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Jocelyn Wildenstein's multibillion divorce settlement, the "trial of the century" exposed the Wildenstein family's $10 billion hidden art empire to criminal investigation and French tax authorities. ------------------- Gain FREE access to secret full-length documentaries on wealthy families "too scandalous for YouTube" by joining our newsletter: https://www.substack.com/@oldmoneyluxury ------------------- TIMESTAMPS 0:00 Introduction 1:39 Chapter One: The Swiss Hunter Meets the Art Dynasty 5:29 Chapter Two: The Transformation and the Million-Dollar Months 9:27 Chapter Three: The Night of the Gun 12:51 Chapter Four: The Empire Exposed 16:33 Chapter Five: From Billions to Bankruptcy ------------------- Three point eight billion dollars represented what newspapers called the largest divorce settlement in history in nineteen ninety-nine, awarded to a woman married into a family whose business required absolute invisibility. The Wildensteins had followed old money rules for four generations, building an art empire while maintaining such complete privacy that most people had never heard their name despite dealing in Rembrandt, Van Gogh, and Cézanne masterpieces. Their clients ranging from dictators to oligarchs paid premium prices for absolute discretion, with the family operating through offshore trusts, Caribbean shell companies, and warehouse facilities whose locations remained closely guarded secrets. Jocelyne Périsset grew up in modest circumstances in Lausanne as the daughter of a sporting goods store manager, but by nineteen seventy-seven she had reinvented herself as a sophisticated huntress who could pilot planes and charm billionaires. That weekend at Ol Jogi Ranch in Kenya, Alec Nathan Marcel Wildenstein needed someone to eliminate a problem lion at a neighboring ranch, and Jocelyn asked to accompany him with his response revealing everything: "As long as you keep your mouth shut." Within a year, on April thirtieth, nineteen seventy-eight, they eloped to Las Vegas, entering a world where monthly expenses routinely exceeded one million dollars with court documents later revealing five hundred forty-seven thousand annually on food and wine alone. The couple maintained five residences simultaneously including a hundred-fifty-year-old French château, an Olympic Tower penthouse, a double-wide East Sixty-Fourth Street townhouse, the sprawling Ol Jogi Ranch, and a Caribbean retreat. Surgical modifications began transforming Jocelyn's face in the nineteen eighties, with documented procedures including canthoplasty reshaping her eye corners, aggressive blepharoplasty on eyelids, and large cheek implants creating the prominent features that became her signature. On September third, nineteen ninety-seven, Jocelyn arrived unannounced at their townhouse to discover Alec in their marital bed with twenty-one-year-old Russian model Yelena Jarikova. Police reports documented that when Jocelyn confronted Alec, he allegedly pulled a nine-millimeter semi-automatic pistol, transforming a marital confrontation into a criminal incident that shattered the Wildensteins' carefully maintained invisibility. Judge Marilyn Diamond's examination triggered fury at Alec's claims of poverty from a man spending millions monthly, declaring it "an insult to the intelligence of the court and an affront to common sense." Forced discovery exposed Daniel Wildenstein's secret art inventory of ten billion dollars including twenty Renoirs, twenty-five Courbets, ten Van Goghs, ten Cézannes, eight Rembrandts, and eight Rubens paintings. The settlement finalized in nineteen ninety-nine awarded Jocelyn two and a half billion dollars plus one hundred million annually for thirteen years, totaling approximately three point eight billion dollars. The Velázquez painting valued at tens of millions proved worthless—a forgery discovered years after the divorce—while the Cézanne attributed at forty million dollars fetched only four point seven million at auction. May fourth, two thousand eighteen brought Chapter Eleven bankruptcy with Jocelyn's checking account containing zero dollars, surviving on nine hundred dollars monthly from Social Security after the family trust terminated her payments. December thirty-first, two thousand twenty-four marked Jocelyn Wildenstein's death at eighty-four, exactly twenty-five years after her record settlement, dying essentially penniless despite supposedly winning history's largest divorce award.