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Art advisor to the stars Barbara Guggenheim slept with clients, once ripped off Sylvester Stallone: Lawsuit

Art advisor to the stars Barbara Guggenheim slept with clients, once ripped off Sylvester Stallone: Lawsuit

New York Post2 days ago
A high-powered art advisor who worked with Tom Cruise and Sylvester Stallone is an unethical, abusive liar who slept with clients and dealers, got kickbacks and urged her former partner to whore herself out to close deals, according to a bombshell lawsuit.
Barbara Guggenheim, 78, who is not believed to be related to the famed museum family, once urged her young employee Abigail Asher — who later became her partner — to 'wear leather and be provocative' and 'that she should never go to a client's home unless she was prepared to sleep with him,' Asher alleged.
Asher, 61, was 'exploited, controlled and threatened by' Guggenheim for nearly 40 years before the two agreed to split in 2023 — only to have Guggenheim spy on her and falsely accuse her of stealing more than $20 million from their company, Asher alleged in court papers first reported by ArtNews.
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3 Barbara Guggenheim and Abigail Asher worked together from 1987 until 2024, when Guggenheim sued Asher in Manhattan. This week, Asher filed her own explosive claims against Guggenheim.
Patrick McMullan via Getty Images
'It should go without saying that art advisors with fiduciary duties to their clients should not become sexually involved with other art dealers or experts who are on the opposite side of deals they are
orchestrating for clients,' Asher said in the lawsuit.
'But Guggenheim violated this rule — a lot.'
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Whenever Asher, who began working for Guggenheim in 1987, spoke up about Guggenheim's behavior the older woman allegedly 'threatened to destroy Asher with her 'secret weapon'' — her then-husband, powerhouse Hollywood attorney Bert Fields, who repped Cruise, Michael Jackson, George Lucas and the Beatles.
In 1995 the two agreed to evenly share the company's profits and expenses but Asher said she was generating far more than Guggenheim, including nearly $20 million in deals during their last decade together.
She also claimed Guggenheim charged their company, West Village-based Guggenheim Asher Associates, for outrageous expenses, such as $3,000 in dance lesssons; an $8,000 spa trip in California; a $12,500 African safari; $36,000 for Fields' 2022 funeral; $48,000 for a party at the Wolfgang Puck-owned Spago in Beverly Hills; and more than $400,000 for car services.
3 A lawyer for Guggenheim called her former business partner's allegations 'libelous nonsense.'
Getty Images for Barneys New Yor
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Guggenheim was also known to send erratic and 'incomprehensible' emails, an example of 'a serious mental decline, which further damaged relationships,' Asher claimed.
In 2023, the two restructured their company, and instead of equally splitting revenue and costs, each worked for their own earnings — a change that sent Guggenheim's finances 'into freefall,' Asher claimed in her lawsuit.
It's not the first time someone accused Guggenheim of wrongdoing. In 1989, Stallone sued her in Los Angeles for fraud, claiming he shelled out $1.7 million for the painting, 'Pieta,' by Adolphe William Bouguereau, and owned by Guggenheim's pal, Stuart Pivar, who'd been unable to sell it.
3 Sylvester Stallone sued Guggenheim in 1989, accusing her of fraud.
Getty Images for Netflix
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Guggenheim was sleeping with Pivar at the time, Asher alleged.
The piece had numerous 'slashes' in it and wasn't worth what he paid, Stallone claimed. The case was later settled.
Guggenheim filed her own lawsuit against Asher in August 2024, accusing her of misappropriating more than $20 million from their business and secretly starting her own competing company.
Guggenheim's August 2024 lawsuit against Asher 'is a transparent act of retaliation by a disgruntled former partner,' said Luke Nikas, an attorney representing Asher who said Guggenheim refused to 'retract her false accusations [or] acknowledge her wrongdoing.'
Guggenheim's attorney, William Charron, ripped Asher's allegations as 'libelous nonsense.'
'Ms. Asher rolls out a litany of supposedly horrible acts by Ms. Guggenheim. So why did Ms. Asher keep working with her for nearly 40 years?' the lawyer said.
'Asher was stunned to see the extent of Guggenheim's misconduct,' Nikas told The Post, noting she was unaware of most of it until she prepared her lawsuit.
Asher is seeking unspecified damages, while Guggenheim is seeking more than $20 million in damages.
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Belgium questions 2 Israelis at music festival over Gaza crime allegations
Belgium questions 2 Israelis at music festival over Gaza crime allegations

The Hill

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  • The Hill

Belgium questions 2 Israelis at music festival over Gaza crime allegations

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Belgium questions 2 Israelis at music festival over Gaza crime allegations
Belgium questions 2 Israelis at music festival over Gaza crime allegations

San Francisco Chronicle​

time13 minutes ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Belgium questions 2 Israelis at music festival over Gaza crime allegations

