Larry Hillblom

Larry Lee Hillblom
Born (1943-05-12)May 12, 1943
Died May 21, 1995(1995-05-21) (aged 52)
Known for Co-founding of DHL

Larry Lee Hillblom (May 12, 1943 – May 21, 1995) was an American businessman, and a co-founder of the shipping company DHL Worldwide Express.

Biography

Early life

Larry Hillblom was born on May 12, 1943, and raised in Kingsburg, California.

During his youth, he went to the Concordia Lutheran Church and attended Kingsburg High School.[1]:7 He attended Reedley College and Fresno State, eventually earning a law degree at the University of California, Berkeley's Boalt Hall School of Law and briefly clerked for San Francisco based attorney Melvin Belli.[2]

Company history

In December 1969 Matson Navigation Co. introduced new container ships (Hawaiian Enterprise Class) into its Hawaii cargo service. They were considerably faster than the older ships they replaced, and they saved several days off the crossing time from the US west coast to Hawaii. But with these faster vessels, the shipping documents could not be delivered by U.S. Postal Service to their Hawaii customers before the arrival of the goods.

Larry Hillblom approached Matson and told them that he could get their documents delivered in time. He did this by purchasing tickets for airline passengers who could take 350 pounds of accompanied baggage, and sending the Matson shipping documents with them. Other Hawaii companies with time-sensitive documents learned about and started to use the service.

In 1969 Hillblom co-founded DHL; the company was later transformed into a general air courier, and Hillblom's wealth expanded to several billion dollars. In the 1980s he moved to Saipan, where he started several businesses and development projects in Hawaii, Vietnam and the Philippines.

Life in Asia

In Vietnam, he spent US$40 million to restore the Dalat Palace Hotel and the Dalat Palace Golf Course. Other investments included the Novotel Dalat, Novotel Phan Thiet and Ocean Dunes Golf Course and the Riverside Apartments outside Ho Chi Minh City. The investment was made via an overseas holding company to avoid an American embargo against Vietnam. The Dalat Palace Hotel opened in 1995 under Hillblom and his Vietnamese partners' ownership, with management personnel provided by Accor.[3]

Disappearance

Hillblom was an aircraft enthusiast, and flew several vintage aircraft. His seaplane crashed on May 21, 1995, on a flight from Pagan Island to Saipan. The bodies of the pilot, Robert Long, and of a business partner were found, but Hillblom's body was never recovered.[4]

Paternity controversy

Hillblom's will stated that the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) would receive his estate, and did not specify any children in the 1982 will. There was no "disinheritance clause" in the will, which caused controversy.[5] After his death, Hillblom's estate was the subject of lawsuits from children fathered across the Pacific. According to Saipan law, illegitimate children born after a will has been drawn up are entitled to make a claim on the estate.[6]

Women from several Asian and Pacific countries made claims that he had deflowered them by committing statutory rape on them and was the father of their illegitimate children. Kaylani Kinney, the first woman to come forward, claimed to have given birth to a child, Junior Larry Hillbroom, fathered by Larry Hillblom. David J. Lujan (Guam), lead legal counsel and co-counsel Barry Israel (Santa Barbara, CA) for Ms. Kinney were responsible for filing the first claim on the Hillblom estate; several women throughout Asia later made similar claims. The law of the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas Islands, where Hillblom was a resident, awarded children, legitimate or not, first right to inheritance, overriding any will. However, since Hillblom's body was not recovered in the crash, there was no DNA that could be used to determine paternity. Mysteriously, his house in Saipan was discovered to have been wiped clean. The sinks had been scrubbed with muriatic acid, and toothbrushes, combs, hairbrushes and clothes were found buried in the backyard, making them useless for DNA testing.[5]

Investigators discovered he had had a facial mole removed at UCSF Medical Center, and it was still there; UCSF agreed to relinquish the mole (although its release could, of course, deprive UCSF of the estate if it could be used to prove Hillblom had sired children). It was later discovered that the mole was not from Hillblom.[5]

Hillblom's mother, brother, and half-brother initially refused to submit their DNA, which could also have been used to determine paternity of the children. David Lujan and co-counsel Barry Israel then dispatched a team of investigators to compare the DNA of all the children suing for claim on Hillblom'so estate. Lujan and Israel surmised that since the girls were located in different countries, if the children shared certain DNA markers, the only logical conclusion would be that they would almost certainly have the same father. In the end, a judge ordered Hillblom's brother and mother to submit to genetic testing. The tests confirmed that four of the eight claimants were Hillblom's children.[4]

It was ultimately determined that a Vietnamese child, Lory Nguyen; Jellian Cuartero, 5, and Mercedita Feliciano, 4, of the Philippines; and Junior Larry Hillbroom, of Palau were fathered by Hillblom. In the final settlement, each of the four children received a gross payment of $90 million, reduced to about $50 million after taxes and fees, while the remaining $240 million went to the Hillblom Foundation, which followed Hillblom's wishes and donated funds to University of California for medical research.[7]

A film by Alexis Spraic documenting the controversy that took place after Hillblom's death, titled Shadow Billionaire was first shown at the 2009 Tribeca Film Festival.[8][9]

See also

Notes

  1. Scurlock, James D. (2012). King Larry: The Life and Ruins of an American Billionaire Genius. New York: Scribner. ISBN 9781416589228.
  2. Troy, Stephen K. (February 8, 2011). "Special Delivery: Larry Hillblom". Business Biographies: Shaken, Not Stirred ... With a Twist. iUniverse. pp. 86–90. ISBN 978-1-4502-8326-7.
  3. Hookway, James (January 3, 2006). "A Vietnamese Hotel Gets Second Chance In 'Capital of Love'". WSJ. p. A1. Retrieved May 14, 2016.
  4. 1 2 Smith, Matt (2000-04-05). "Ca$h for Genes". SF Weekly. Village Voice Media Holdings, LLC. Retrieved 2012-07-02.
  5. 1 2 3 Robert Frank (March 20, 2000). "Settled Paternity Suit Makes A Millionaire Out of Junior Hillblom, Despite Downside". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 2 October 2016.
  6. MARY CURTIUS (May 20, 1999). "Asian Children Finally Get Part of $550-Million Estate". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2 October 2016.
  7. San Francisco Business Times, "The Week in Review", page 10, January 16, 1998.
  8. Shadow Billionaire, Tribeca Film Festival, 2009
  9. Shadow Billionaire (2009) at the Internet Movie Database

External links

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