Case File
efta-02514132DOJ Data Set 11OtherEFTA02514132
Date
Unknown
Source
DOJ Data Set 11
Reference
efta-02514132
Pages
18
Persons
0
Integrity
Extracted Text (OCR)
EFTA DisclosureText extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
From:
Valeria Chomsky
Sent:
Tuesday, March 6, 2018 11:29 PM
To:
Jeffrey E.
Subject:
Fwd: Fwd: Response to your letter
</=iv>
Forwarded message
F=om: Noam Chomsky «= href="mailto
Subject: Fwd: Fwd: Response to your l=tter
To: Valeria Chomsky
Forwarded messa e
-
From: Diana Chomsky
Date: Mon, Mar 5, 20=8 at 8:51 PM
Subject: Re: Fwd: Response to your letter
To: Noam Chom=ky
Cc: Avi Chomsky
&=
Dear Doddoy,
arty Chomsky
<mailtc
Thanks for your detailed an= heartfelt reply. You've made it really clear how damaging it is
to all of us to c=ntinue to pursue this conversation. We completely share your wish to be able to get back to the family
relations that we also have treasured all these years, and as we've said, we want you to be happy and relaxed. We
don&S=93 mean to ignore your points—we've read and thought deeply about =very one of them. But we take to heart
your words that you really want to end this interchange. We'd be willing to drop it at this point.
On the other hand, you say you wan= something more: to replace Max as trustee. Working that out with us will require
some more conversation—maybe just a little bit, though. Can=you start by telling us the status of the process already
underway? Have you had a chance to look at the list of candidates that we proposed in January?=/font>
Love, Avi, Diane and Harry
From: Q=A0 Noam Chomsky
To:
Diana Chomsk
<manta
, Harry C oms
Da=e:
01/03/2018 12:58
Subject: =C240 Fwd: Response to your letter
y
Avi Chomsky
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I've withheld writing because it is, frankly, not =asy. The concerns you express about my life are completely groundless.
There is in fact one problem in my life, one and only one: your insistence on pursuing this matter instead of resolving it
easily, as I have suggested= The one and only problem.
Furthermore, your picture of what happened in the past= whatever its source, is almost completely false. I've written to
you in detail about what did happen. You haven't yet responded, s=mply ignoring the detailed account I gave. I don't
understand that.Q=A0 I'll go through it again and hope that this will finish the matter.Q=A0 Furthermore, you will find
in due course that there has been serious wrongd=ing, much more than I told you about in the letters I have sent before,
some repeated below.
Easier to add comments below. I also think it wo=ld be useful to make more explicit comments about your earlier letter,
and a few other things.
First, an area of agreement. Just as you are dis=urbed, similarly all of this is disturbing to me, extremely so. It's the one
seriously -- very seriously -- dark spot on the new lives that Valeria and I are shaping for ourselves, and I would therefore
like to get it over with and resolved as soon as possible. As I wrote, I cannot understand why you are bringing any of
these things up, and I think it would be very good to make everything clear, and keep nothing hidden or implicit.
Second, it's clear that we are not communicating.=C2* The reason is clear: I write you long and detailed letters
explaining the facts, and you completely ignore the letters, not responding to anything I wrote. Not once. I presume
that includes the letter I wrote about my father, which you ignored, along with all the others. When I ask specific
questions, you do not respond. I've repeatedly ask=cl you for the sources of your beliefs, but you have never told me, so
I can only guess. To take the most recent case, I have asked several times where you received the information about the
sale of our Cambridge apartmen= (incorrect information, as I wrote) and the purchase of our Tucson house -- and also,
why you even wanted to look into the matter, which, frankly, seems to me very strange.
Then come the areas of disagreement, which I hope we c=n iron out quickly and expeditiously so that we can pick up the
warm and close relations that we always had, and that I'd always treasured.
More below, interspersed in your last letter
On Tue, Feb 6, 2018 at 9:16 AM, Diana Chomsky
wrote:
Dear Doddoy,
We really hesitated to write our long letter to you last month. We only finally decided to write it because you insisted so
many times that we do so. We think, and have thought for a long time, that we need to sit down face-to-face and work
through our very substantial differences with you in how we understand your estate plan, financial history, and current
situation. But after you asked us so many times in December to discuss it by e-mail, we decided to give that a try. We
definitely didn't intend to be legalistic and adversarial, and we really regret th=t that's how you found our writing. We
meant our letter as a heartfelt ex=lanation of our perspective on the issues and how we want to help you understand
the problem and fix it. But it doesn't sound like you've unde=stood what we were trying to explain and express. This
strongly confirms our feeling that e-mail is not a useful way for us to communicate about these issues.
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I understood very well, and responded, pointing out that the information you have received from some source -- which
you do not identify, despite repeated requests -- is flatly wrong. In the letter I wrote to you, to which this one was
supposed to be a response (while avoiding everything I wrote), I already had explained in some detail why your picture is
incorrect, throughout. I'm sorry that you ignored the letter, but I will repeat the main points below. If you want to sit
down face-to-face, OK, though I think a conference call would make more sense.
Before going on, I frankly cannot comprehend why yo= think this discussion -- in which I respond to you point by point
and you ignore everything I write -- is necessary or even appropriate. = can appreciate your being concerned about my
life, just as I'm concerne= about yours. I'd be amazed if it were otherwise. That's=natural in a close-knit family. Over
the years, I've often been seriously concerned about the decisions and choices all of you have made, which somet=mes
seemed questionable or mistaken to me (Mommoy even more so, when she was alive and well). But neither she nor I
ever ever felt that we had a right to interfere or to supervise. For example, I never would have dreamed of asking you
for financial statements, or even suggested that we discuss these matters. I'd have been happy to do so if yo='d asked,
but if not, it's your decisions and my role is only to be suppor=ive -- as I have been, in many ways that you know and I
need not review. And also by setting aside ample funds over the years to ensure that you and your children will be well
provided for: that includes the trusts of which you are beneficiaries, two houses, almost all of my pension, educatio=al
Trusts for grandchildren, and lots of funding along the way for all sorts of purposes. I don't understand why you think it
is any different in the present case, and I think it would be a good idea for you to explain= so that we can clear the air.