BRUSSELS (AP) — Belgian police questioned two members of the Israeli army who were attending a music festival in Belgium over allegations of serious violations of international humanitarian law in Gaza, the Federal Prosecutor's Office in Brussels said in a statement Monday. In a statement to The Associated Press, the Israeli Foreign Ministry said an Israeli citizen and an Israeli soldier who were on vacation in Belgium 'were taken in yesterday for interrogation and were released shortly afterward." It said Israeli authorities "dealt with this issue and are in touch with the two.' It was not immediately clear why the Israeli Foreign Ministry referred to one civilian and one soldier, while Belgian prosecutors spoke of two Israeli army members. The whereabouts of the two people who were questioned was not immediately clear. The case was hailed as a 'turning point in the global pursuit of accountability' by a Belgium-based group called the Hind Rajab Foundation, which has campaigned for the arrest of Israeli troops it accuses of war crimes and crimes against humanity. The group was named for a young girl who Palestinians say was killed early in the war by Israeli fire as she and her family fled Gaza City. Israel says its forces follow international law and try to avoid harming civilians, and that it investigates allegations of wrongdoing. In a written statement, the prosecutor's office said that the two army members — who were in Belgium for the Tomorrowland festival — were questioned after the office received legal complaints on Friday and Saturday from the Hind Rajab Foundation and another group. The prosecution office requested the questioning after an initial assessment of the complaints 'determined that it potentially had jurisdiction.' The Hind Rajab foundation said it filed its complaints along with the rights group Global Legal Action Network. The decision to question the two Israelis was based on an article in Belgium's Code of Criminal Procedure that went into force last year and grants Belgian courts jurisdiction over acts overseas that are potentially governed by an international treaty, in this case the 1949 Geneva Conventions and the 1984 United Nations convention against torture, the prosecution statement said. 'In light of this potential jurisdiction, the Federal Prosecutor's Office requested the police to locate and interrogate the two individuals named in the complaint. Following these interrogations, they were released,' the statement said, without elaborating. It said it was not providing any further information at this stage of its investigation. The news in Belgium came as the U.N. food agency accused Israel of using tanks, snipers and other weapons to fire on a crowd of Palestinians seeking food aid, in what the territory's Health Ministry said was one of the deadliest days for aid-seekers in over 21 months of war. The death toll in war-ravaged Gaza has climbed to more than 59,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza's Health Ministry. Its count doesn't distinguish between militants and civilians but the ministry says more than half of the dead are women and children. The ministry is part of the Hamas government, but the U.N. and other international organizations see it as the most reliable source of data on casualties. 'We will continue to support the ongoing proceedings and call on Belgian authorities to pursue the investigation fully and independently,' the group said in a statement. 'Justice must not stop here — and we are committed to seeing it through.'

Belgium questions 2 Israelis at music festival over Gaza crime allegations
Belgium questions 2 Israelis at music festival over Gaza crime allegations

Hamilton Spectator

time42 minutes ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

Belgium questions 2 Israelis at music festival over Gaza crime allegations

BRUSSELS (AP) — Belgian police questioned two members of the Israeli army who were attending a music festival in Belgium over allegations of serious violations of international humanitarian law in Gaza, the Federal Prosecutor's Office in Brussels said in a statement Monday. In a statement to The Associated Press, the Israeli Foreign Ministry said an Israeli citizen and an Israeli soldier who were on vacation in Belgium 'were taken in yesterday for interrogation and were released shortly afterward.' It said Israeli authorities 'dealt with this issue and are in touch with the two.' It was not immediately clear why the Israeli Foreign Ministry referred to one civilian and one soldier, while Belgian prosecutors spoke of two Israeli army members. The whereabouts of the two people who were questioned was not immediately clear. The case was hailed as a 'turning point in the global pursuit of accountability' by a Belgium-based group called the Hind Rajab Foundation , which has campaigned for the arrest of Israeli troops it accuses of war crimes and crimes against humanity. The group was named for a young girl who Palestinians say was killed early in the war by Israeli fire as she and her family fled Gaza City. Israel says its forces follow international law and try to avoid harming civilians, and that it investigates allegations of wrongdoing. In a written statement, the prosecutor's office said that the two army members — who were in Belgium for the Tomorrowland festival — were questioned after the office received legal complaints on Friday and Saturday from the Hind Rajab Foundation and another group. The prosecution office requested the questioning after an initial assessment of the complaints 'determined that it potentially had jurisdiction.' The Hind Rajab foundation said it filed its complaints along with the rights group Global Legal Action Network. The decision to question the two Israelis was based on an article in Belgium's Code of Criminal Procedure that went into force last year and grants Belgian courts jurisdiction over acts overseas that are potentially governed by an international treaty, in this case the 1949 Geneva Conventions and the 1984 United Nations convention against torture, the prosecution statement said. 'In light of this potential jurisdiction, the Federal Prosecutor's Office requested the police to locate and interrogate the two individuals named in the complaint. Following these interrogations, they were released,' the statement said, without elaborating. It said it was not providing any further information at this stage of its investigation. The news in Belgium came as the U.N. food agency accused Israel of using tanks, snipers and other weapons to fire on a crowd of Palestinians seeking food aid , in what the territory's Health Ministry said was one of the deadliest days for aid-seekers in over 21 months of war. The death toll in war-ravaged Gaza has climbed to more than 59,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza's Health Ministry. Its count doesn't distinguish between militants and civilians but the ministry says more than half of the dead are women and children. The ministry is part of the Hamas government, but the U.N. and other international organizations see it as the most reliable source of data on casualties. Since forming last year, the Hind Rajab Foundation has made dozens of complaints in more than 10 countries to arrest both low-level and high-ranking Israeli soldiers. 'We will continue to support the ongoing proceedings and call on Belgian authorities to pursue the investigation fully and independently,' the group said in a statement. 'Justice must not stop here — and we are committed to seeing it through.' ____ Melanie Lidman and Isaac Scharf in Jerusalem contributed to this report. Error! Sorry, there was an error processing your request. There was a problem with the recaptcha. Please try again. You may unsubscribe at any time. By signing up, you agree to our terms of use and privacy policy . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google privacy policy and terms of service apply. Want more of the latest from us? Sign up for more at our newsletter page .

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