Case File
efta-02657394DOJ Data Set 11OtherEFTA02657394
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DOJ Data Set 11
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efta-02657394
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Integrity
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From:
Noam Chomsky <
Sent:
Monday, May 21, 2018 7:30 PM
To:
Harry Chomsky
Cc:
Avi Chomsky; Diana Chomsky
Subject:
Re: Marital Trust
>
Sorry, I made the same error as before. I'm find=ng it hard to shake the illusion that we are discussing things within a
fa=ily, and are not characters in Bleak House. I'll try to r=member. Below.
On Sun, May 20, 2018 at 9:19 PM, Harry Chomsky <
<mailto
> wrote:
It sounds like you would like me to say yes or no to your pro=osal exactly as you have stated it, without further
discussion. I ca='t do that. Here are some reasons:
1.
It's not permi=ted under Massachusetts trust law.
Can=you -- or perhaps your lawyer -- refer me to the part of Mass Trust Law th=t makes it illegal for beneficiaries to
agree on distributing funds from a=marital trust and then liquidate it? I can't find it.
<=iv>
1.
tzA0 I agreed to certain obligations when I became trustee, and I have to ma=e sure to discharge them
faithfully. Even if you tell me you don'=t care about my fiduciary responsibility, the law says I'm responsible=anyway.
Your solemn obligations ar= no doubt impressive, but there is an easy way to put them to rest. =imply resign (permitted
under Mass law) and then you will have no further =bligations. We can then return to the situation before I appointed
y=u to be a trustee, when I was a trustee and there were no problems about f=duciary responsibility -- that was before
the transition from family to .
1.
It's not specific. For instance, you menti=n dividing the trust into two parts, but you don't say what each
part =ould consist of.
Co=rect. I left that for discussion, still laboring under my illusions. =So I therefore suggest that you propose what you
think would be an appropr=ate split and we can proceed from there.
1.
It's not complete. For ins=ance, you haven't proposed any way to shield us and Max from liability=for
past actions.
I hadn't rea=ized that you are concerned that your past actions might make you legally =iable. But this too can be
handled easily. I'm sure that y=ur lawyer can construct some document to protect you from whatever those p=st
infractions were, and since I still labor under my old illusions, that =ill suffice.
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However, given y=ur assumptions, we should definitely have ironclad agreements, with batter=es of lawyers an notaries
and witnesses, including an agreement that you w=ll not contest my will, something that had never crossed my mind
before I =earned about your assumptions -- which, I admit, I'm still having trou=le comprehending.
It might be possible to work out all of these proble=s and develop a legal, specific and complete agreement
based on the framew=rk you've proposed. Would you like to engage with me in some kin= of process to attempt that?
Other than having your lawyer talk to m=ne, do you have any suggestion about how to do so?
<=iv>
Very simple. Proceed as above
On Sat, May 19, 2018 at 2:26 PM, Noam Chomsky =It
<mailto
wrote:
> >
I'm glad that you find the idea interesting and think that you migh= consider it, though you have to consult
lawyers first.
My =wn view is different. To me the proposal I suggested seems to be a v=ry simple way of settling this matter,
which to me is extremely troubling.=C2* I realize that this is just another case of a longstanding differenc= in the way
we approach these problems, a difference that has been clear e=er since we were discussing the interest on the loan
from the Trust and fo=nd that we could not communicate because I mistakenly assumed that it was = discussion among
family members while your letters made it very clear and=explicit that you saw it as a legal issue to be settled among
lawyers and =ainco, perhaps with a mediator in the adversary proceeding. All matt=rs I find it very hard to comprehend,
and to live with, but so be it.
So by all means consult with your lawyer, or perhaps a battery o= lawyers, to make sure that your interests are
properly protected. l=don't need any lawyer's advice. The matter is perfectly clea= and straightforward. So there is no
reason for me to hire a lawyer =o deal with the question and to have a lawyer contact yours and initiate a=discussion in
which we all participate.