On a personal level, we are heartbroken to feel that we are kept at such a distance from you in your new life. We were
thrilled to learn that you had found a new partner, but we were grieved when we began to realize that this meant we
are rarely able to see you.
It didn't mean that at all. Of course, my=life became different, and Valeria and I had many things to do to put our new
life together. But we took time off from the conference in Mexico to see you, with much pleasure; a few months before
that we went to Wellfle=t to spend some time with you. Harry, Amy and Alex have visited. I kept seeing Avi whenever
we could arrange it, sometimes with Valeria, usually alone. We began spending winters in Tucson, now moved. I
certainly don't want any distance, and am just as heartbroken as you to think that there might be.
Even email and telephone communica=ion has become much more limited.
If so, I'm not aware of it. Until the las= few weeks I spoke to Harry weekly until he stopped calling. I very rarely had
email correspondence with Diane in the past, more often with Guillermo, which has continued. Since Avi was close by,
email was always limited= Otherwise we rarely used the phone.
We have also been increasingly dis=ressed to see that instead of feeling happy and relaxed, you feel impoverished.
You misunderstand, totally and completely, so much so that I cannot comprehend where you are getting your
information from.4>=A0 Certainly nothing in my letters or anything of said. Again, apart from this continued
interchange, which I don't understand, I'm happ= and relaxed, much more so than during the years before Valeria and I
came toget=er. As for "impoverishment," when I began to look into how my affairs had been handled, I discovered that
I was indeed facing financial problems, though far from impoverished. I've explained before in letters th=t you have
ignored, so I will repeat briefly again.
I discovered that I have almost no pension: years a=o it was turned into trusts of which you are the beneficiaries, and
the very small pension I receive (less than Social Security) ends at my death, leavi=g nothing to Valeria.
I discovered that I was living on an IRA that was b=ing rapidly depleted. To run through the arithmetic again, there is a
mandatory withdrawal of about $300,000. Half of that was being distri=uted to 10 family members. The other half was
3
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going to payment of taxes and management fees on the entire estate. In addition, close to $100,=00 was going to
expenses for Wellfleet and Alex's medical expenses. Hence before I withdrew a penny for daily life, I was already far
over the mandatory withdrawal, which, by law, imposes exorbitant taxes that I also had to pay. You can work out the
arithmetic for yourselves. And you will recall I'm sure that when I requested that some of the tax=s be covered by the
marital trust (which, by rights, I should have full acces= to), Harry refused unless I submitted to extensive and highly
intrusive financial analysis, which of course I refused to do on principle. There was never a request for such financial
analysis when distributions were made to family, or when Max distributed funds to family from the marit=l trust, or for
any other gifts over the years. And I saw, and see, no reason why I should be subjected to this humiliating demand.
In addition, as I've repeatedly explained, I bo=ght the apartment in the Cambridge co-op on the erroneous assumption
that the cost would be covered completely and quickly by the sale of the Lexington house. If I'd paid attention instead
of just trusting advisers, I would have known, as they did, that I did not own the Lexington house and that the profits
would go to you, so I was buying an expensive apartment in a co-op with no assets at all, a crazy decision. As I wrote, I
agreed to the surreal idea of borrowing money from within the family (with interes=) only on the false assumption that
the loan would be for a few weeks or months, hence meaningless.
That's the "impoverishment," and I t-=;ve now pretty much overcome what had been done.
All that keeps me from being "happy and relaxe=" is your continued insistence on pursuing these matters, which, again, I
don't understand.
You have even felt the need to hire multiple lawyers t= threaten people who you had trusted for years, and who we
believe have continued to do their utmost to act in your best interest and to help you navigate your new financial
situation.
Again, I'd be interested in=knowing your source for these claims. You're quite right that for years I had (quite
mistakenly) trusted people who, it turned out, had been making decisions, such as those I have again reviewed, that
were quite harmful to me. It is hard for me to comprehend how you think they would act in my best interest and help
me navigate the financial difficulties that they had created in the light of what I have explained to you, repeatedly. And
as I've written, that's only a part of it. I mentioned th= tens of thousands of dollars we paid Max for such things as a will
so outlandish that we had to trash it at once (see my last letter). And there is quite a lot more. I don't understand why
you completely disregard the detailed and fully accurate information I have once again reviewed, and choose instead to
rely on what you are told by others. And as I mentioned above, there has been serious wrongdoing, now coming to
light, which you will find out about in due course.
We have in fact found your letters over the past year increasingly alarming= If we felt that you were stable and content
in your new life, we would probably accept the distance that has been created. But your statemen=s, in person, and in
your letters, do not give us the impression that you feel stable and content.
I have explained before, and will repeat again, tha= I am very stable and content in my new life, and looking forward to
the peace, tranquillity, work and life conditions that I think I have a right to enjoy after many years of hard work and
with ample attention to caring for the needs of my children. There was a financial problem caused by extremely harmful
decisions of advisers that I had trusted, but that'=s now pretty much overcome. What's causing extreme distress is your
insistence, which I don't understand, on pursuing the matters we are no= again discussing.
One matter that remains is that marital trust.Q=A0 I explained what has been happening in a letter that you seem again
to have ignored, and won't repeat the full details. In brief, Max ha= concocted an interpretation that is technically legal
but that clearly makes no sense at all. It is based on the outlandish idea that Mommoy and I had decided to split our
assets so that she would make decisions about allocation of her part and I would make decisions about allocation of my
part. The idea is insane, and never occurred to either of us..C2* Max's weird interpretation is based on a pure
technicality: namely, in setting up the trust in M's name for tax purposes, the funds were first assigned to her revocable
Trust and then to the Marital Trust. That Trust was, of course, intended for the use of the survivor -- which is, for
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example, why I have always selected the Trustees without question or discussion, and should continue to do so, just as
M would have done had she been the survivor, as we anticipated.
