Alpern: Traveling on the Arts road
Elliot Alpern: Traveling on the Arts road
That was the original dilemma, the first really consequential choice I made after arriving at the University. Sure, I had made a tentative choice for major (later changed), and yes, I could have worked in two Sections of the Daily for a semester, maybe …
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Atelier: Alpern (filia warszawskiego Atelier "Bernardi") Ciechocinek ok. 1900
fotografia wizytowa/carte de visite