A New York court docket on Thursday (2 March) upheld the dismissal of a lawsuit filed by billionaire artwork collector and former Museum of Trendy Artwork (MoMA) board chairman Leon Black that claimed he was the sufferer of a conspiracy to spoil his status and push him out of the non-public fairness agency he based earlier than stepping down in 2021 over his ties to disgraced late financier Jeffrey Epstein.
In October 2021, Black filed a civil RICO (Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organisations) swimsuit in New York claiming that Guzel Ganieva, a Russian mannequin with whom Black says he had a consensual affair with, conspired with others to make false claims that Black sexually assaulted Ganieva.
Black accused Josh Harris, with whom Black based Apollo International Administration, the corporate’s public relations head and Wigdor, the legislation agency representing Ganieva, of being in on a scheme to pressure Black to resign from Apollo. In his grievance, Black stated Harris needed to take revenge after he was not chosen to succeed Black because the non-public fairness agency’s chief government (Harris’s representatives denied the declare to the Wall Road Journal final 12 months).
US District Decide Paul Engelmayer first dismissed Black’s swimsuit final June, and referred to as Black’s argument that he was the sufferer of racketeering “obviously poor”. Black filed an attraction, however the dismissal was affirmed by the Second Circuit Courtroom of Appeals on Thursday with prejudice, which suggests Black will be unable to pursue the identical declare once more.
“We consider Black’s claims in opposition to our legislation agency have been baseless and filed in retaliation as a result of we signify Guzel Ganieva in her first filed lawsuit in opposition to Black,” Jeanne Christensen, a associate at Wigdor, stated in a press release Thursday.
“This procedural ruling doesn’t change the indeniable details that Ms. Ganieva extorted Mr. Black, broke her settlement with him about their consensual affair after pocketing $9.5m underneath that settlement, after which defamed Mr. Black by making demonstrably false allegations,” Susan Estrich, a lawyer for Black, stated a press release. “We’re assured {that a} evaluation of the proof in Mr. Black’s New York State Courtroom swimsuit, together with the signed settlement and Ms. Ganieva’s personal phrases, will expose her despicable claims as lies.”
Ganieva sued Black in June 2021, accusing him of sexual assault and defamation after he advised information shops in April of that 12 months that she had extorted him after a consensual affair. Black made the feedback in response to Ganieva saying on-line that Black was a “predator” and had raped her. The grievance claims Black “sexually harassed and abused” Genieva “for years” and referred to a selected alleged rape that Ganieva stated passed off in 2014.
Black stepped down as Apollo’s chief government and chairman in March 2021 after an unbiased investigation discovered he paid greater than $150m to Epstein between 2012 and 2017, after Epstein pleaded responsible to soliciting prostitution from a teenage lady in Florida. Whereas the inquiry discovered no proof that Black took half in Epstein’s abuse, Black didn’t stand for re-election as board chairman of MoMA in New York after greater than 150 artists signed onto an open letter demanding that Black be eliminated. (He’s nonetheless a trustee of the museum.)
A second girl, Cheri Pierson, sued Black for rape in November 2022 and is represented by the identical New York legislation agency, Wigdor. Pierson claimed in her swimsuit that she was launched to Black by Epstein, and that Black sexually assaulted her throughout a therapeutic massage at Epstein’s New York mansion. Weeks after the alleged assault, Pierson stated Black insisted on assembly her at a bar in Manhattan at hand over $5,000 in money. Black has denied all of the accusations of sexual assault.
Black has donated tens of millions to MoMA, and constructed a notable artwork assortment of his personal. He was reportedly the customer who spent almost $120m on one in every of Edvard Munch’s The Scream (1895) pastels at Sotheby’s New York in 2012, in response to the Wall Road Journal. The sale set a document worth on the time for an art work offered at public sale.