Perhaps, though you haven't said so, you agree =ith Max, and want to ensure that the survivor (me) does not have
access to the funds and that they should go to you in addition to those of which you are already the beneficiaries. And
that I should not have the right to leave anything to Valeria. If that's the case -- which i= hard for me to believe -- I think
it would be best to say so straight out.=C24o If it's anything else, I just don't understand your letter.
We have begged you to meet with us with a mediator. We renew that request. A mediator is a person trained to help
different parties communicate and understand each other. This is what we want. We do not want to watch you engage
in expensive legal battles, and we do not want to live in trepidation of the next angry and irrational email we might
receive from you.
You have received completely rational emails
whi=h are sometimes annoyed, and for good reasons. I still am shocked
at the refusal to pay part of the taxes without extensive financial scrutiny, particularly after the facts that I have again
described. I don't know what you have heard about "expensive legal battles," but I strongly suspect that it is as
mistaken as your beliefs about my financia= situation. I'd be glad to meet, or more easily to have a collecti=e phone call,
but I cannot imagine why you want a mediator. If there are some issues, we can discuss them. In my mind at least,
there is no adversarial conflict for which a mediator is in order.
I do hope, again, that we can resolve this quickly.=C24> It is deeply disturbing, the one and only disturbing thing in my
life.4>=A0 And unnecessary, unless you have something on your minds that you have not told me.
A few more comments below.
PS. About your earlier letter concerning the estate plan, though I responded explaining why you and Max are
completely wrong about the Marital Trust, there are a few points I left out.
One, I'm amazed, and not a little disturbed, th=t you have even looked into this in such extensive detail. These are
matter= I never paid any attention to until I started looking into my affairs and discovered what was being done by my
advisers, as I've just one again d=scribed. I do not comprehend why you felt that you should undertake this inquiry --
just it would have been unthinkable for me to have inquired into your affairs when you were making decisions I found
questionable and was of course supporting them, financially and otherwise.
But put that aside.
The first sentence of your letter is Max's inte=pretation, which is flatly false, and surely ridiculous. We never thought of
the crazy idea of setting up two separate Trusts, one to manage my "in=ividual property," and the other for M to
manage her "individual property." It amazes me that this idea could even occur to you. We had common property, not
divided into mine and hers. Technically, almost all of it was my earnings, but it would never have occurred to us to
regard that as my "individual property," or even to imagine separate "individual properties." Again, Eric suggested this
pretense solely for tax purposes. We agreed, but the idea that you (and Max) express could never have occurred to us,
and I find it hard to understand how it occurred to you.
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I have already reviewed the facts about the way the Marital Trust was established and the obvious intentions, so won't
go t=rough it again, but your account in the letter is entirely wrong, though it does exploit a legal technicality, and it's
hard for me to imagine how this weird interpretation could even have occurred to you.
Aside from many factual errors in your letter, whic= I won't review, I'm also amazed, and shocked, to read such
statemen=s as "Carol's intention to leave some money to your children." Car=l's intention? Alone? Not my intention? Is
this your concepti=n of what our family life was? I hope not. In reality, neither of us had separate "intentions." We
decided together how to ensur= that the children and grandchildren would be very adequately cared for from my
earnings of the years, and how the survivor would be as well.</=ont>
I've just explained, once again, why you are ra=ically misled about what happened to my IRA under Max's and Bainco's
super=ision, until I started looking into it and ended the practices that were rapidly depleting it.
You say that you learned about Valeria in 2013 -- t=at is, when we met. It's quite true that I didn't consult lawyer= or
financial planners or Harry before we decided to get married, just as Carol and I didn't, just as none of you did. I don't
frankly unders=and what you are thinking.
You are, again, mistaken about the sale of the Lexi=gton house. The facts are as I have repeatedly described. I surely
would never have contemplated buying a Mem Drive apartment in a co-op with regular expenses and taking out a loan
from a family trust had I not assume= that the loan would last until the sale of the Lexington house that would cover the
costs of the new apartment. I've explained this over an= over. I don't understand why I have to say it again, and why
you simply ignore what I say -- which is completely accurate.
You report a visit by Harry and Max with an idea ab=ut using assets that you recount. I don't know where you got that
fr=m. Nothing like that happened. They did come with an outlandish proposal that I at once rejected. Max had once
come to Lexington to tell me that I had such enormous assets that I would never have a financial problem= Later he
changed his story, radically: I don't know why. I had a p=ivate visit with Max in my MIT office in which he explained that
I'd have to sharply reduce my past lifestyle, sell the boat and other such assets, because of the way my estate had been
arranged. That's the first I'd heard of any of this. At that point I began to look into what was going on and found what
I've described to you in detail, repeatedly=
You say that "as far as we know, no financial planning has occurred, despite the passage of a year and a half since Max
and Harry understood we all agreed it needed to be done."
That's the first I've heard that Max and al= of you have been my supervisors. I had thought that Max was my lawyer and
that you were my children. In fact, financial planning has now occurr=d, the first serious and careful planning since Eric
Menouya, but it never occurred to me that I was supposed to be under the control of Max and Harry=
You're right that I changed my relations with A=thony, as part of our financial planning. Again, it did not occur to me
that this was anyone's business but mine. You can have your belie=s about the facts, but I have the facts available and
feel I have the right to make such decisions without supervision, just as you do.
You are quite right that I can repay the loan to th= marital trust, even though the profits from sale of the apartment are
consi=erably less than your sources told you. I won't comment further about th=s, but you might want to think about it.
As for my lifestyle, for your information it is con=iderably reduced from what it used to be, though I don't understand
why that is your business, any more than I inquire into your lifestyles or seek to supervise them.
The "sudden and sustained increase in spending=quot; is fully and completely explained by the practices I have once
again review=d to you. That's why the IRA was depleted. Now I have ended t=ese practices and am no longer paying
exorbitant fees to Max for such matters as the proposed will that I described to you.
