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Victoria Lynn Morgan met Alfred S. Bloomingdale in 1970 when she was seventeen years old bouncing through foster care and he was fifty-four, heir to the Bloomingdale department store fortune and Diners Club co-founder. ------------------- Gain FREE access to secret full-length episodes on wealthy women "too scandalous for YouTube" by joining our newsletter: https://www.substack.com/@oldmoneyluxury ------------------- TIMESTAMPS 0:00 Introduction 0:56 Chapter One: The Teenage Model and the Department Store Heir 4:51 Chapter Two: The Palimony Suit That Shocked Reagan's White House 8:06 Chapter Three: Living with a Time Bomb 11:07 Chapter Four: The Baseball Bat and the Sex Tapes 14:26 Chapter Five: Justice and Conspiracy ------------------- Victoria Lynn Morgan met Alfred S. Bloomingdale in 1970 when she was seventeen years old bouncing through foster care and he was fifty-four, heir to the Bloomingdale department store fortune and Diners Club co-founder. The power imbalance was absolute from their first meeting—a teenage girl who had nothing facing a multimillionaire who could buy anything and would soon join Reagan's exclusive Kitchen Cabinet of wealthy businessmen shaping presidential policy. His wife Betsy personified society elegance as Nancy Reagan's best friend and queen of charity balls, presiding over dinners where California's power brokers decided America's future. Alfred installed Vicki in apartments over twelve years, handling her two divorces from brief teenage marriages with financial assistance while cars appeared in her name and designer clothes filled closets creating complete financial dependence. Court documents filed in 1982 contained allegations about what she claimed to have endured, describing herself as his "therapist" coordinating encounters with other women in sessions following patterns she claimed were necessary to manage his psychological needs. When Alfred was diagnosed with terminal cancer in the early eighties, the financial arrangements that had sustained her for twelve years faced disruption as payments allegedly stopped after his death. Financial desperation drove Vicki to file an eleven-million-dollar palimony suit against the Bloomingdale estate in 1982, seeking recognition of what she claimed were promises of lifetime support. Her lawsuit went beyond monetary claims, making allegations about Alfred's private conduct that shocked conservative supporters and created sensational headlines during Reagan's presidency contrasting public morality with alleged private conduct. The judge applying established legal precedents concluded the arrangement was primarily financial rather than quasi-marital, devastating Vicki's legal position and leaving her facing poverty with her reputation destroyed. Marvin Pancoast, thirty-three years old and unemployed with documented mental health issues including psychiatric hospitalizations and suicide attempts, offered his North Hollywood condominium when homelessness seemed Vicki's only alternative. Court records detailed his medication regimens and how he had stopped taking prescribed treatments, a decision that would have serious consequences as tensions escalated in their shared living situation. On July 6, 1983 witnesses reported hearing a confrontation when Vicki announced she had found alternative housing and would be leaving, triggering what psychiatrists would later analyze as an acute psychological crisis in Pancoast. On July 7, 1983 Marvin Pancoast attacked Vicki Morgan in her bedroom while she slept, the multiple injuries ending her life at age thirty. Pancoast immediately called police to confess saying "I just killed someone" and waited calmly for their arrival, making no attempt to flee or deny his actions. Pancoast's attorney Arthur Barens held a press conference making claims about videotapes allegedly showing Alfred Bloomingdale and government officials in compromising situations similar to those Vicki had described in her lawsuit. Attorney Robert Steinberg then claimed he had secured these materials and scheduled a press conference to present explosive evidence, but at the appointed time announced the materials had disappeared from his possession. No recordings were ever found or independently verified to exist as police investigators found no evidence supporting the conspiracy theory during extensive searches of Pancoast's belongings, Vicki's possessions, and all connected locations.