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Friday, May 6, 2022
Vol. 10, No. 18
GUIDE TO MOTHER’S DAY
ANTISEMITIC UPTICKS ON LONG ISLAND
NASSAU REACTS TO ABORTION REPORT
PAGES 28-29
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A.G files complaint against two Manhasset attorneys Accused of misappropriating funds from trust, foundation BY R OB E RT PE L A E Z A pair of Manhasset attorneys misappropriated more than $1.3 million from a charitable trust they administered on behalf of a deceased client, according to a complaint filed by the office of state Attorney General Letitia James last Tuesday. The civil complaint alleges that Paul Marchese and Robin Maynard, of Marchese & Maynard LLP, represented Helen Gottlieb during the final years of her life before her death in 2008. Prior to her death, Marchese aided Gottlieb in establishing The Harold and Helen Gottlieb Founda-
tion, along with the charitable trust worth around $2 million, according to the complaint. Following her death, Marchese, became the successor of Gottleib’s trust and had access to all of her assets, the complaint said. Marchese allegedly directed the trust to pay the law firm nearly $600,000 before he and Maynard, acting as sole directors of the foundation, paid themselves salaries of more than $750,000, according to the complaint. James said Marchese was able to conceal the transfers from the trust to the firm because he allegedly did not register the trust with the Attorney General’s Charities Bureau,
as is required by law. The suit, according to James, seeks a court order to force Marchese and Maynard to repay the funds they allegedly transferred from the trust and foundation, along with other penalties and interests. “Acting in their own interests, these lawyers allegedly failed to grant their client’s dying wish and hurt a charitable cause in the process,” James said in a release. “New Yorkers must have trust in the individuals tasked with overseeing their affairs when they are no longer able to do so themselves. My office will continue to uphold the laws designed to protect the interests of Continued on Page 49
Manhasset High School on U.S. News & World Report list Ranked No. 24 throughout New York, No. 215 nationallly PHOTO COURTESY OF THE MANHASSET SCHOOL DISTRICT
The Manhasset School District announced the creation of a varsity unified basketball team sponsored by the Special Olympics last week.
BY B R A N D ON D U FF Y Eight public high schools in the North Shore have been named among the nation’s 1,000 best, according to U.S. News & World Report’s annual list released Tuesday. Atop the list is Great Neck South High School, which ranked 195th and 22nd in New York. They are the
only local public school to make the list’s top 200. This year’s ranking moved Great Neck South ahead of Manhasset High School, which this year was No. 24 in New York and No. 215 nationally. Great Neck South and Manhasset were followed on the North Shore by Herricks High School at
No. 327 overall and No. 38 in New York, North Shore High School at No. 406 overall and No. 48 in New York, Roslyn High School at No. 415 overall and No. 50 in New York, The Wheatley School at No. 474 overall and No. 53 in New York, Great Neck North High School at No. 503 and No. 58 in New York and Paul D. SchContinued on Page 50
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