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Your phrase "an independent Trustee, such as M=x," is quite remarkable in the light of what I have told you, not least
the legalistic chicanery about the Marital Trust. He's your lawyer, w=rking for your benefit, which is what a lawyer is
supposed to do I suppose. That explains the record I have described at length, repeatedly. But I have every right to
select an independent and qualified Trustee, just as I selected the Trustees up until now, without question or
discussion.</=ont>
I can only repeat what I said before. We sure=y should be concerned about one another. I've often been concerned
about your decisions and choices, and felt that they were questionable or misguided. It never occurred to me that I
should inquire into the detail= of your financial situation or your lifestyles or to supervise what you do. Rather, I just
supported it, whatever my misgivings, financially and in other ways. Same with Mommoy when she was alive, and
contrary what you seem to believe (along with Max), we were a couple, making decisio=s jointly, not deciding separately
how to allocate funds under her or my separate control, an idea so outlandish it never occurred to us, or to Eric, or to
anyone until Max and you brought it up.
I do hope we can end this quickly, and pick up our lives without this blight. One practical step that remains is for you to
request Max to withdraw as trustee of the Marital Trusts, so that, as before, I can select the Trustee of my choice,
someone I can regard as reliable and trustworthy.
D</=>
Love, Avi, Diane and Harry
From:
03/02/2018 23:33
Subject:
Response to your letter
Harry Choms
Still surprised that you had the financial information about the apartment and our Tucson house, which we never
provided to anyone, because it's n= one's business, just as no one knew or raised any questions about earli=r cases of
purchase and sale.
However, whoever provided you with the information left a few things out, like payments to the cooperative and the
costs of the sale. When these are taken into account, you'll find that what we received suf=ices to cover the costs of our
purchase of the apartment, a bad mistake, as I've already explained, since we obviously couldn't afford it, =ot having the
funds from the sale of the Lexington house, as I had expected. There is a little left over for a small mortgage on a much
less expensive place that we can afford. In the cooperative there are retired profes=ors, but they are people who have
pensions and had property that they could sell to buy the apartment. I had neither, as you know.
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Again, I don't know why you brought this up at all, but more genera=ly, don't understand why you are persisting with
this correspondence.=C20 As I've written several times, and shouldn't have to say, I=E204>ve worked hard all my life,
set aside ample funds to ensure that my children and their families will be well taken care of, and think I have the right
to spend my last years in peace and tranquility without being concerned with accounting for financial matters. I don't
understand, but wil= respond to your letter. I'll also send a separate letter concerning s=me recent interchanges with
Max, which you may or may or not have heard someth=ng about.
I should say that your letter is not easy for me to read, and a response won't be easy to write, for reasons I've explained
in earlier lette=s. In the first place, to repeat again, I'm amazed that we are having this correspondence at all, that we've
wasted 5 minutes on this. I als= continue to be perplexed about the difference of style: I write you persona= letters, and
when you respond to them (usually you don't, as in the pre=ent case), the letters read as though they are written by
lawyers in an adversarial proceeding. On the matter of the loan to buy the Cambridge apartment, for example, I
explained that the whole idea of a loan within a family seemed to me utterly surreal, and I agreed only because I
assumed, mistaken=y, that the loan was for a few weeks until the Lexington house would be sold and would cover the
costs of the apartment. If I had been paying attention, I would have known that I didn't own the Lexington house.O=A0
If I had had a lawyer and financial adviser who were concerned with my situation, they would have informed me that the
Lexington house was not mine, and since I had no funds to pay for a new place to live, I couldn'=t afford to buy an
apartment in Cambridge near Harvard Square, surely not a coop with continual fees. That's what I explained in my
let=er. Your response was a statement of the legal issues as you understood them and advice to have lawyers clarify the
matter.
Same now. I wrote you several long personal letters, and this is your first response. Virtually a legal document. And I
have to say I'm surprised that you have the information you include, which h=ppens to be incorrect in crucial respects as
I explained in earlier letters and will repeat.
In particular, your account of the sale of the Lexington house and the purchase of the apartment is incorrect, as I have
just reviewed once again.=C2. The facts are as I have already described them, entirely unlike the story you present
here, which I presume you received from Max and Sam.
Some of your letter is correct. I did not consult with lawyers before we decided to marry -- I won't comment further on
this. And it is true that the earlier estate planning did not take into account that I might marry, a fact that has been
causing some remarkable actions. I won't comment on this either, but will simply add below a letter I wr=te to you
some time ago but never sent.
You state, correctly, that it would be wrong for Valeria to end up as your tenant. But then right below you say that the
preferred solution was for the apartment we bought to be in a trust of which you are the benef=ciaries, which means
that she would end up as your tenant. That aside, why should the apartment have been in a trust at all? <=font>
As I wrote you several times, we are very happy together. Valeria gave up her family, friends, and a flourishing
professional career to be with me — a very precious gift. I want to make sure that she =s well taken care of when I die,
not beholden to anyone, not anyone's=tenant.
About the "scam," yes, there is one, and I have described it to you several times. To repeat again: the mandatory annual
withdrawa= from the IRA is about $300,000, which certainly does sound like a lot of money, until we look at what was
happening to it. About half went to distributions to the family. The remaining half was spent in taxes and management
fees for the entire estate. Over and above this were the payments for Wellfleet and Alex's medical expenses, all drawn
from the IRA in excess of the mandatory withdrawal and therefore subject to exorbitant taxes. That's before one cent
was used for personal expenses.0=A0 If I had had a lawyer/financial adviser, he would have informed me that this is
going to quickly deplete the IRA. But I didn't. I f=nally learned about it and ended it.
You say that my expenditures have gone up since then. Since you seem to have gotten information about my expenses,
could you explain how they went up? I can give you some hints. We were, for example, payin= tens of thousands of
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dollars to Max for things like making a will, which, when he finally sent it to us, was so outlandish that we simpl= trashed
it -- for example, with a demand that we list all of our tangible assets, including teaspoons and pillow cases, presumably
to make sure that nothing would go to Valeria. And other such conditions. So yes, those were expenses. If you know of
other ones, please let me know.