The matter is very =imple. We can proceed without delay if you agree to settle the issue=in the simple manner
that I suggested.
As for your proposal= in your letter of March 29, as I wrote you, the letter was so shocking th=t it was hard for
me to bring myself to respond, but I did, in detail, but=decided not to send it. Perhaps I should. Will think about
it.=/div>
As for your proposals, my response was the obvious one..>=A0 I'm sorry for the stress you had to endure, but
your efforts were a=waste of time for reasons I had already fully explained before you underto=k them. As I'm sure you
recall, a few years ago, I requested tax=payments from the marital trust when my IRA was being rapidly depleted by =y
advisers who were distributing half to family and using the other half t= pay management fees and taxes for the entire
estate, so that to pay Alex&=39;s medical expenses and the expenses for Wellfleet I had to withdraw exc=ss funds with
exorbitant taxes, all that before withdrawing even a cent to=live on again with exorbitant taxes. Your response was to
refuse the=request unless I agreed to intrusive and insulting financial investigation= -- of a kind I never considered when
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providing funds to you for something-you needed. I made it clear and explicit at the time that I would no= submit to
this procedure. Since your efforts and proposals simply r=peat the same procedure, they were a waste of time.
There w=re some things in your letter that were correct. You're right th=t despite what has happened, I'm still a
"wealthy man," with=income well above the median, though lacking a pension and accumulated pro=erty, not at the
level of my peers. Furthermore, I can supplement my=income by teaching large undergraduate courses, something I'd
never do=e and that is not that common for people approaching 90, but something tha= I enjoy. And you too are a
wealthy man, for the same reasons: the r=asons are that I've worked hard all my life, lived fairly simply (and =ive even
more simply today), and was therefore able to put aside enough mo=ey to ensure that my children and grandchildren
are very well cared for, i=definitely.
But I again suggest that we put all=of this aside, and deal quickly and simply with what appears to be the
one=outstanding issue: dividing the Marital trust and then dissolving it, all =ery simple, needing no lawyers, at least on
my part.
0
On Fri= May 18, 2018 at 1:44 PM, Harry Chomsky <awrote:
This is an =nteresting idea. We could consider it further, but I would need the =dvice of my lawyer —
and I assume you would want your own lawyer&#=9;s advice as well — to ensure that any agreement we reach is
cons=stent with Massachusetts law and satisfies the interests, needs, and oblig=tions of everybody involved. Perhaps,
as a next step, you could ask =our lawyer to contact mine and begin a discussion in which we all particip=te.
I'm also curious to hear your thoughts ab=ut the proposals I suggested in my message on March 29th.
On Thu, May 17, 2018 at 10:05 AM, Noam =homsky <
<mailto
> wrote:
As I wrote a little while ago, I .id write a long response to your last -- deeply depressing -- letter,
but =ecided not to send it. I may return to that letter later but will ke=p to some factual matters that ought to be
cleared up.
=ut now I'm writing just about one point, which seems to be the core of=the problem -- a
problem, which, again, I don't understand. But =et's put that aside, though I hope we can clear it up soon. All =f this is a
painful cloud that I never would have imagined would dar=en my late years.
The core issue seems to be the =arital trust. I've explained how M and I actually set it up
with=Eric, which seemed to us just plain common sense. I've also expl=ined Max's different interpretation. I've asked
you for your=, but haven't heard it. But let's put that aside too, and ju=t resolve the matter, as can be done very simply -
- with no need for lawye=s to explain the fiduciary responsibility of the trustee I appointed years=ago to replace me,
something I never paid any attention to before.
The simple solution is to divide the trust into two parts= One part will go to you, to use as you
wish. One part will go=to me, for me to use without any investigations of my financial situation =nd other such
intrusions that I won't accept. Then the trust can=simply be dissolved, and it is all over.
So I sug=est that we proceed this way, and end the whole matter -- at least, whatev=r it is that I
understand about what is of concern to you.
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<=div>
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