The art of the steal
The Donald scored his new Virginia B&B, in the shadow of Thomas Jefferson's Monticello, for pennies on the dollar

In May, Donald Trump and his son Eric opened the 10-room trump Albemarle estate, a lavish bed-and-breakfast (rooms start at $399 a night) near Charlottesville, Virginia, in a manse that—in case you’ve been living in the bottom of a chardonnay barrel for the last couple of decades—formerly belonged to the late media billionaire John Kluge, once America’s richest man. Trump paid just a fraction of the assessed worth of the property, which has a tangled history.
1990Kluge and Patricia, a one-time nude model and actress, divorce Patricia settles for an estimated $100 million, plus Albemarle House.
2007–2011Patricia takes out some $65 million in loans to expand wine production and makes plans to build a luxe subdivision, Vineyard Estates, with 24 multimillion-dollar homes (it will never be completed).
Fall 2009Patricia lists Albemarle House for $100 million. In early 2010 she slashes the price to $48 million. Still no takers.
Summer 2010Kluge wines are well received (they’re served at Chelsea Clinton’s wedding), but winery finances are a mess. To help pay creditors, Patricia auctions personal property and Albemarle House furnishings, reaping $15.1 million for 933 items. In September John Kluge dies at 95.
December 2010An attempted auction of the winery attracts no bids, and Patricia’s lenders close in. Farm Credit of the Virginias takes possession of the winery after it fails to sell at auction a month later Southern National Bancorp of Virginia forecloses on Vineyard Estates.
June 2011Patricia files for personal bankruptcy.
Images: From Top: Ron Galella / Getty Images Andrew Shurtleff / Zumapress / Newscom(2) Getty Images Steve Helber / Ap Brendan Hoffman / Prime
First Published: Jun 30, 2015, 06:05
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