You clearly trust Max and are accepting his version of events and circumstances rather than mine. That surprises me,
but to repeat,=C24)I don't trust him at all, for good reasons, which I've explained repe=tedly -- leaving out a fair amount.
Could add more, but won't. To go back to the beginning, I fin= it difficult to understand why you are persisting in these
inquiries. We are a family. We care for each other. I don't unders=and why you are doing this.
=br>
There are some other reasons why it looks simple to me, and I think it would be helpful to make them clear and open.
Throughout this whole business, thoughts have been coming to my mind that I'm sure must have occurred to you too.
Namely my own experiences=
When my mother died, in 1972, my father was 78 years old, not a good time to be alone. Knew that well enough then,
but it came home like a hammer blow when Mommoy was diagnosed in 2006 with incurable brain and lung cancer, and I
was privately told by her physician that she had at most months to live -- never told her of course. I couldn't help
realizing that if I had died before her, and she was alone, she would have had to be put in some facility where she would
suffer and die soon in miser=. Since I was there, I could take care of her at home and to the great surpri=e of her
doctors, she had two years that were tolerable and sometimes very enjoyable even as she wasted away and reverted to
infancy, and was able to pass away in peace, at home.
i didn't think of all of that when my mother died, but I did understand enough to realize -- we all did -- that my father
was facing a very difficu=t and dangerous period.
We were therefore all delighted when, a year later, he met and married Ruth. They spent the rest of his life together,
happy and secure, and he too was able to pass away at home, in peace, his wife taking care of him and his children and
Judy nearby.
We were, of course, very grateful that he had found Ruth, and very grateful to her. David and I owned the house, but of
course we just gave it to her for the rest of her life, and for whatever she wanted to do with it.
There was never a question, a problem, a concern. All entirely natura= within a family, very simple.
Like other cases I know of.
D =br>
Forwarded messa e
From: Noam Chomsky
Date: Mon, Jan 8, 2018 at 6:27 PM
Subject: Re: Fwd: Fwd: Marital Trusts
To: Diana Chomsky
A i h m
Harry Chomsky
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Received your letter, and will go through it carefully. But even on a quick reading there are things that surprise me. To
mention just one exampl=, I would be interested in knowing where you received the information about the sale of the
apartment in Cambridge and the purchase of the house in Tucson.
To clarify, Deborah is not Valeria's lawyer, she's mine and Valeria=#39;s lawyer. Max recognized that he had a conflict of
interests, and recommended to me that I should have a different lawyer, so we arranged for Deborah and her firm to
represent both of us.
I can see that there are many other important things to discuss and clarify=
0
On Mon, Jan 8, 2018 at 4:32 PM, Diana Chomsky
wrote:
Dear Doddoy,
Please find attached a reply to your emails which we spoke with you about before Christmas.
As we've said before, based on past experience we have a lot of dou=ts about how well an email exchange will work. We
did attempt, a few months ago, to use email to address one small, concrete issue: the loan from the marital trust and its
conditions and interest rate. We thought it would be simple to resolve our different understandings, but in the end our
multirle communications—even including an explanatory memo from the lawyer w=o set up the loan—did not manage
to clarify things at all. Nonetheles=, since you've asked several times for an email exchange about the broade= issues,
we're willing to try.
We know that what you asked for was for us to go through your detailed emails point by point and tell you what we
disagree with and why. That isn't exactly what we've done here. Instead, this is our be=t attempt to explain the history
and circumstances as we understand them.
Why have we done this? For a number of reasons. We think that many of your underlying assumptions are far off from
reality, and that your understandin= of the past, the present and what we are saying about these financial issue= is
deeply distorted. We want to start by looking at the larger, long-term issues, where we feel you have simply rewritten
history.
The attached narrative is our best attempt to do this. Please keep in mind that it is based only on our memory and a
handful of documents we've se=n through the years. The numbers in particular are all rough approximations, since of
course we don't have access to your legal and financial fi=es. You may very well feel we're mistaken about some details.
But in or=er to address those issues and come to an agreement on even the basic facts, we'd really like to meet face to
face, with the help of the people who actually have the documents and the information to determine whether the things
each of us believe are true or not. And, with a neutral mediator, who can ensure that we all are able to listen to and
understand what the other parties are trying to say.
Love, Avi, Diane and Harry
From:
20/12/2017 12:24
Subject:
Re: Fwd: Fwd: Marital Trusts
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May be missing something. I don't see anything mentioned below
It's a very troubling situation, as I've outlined, and I hope we ca= settle it quickly. I'd like to get back to my life and work
without this constant dark cloud and continual aggravation.
It's true that it looks simple to me, but I'll wait to hear from yo=. Soon I hope.
0
On Wed, Dec 20, 2017 at 10:01 AM, Diana Chomsky (:
wrote:
Dear Doddoy,
We recognize that you see a simple way forward -- we should tell you by email what we disagree with in what you have
outlined to us, and what our reasons are for disagreeing - but to us this does not seem so simple, for all the reasons we
mentioned below. Thus we can't answer you right now, but we didn't want to just leave your email there without any
reply. We know this isn't a real response, and we'll get back to you soon wit= something clearer.
Love, Avi, Diane and Harry
From:
16/12/2017 23:18
Subject:
Fwd: Fwd: Marital Trusts
I'm sorry, but this is surreal.
I have repatedly spelled out the circumstances in extensive detail. Your sole response has been that you disagree,
without once saying what you disagree with or why. I have never denied anything you have tried to say, for the simple
reason that you have never said anything that could either be affirmed or denied, only that you disagree with what I've
spe=led out but without any indication of what or why.
