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This in-depth, full-length documentary explores how immense inherited wealth corrupted America's elite into committing shocking acts of violence, murder, and manipulation. From tobacco fortune heiresses killing interior designers to socialites orchestrating family assassinations for inheritance money, these cases reveal the dark side of generational wealth, trust funds, and old money dynasties who used their resources to cover up crimes, manipulate justice systems, and destroy lives through calculated brutality that shocked even hardened investigators. --------------------------- 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 1:09 1. The Billionaire Tobacco Heiress Who Killed Her Interior Designer: Doris Duke 22:08 2. The Assassination of Helene Pastor 49:02 3. The Tragedy of Brooke Astor 1:05:57 4. The NYC Socialite Who Made Her Teenage Son Kill His Own Grandfather for $10 Million: Frances Schreuder 1:24:01 5. She Had A $12 Million Trust Fund… Then Got Murdered Over a Rent Dispute: Nancy Pfister --------------------------- Doris Duke, the tobacco fortune heiress worth over $1 billion, killed her interior designer Eduardo Tirella on October 7, 1966, when she crushed him with her 2-ton station wagon at the gates of her Newport mansion Rough Point. The 53-year-old Duke had been arguing with Tirella about his decision to leave her employment and return to Hollywood when she accelerated through the wrought-iron gates, pinning him beneath her car. Despite witness testimony that Duke gunned the engine deliberately, Newport police ruled it an accident after Duke's wealth and social connections influenced the investigation. Hélène Pastor, Monaco's second-wealthiest woman controlling one-third of the principality's real estate, was shot 10 times in a hospital parking lot on May 6, 2014, dying May 21. Her son-in-law Wojciech Janowski, a Polish businessman with a fake Cambridge degree and Nazi collaborator father, had paid €365,000 for the hit after Pastor discovered his massive debts and threatened to cut off financial support. Janowski received a life sentence in October 2018 after confessing to orchestrating the murder of the woman worth $3.7 billion who had given each child €500,000 monthly allowances. Brooke Astor, the philanthropist widow worth $200 million, suffered horrific elder abuse at the hands of her son Anthony Marshall, who stole millions while she lived in squalor despite her vast fortune. Marshall forged documents, sold her beloved art collection, and left the 105-year-old woman sleeping on torn sheets in freezing rooms while he diverted her charitable donations to his own accounts. He was sentenced to three years in prison for stealing $60 million from his mother's estate. Frances Schreuder, a New York socialite obsessed with her inheritance, manipulated her teenage son Marc into shooting his own grandfather Franklin Bradshaw for $10 million in 1978. The 76-year-old auto parts magnate was gunned down in his Salt Lake City warehouse by his 17-year-old grandson, who Frances had psychologically tortured into believing murder was the only way to secure their financial future. Frances received life in prison while Marc was sentenced to five years to life, serving 12 years before parole. Nancy Pfister, heiress to a $12 million trust fund and Buttermilk Mountain socialite, was murdered in February 2014 by her tenants William and Nancy Styler over a rent dispute at her Aspen chalet. Despite her immense wealth, Pfister had become increasingly erratic and vindictive, threatening to evict the Stylers and destroy their lives over $6,000 in unpaid rent. The Stylers beat her to death with a hammer and hid her body in a closet before fleeing to Denver, where they were arrested days later. William Styler received 20 years in prison after pleading guilty to second-degree murder. These cases demonstrate how extreme wealth can corrupt moral boundaries, enabling the wealthy to view other human beings as disposable obstacles to their desires. From Newport mansions to Monaco palaces, from New York penthouses to Aspen chalets, America's elite used their fortunes not just to live in luxury, but to literally get away with murder.