In this letter, for the first time, you specifically address something I have written. You write: "We can tell from your tax
requests that you have been spending many hundreds of thousands of dollars every year on personal expenses, even
after having successfully eliminated the extra costs that you have mentioned as a drain on your resources (the Cape
house, the gifts, Anthony's salary, etc).&q=ot; What I wrote you however is quite different. To repeat: there is a
mandatory withdrawal from the IRA. Half of that was distributed to children, grandchildren, and spouses. The other
half was spent in taxes and management fees for the entire estate. Cape house, Alex&=39;s medical expenses and other
gifts, Anthony's salary, etc., were from nec=ssary withdrawals over and above the mandatory withdrawal, hence subject
to exorb=tant taxes, requiring additional withdrawal. That is before we even get to ordinary living expenses. The
request had nothing at all to do with personal expenses, as you can see by just looking at my letters and running through
the arithmetic. So the one case you now mention is flatly incorrect.
But this tells us how to proceed: tell me explicitly what you have in mind, and then we can proceed in a reasonable
fashion.
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There's a simple way out of this impasse -- not by setting up an advers=ry proceeding with a mediator, as you suggest,
but by you telling me what you disagree with in what i have outlined to you and what your reasons are. You have not
yet done that in a single letter. So, simply, why not do it right now, and then we can proceed.
Again, I've repeatedly spelled out the circumstances in extensive detai=. So, simply, tell me what you disagree with and
why. No mediators are necessary, just a direct response. Or if you feel that you have already done so, then re-send the
letter in which you responded to my detai=ed account, telling me what you disagree with and why.
Meanwhile, while the impasse continues, I'm compelled to face constant aggravating and painful circumstances, not to
speak of humiliating demands and by now significant costs. That can end if we simply resolve these matters quickly in a
straightforward and simple way.
I haven't responded to the last part of your letter because it doesn I-=;t relate to the matter at hand. I was referring to
Max's radical sh=ft in stand, not to how affairs were managed in the past. To repeat, when distributions were made to
family from the IRA, and taxes and manageme=t fees for the entire estate were drawn from the IRA -- exhausting the
mandat=ry withdrawal -- Max, my lawyer, raised no question about the financial circum=tances of the beneficiaries, nor
should he have done so. But when i am requesting tax payments from the marital trust that was set up for M and me
and the survivor for our lifetimes, all of a sudden he is making exorbitant and humiliating demands. What you describe
below has nothing to do with this simple matter.
0
Forwarded message
From: Diana Chomsky
Date: Sat, Dec 16, 2017 at 8:37 PM
Subject: Re: Fwd: Marital Trusts
To: Noam Chomsky
Cc: Avi Chomsky
Harry Chomsky
Dear Doddoy,
We've tried to talk to you about your financial situation several times over the past couple of years, in person, by phone,
and by e-mail. The process has been extremely unpleasant for us, and we presume for you as well. More importantly, it
has not led to any enlightenment on any of our parts. Much of what we've tried to say you have flatly denied; some of it
we think you simply haven't understood. You se=m absolutely convinced that your beliefs are correct and absolutely
uninteres=ed in trying to look at the situation in other ways, to the extent that you can't even remember these
exchanges. Much of what you've said=to us conflicts directly with our personal knowledge of your history and with legal
and financial advice from every source we've heard from. So the conversations lead only to more stress and heartache.
We are not willing to continue trying to discuss this with you unless somet=ing changes. One change would be to
include a professional in the convers=tion who can resolve our differences in belief about basic facts. However, you
have apparently decided that because you disapprove of some of the suggestions made by your former lawyer and
financial managers -- many of which were based on choices you and Mommoy had made previously -- you will now not
believe anything they tell you. That leaves us with no recour=e to determine the truth about anything that happened
between 2007 and 2016.<=r>
We have suggested a mediator as a last resort. Perhaps with a mediato= we can at least listen to each other's beliefs
and perspectives, even i= we can't come to agreement on key points. Perhaps a mediator coul= even help us find a way
to investigate the questions of fact and come to some conclusions that we could all accept. <=ont size="2" face="Arial">
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Short of being able to talk to you openly, it's very important to the t=ree of us to protect you from future financial
catastrophe. We have been trying our best to do this, and will continue to try, regardless of what happens with our
communication. We believe that Eric Menoyo designed your estate plan properly to protect the interests of all parties,
and we will continue to work to ensure that the plan is administered in a faith=ul and professional way.
We also wanted to say that we have a different interpretation of how we have balanced respect, privacy, and autonomy,
versus questions and interfer=nce, in our family history. You tell us that you deeply resent being asked quest=ons when
you request financial withdrawals, and you deeply resent our questions about your financial situation. You say that you
are the only one being questioned in this way. But we don't believe that's the case. Historically, as a family we have
been open with each other about our individual financia= situations; we have watched out for each other and stepped in
if we felt it was needed; and on the most concrete level, any request to access funds from any of the trusts has always
required an explanation to go along with it.
In Avi's case, you and Mommoy interfered to tell her that something=was going very wrong with Sandi and that she had
to get professional help; to practically force her to go meet with a lawyer Mommoy found for her when she became
convinced that Avi's marriage to Jon was causing harm; and to order Avi to go see a doctor and get on medication when
she confesses that she couldn't handle things. That is: when Mommoy s=w Avi doing fine, she didn't pry or interfere.
When she saw her=falling apart, she stepped in to help.
In Diane's case, she discussed her financial situation with Mommoy =n a very open way on many, many occasions,
leading Mommoy to offer her things like washing machines (we all know how that turned out) and more significanrly,
help with rent payments during a few years in Mexico, during a period when: Oxfam had stopped paying the rent, Gmo
had stopped receiving his stipend as a grad student, and Diane was still suffering from a considerabl= salary cut imposed
by Oxfam after the move to Mexico. Diane accepted her offer, which was a huge temporary help while she got herself
back on her feet.
Furthermore, on the occasions when Diane has asked Bainco for money from the trust that is in her name, she is always
asked to explain exactly what it is for. This happens even though the amounts have never been very large. If anything
looks odd, the trustees come back to her with questions. Harry once even phoned her because what she was asking for
seemed so strange and he was concerned that something was wrong (in case you are wondering what was indeed going
on, it was a small Mexican peso loan to a friend in trouble, which Diane couldn't do by other means because she was
trav=ling at the time, and it couldn't wait until she got back home). Diane has n=t found this questioning to be
humiliating or prying - she assumes it is the terms of the trust and the trustees are just doing their jobs.
In Harry's case, at one point in the mid-1990s he unexpectedly owed $60=000 due to the Alternative Minimum Tax as a
result of receiving stock options..=C2* He discussed this with Mommoy and her accountant, and they decided she
would lend him the money to pay the taxes and he would pay her back once he had a chance to exercise and liquidate
the stock options, several months later.
In the current situation, the reason we are asking you questions now (and never before) is that now we are hearing from
you repeatedly that your financial situation is dire. We decided to ask you about your financi=l circumstances • not
lightly, as we said in one of our many emails, but after much thought, given that we could see that your concern about it
was causing you a great deal of stress and was leading to you taking import=nt and possibly unnecessarily radical
decisions. We continue to feel that you are misinterpreting your financial situation, and that this is causing you
considerable anguish. It pains us greatly to see this, as we've sai= before.
We can tell from your tax requests that you have been spending many hundred= of thousands of dollars every year on
personal expenses, even after having successfully eliminated the extra costs that you have mentioned as a drain on your
resources (the Cape house, the gifts, Anthony's salary, etc). T=is is far out of alignment with what we know about your
lifestyle. You and Valeria should live in comfort together -- no need to adhere to your old, fairly austere living conditions
-- but your expenditures seem to go far beyond that, and seem to keep rising. This makes us worry and makes us want to
intervene to try to help. It also makes the trustees worry that you are not managing your finances with attention to your
13
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possible lifelong needs. Nothing in the long and detailed letters you've s=nt us can begin to explain why your personal
spending has shot up the way it has. We can see only little pieces of your situation, because of the secretive posture
you've adopted in recent years, but the pieces we do see suggest a set of problems very different from the ones you've
descr=bed.
We hope this helps to explain our position and our real concern. You are right that in our last emails (and in this one) we
haven't gone point b= point through your affirmations, explaining our different understanding of the basic facts, but as
we said at the beginning of this email, we tried to do that in the past and it didn't work. We truly hope we can find a way
to talk openly about the situation.
Love, Avi, Diane and Harry
From:
14/12/2017 18:03
Subject:
Re: Fwd: Marital Trusts
I just don't understand this. I've explained the facts in det=il, repeatedly, with no response. You've told me that you
have a diff=rent understanding of the basic facts, but haven't told me what it is, or wh=t are the questions to which you
want answers other than what I have told you. That is why communication cannot proceed. So, yes, frustra=ing.
Evidently you regard this as an adversarial proceeding, requiring a mediato=. I don't understand this either. I thought
we were a family discus=ing matters relating to us. I have no idea what a mediator would before.=C2. Mediating
what? Another reason for my frustration.
As for Bainco and Max, I have explained in part what they have been doing, causing me plenty of harm. In part. As I've
told you, there is a lot more. But what I have told you is more than enough to explain that they are not reliable sources
who can be trusted.
If you want them to answer your questions, OK, but it would seem rather strange if I were to ask them about your
financial affairs -- a matter into which I've of course never inquired, except by asking you question= if they came up. So I
find all of this quite strange. If I have questions about your lives and circumstances, I would ask you, not some
investment firm or lawyer, and I wouldn't request a mediator.Q=A0 I don't understand why it is different in my case,
and this is somethin= else I'd like to know the explanation for.
So, yes, frustrating. For these reasons.
0
On Thu, Dec 14, 2017 at 4:27 PM, Diana Chomsky «
Itvrote:
Dear Doddoy,
We have tried to discuss this with you but we have been frustrated—=nd even frightened—by the results. That's why
wei>=99ve asked you if we could meet with a mediator who could facilitate the discussion and make sure that we are
able to actually hear each other. We would still like to do this if you are willing. Because some of the disagreements
seem to be about basic facts—which could be clarified by outside so=rces—we have also asked if these outside sources
14
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(Bainco, Max) could be part of the conversation, or could be available to give us clear answers to some of the questions.
We would still like to do this, too!
Love, Avi, Diane and Harry
From:
14/12/2017 11:22
Subject:
Re: Fwd: Marital Trusts
One way to communicate better would be to know our respective points of view. I've written to you three long and
detailed letters explain=ng my understanding of the situation. You have only told me that your understanding is quite
different, but you haven't told me anything abou= what your understanding is, or what its source is. What do you see
differently from what I have described in detail? Without knowing that, there's no way to communicate. I have no idea
what your understanding is, except that it is quite different, for reasons that I do not know.
I do not like to leave matters to lawyers, not just because of the expense, but far more importantly because the
differences in understanding are matte=s we ought to work out among ourselves. And again, that is not possible until
you let me know what you think the situation is, and why.
To clarify, the lawyers are discussing certain technical matters, but not the issues I brought up in my last letter to you, or
the earlier ones.4,=A0 That's personal, not for lawyers.
On Thu, Dec 14, 2017 at 8:51 AM, Diana Chomsky c
wrote:
Thank you for your detailed email. As we said before, our understanding of many of the specific points you make is quite
different from yours, but we certainly are in agreement that you should be able to live in comfor= and financial security.
We wish that we could sit down together to try to work this out and communicate better as a family, but since it seems
that we can't right now, we'll have to resort to working through th= lawyers. As you know, their discussions are
underway on the issues you've brough= up.
From:
13/12/2017 15:19
Subject:
Fwd: Marital Trusts
Harry Chomsky
I would like to renew my request that you arrange for Max to resign as trustee for the marital trusts, and expeditiously,
for reasons I will expla=n below.
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I have already spelled out some of the reasons why I cannot trust Max.40=A0 I hope you have read those detailed
letters, which only tell part of the story, though it was more then enough. By now the situation has becom= completely
intolerable.
During the years when Max was serving as my lawyer, he saw no problem when the IRA that is my source of income was
being depleted by distributions to 10 family members -- which alone amounted to half of the mandatory withdrawals --
along with payment of taxes and management fees for the entire estate.=C2* All of that exhausted the annual
withdrawal, and the IRA was exhausted further by payments for the Wellfleet house, Alex's medical expenses, a=d
others that you know about, compelling me to make further withdrawals just for ordinary daily expenses, and imposing
the exorbitant taxes charged for such withdrawals. Max saw no problem with that. He never suggested any financial
accounting from any of the beneficiaries. I trusted him, mistakenly, as in the case of the purchase of the apartment and
the outlandish loan from the marital trust, which I assumed would be for a few weeks until the Lexington house was
sold, not realizing -- though he surely did -- that I would receive nothing for that and would be stuck with an expensive
apartment I could not possibly afford and a loan that I never would have agreed to had I understood.
Now, all of a sudden, everything has changed. Suddenly, Max has all sorts of scruples and legalistic demands. What
caused the sudden change? It is because now I am requesting that taxes be paid by the marital trust. For the first time,
Max insists on extensive (and of course outrageous) financial surveillance, claiming that as trustee, he is concerned with
life expectancy (I might live too long) and with the long-term effect on the trust -- matters that never concerned him
while he watched my IRA being depleted with payment of taxes and management fees for the entire estate, in addition
to distributions to family. No scruples, no concerns, all fine as long as it was rapidly depleting my source of income.
To make this even more outrageous, the marital trust is, of course, intender for the use of the married couple who
established it, to be their main resource during their lifetimes, and the lifetime of the surviving spouse..C2. That is the
obvious intention of a marital trust, and that should end the matter, within a family. But it is even true of the wording, if
we have to descend to legalities. Not just for taxes, which is what I am requesting, but for daily life.
As you know, the trusts were in Carol's name for two reasons: one, we a=sumed that she would be the survivor, and
two, for estate tax reasons, to assure that the three children would receive the maximum benefits after we both died.
In addition, Max has apparently been allowing distributions from the marita= trust to children and grandchildren
without consulting me -- and, of course= without calling for investigation of their financial circumstances. That concern
is reserved for my request for tax payments from a trust to which, by rights, I should have full access.
I can think of only one explanation: Max, as your lawyer, is seeking to ensure that you receive every penny possible: not
just the trusts and educa=ional trusts of which you are the sole beneficiaries, along with the two houses, and almost all
of my pension, but even the marital trusts that M and I established for ourselves. I can think of no other reason for his
radical change of attitude from the time that the IRA was being exhausted before his eyes to today, with sudden concern
about long-term potential problems with the marital trust and possible excessive life expectancy4=A0 No doubt he can
contrive various legalisms, but I hope it is clear enough why these should not even be considered in matters such as this.
Plainly, this situation -- which I have only partially described -- is unacceptable. And it would be even apart from what I
have already written to you, and you know without my spelling it out.
To repeat, I've worked hard all my life and have been very careful to provide for the needs of my children and
grandchildren, and to ensure that they will be well cared for after my death, even abandoning my pension and main
material possessions (the two houses), in addition to trusts of which they are beneficiaries. After M died, I assumed that
I would spend my last days alone. I was lucky to meet a wonderful woman, who has given up her life, her family, and
her successful professional career to be with me. We are very happy together, and have been looking forward to a new
life in Tucson, in peace and tranquillity, where we can be together and pursue our work and lives. I think I have that
right. Inste=d, I am spending exorbitant amounts of time, energy, and even lawyer's fee= to obtain what should be
16
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available to me with barely a word. Alone among the people I know, I am compelled to suffer serious aggravation, and
to spend time and energy away from life and work, without simple financ=al security. I hope you can see how unfair this
is.
I would therefore like to renew my request that you inform Max that he should resign. I would then like to replace him
with my financial adviser, Richard Kahn, who is experienced, highly qualified, and trustworth=. That seems simple
enough.
Furthermore, it is urgent. Within the next few days, money has to be available for taxes, and Max's repeated delays and
sudden scruples a=e going to again cost a lot of money that I should not have to spend. I hope it is also clear that I
should not have be facing this kind of situa=ion at this stage of my life.
0
Forwarded messa e
From: Diana Chomsky
Date: Wed, Nov 22, 2017 at 6:33 PM
Subject: Re: Marital Trusts
To: Noam Chomsk
Cc: Avi Chomsk <
Dear Doddoy,
We were so saddened to hear about Ed Herman. What a terrible loss.
Love, Avi, Diane and Harry
From:
20/11/2017 21:52
Subject:
Marital Trusts
Harry Chomsk
Back from Mexico, and there's some business I'd like to take care o=.
Harry Chomsky
I would like to arrange for Max to step down as trustee of the marital trusts. All that this requires is that each of you
authorize him to do so. I've explained some of the reasons. There are oth=rs. In general, I want to make a clean break
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from what has been happening for the past few years. I would then like to appoint Richard Kahn as Trustee. As you
know, he is the financial advisor/accountant I have been working with, extremely competent and trustworthy.
I hope this can be done quickly and expeditiously.
In brief, I've worked hard all my life and have managed to set aside fu=ds to ensure your security and the security of
your children -- the two houses= trusts, in substantial sums. Valeria and I are very happy together.=C24> I think I now
have the right to live the rest of my life in peace and tranq=ility, without constant financial concerns, in fact like
everyone else I knowtrA0
Those who remain. You have perhaps heard that my old friend Ed Herman died a few days ago.
Oxfam works with others to overcome poverty and su=fering
Oxfam GB is a member of Oxfam International and a c=mpany limited by guarantee registered in England No. 612172.
Registered office: Oxfam House, John Smith Drive, Cowley, Oxford, OX4 2JY.<=r> A registered charity in England and
Wales (no 202918) and Scotland (SC 039042)
</=iv>
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