Double   Lives, People with Secret & Double Lives , These smooth  operators   harbored hidden families, professions and even names from  their loved   ones. From suburban spouses to heads of state, check out their secret lives.Douglas Cone
For nearly 30 years, the wealthy tycoon secretly kept two families    living in the lap of luxury, 20 miles away from each other. He fathered    three children with his wife of 52 years and two with another woman.   Douglas Cone + double life, Douglas Cone + Tampa highway construction,  Hillary Carlson + former employee + Douglas Cone, Douglas Cone married  Hillary Carlson two weeks after wife's death, Donald Carlson + Douglas  Cone, 
Cone lived a secret double life for nearly 30 years, raising two    affluent families in lavish homes 20 miles apart — one with his wife of    52 years and the other with a former employee.
By all accounts, Jean Ann Cone never suspected her husband was using an    alias to carry on a relationship with Hillary Carlson, 18 years her    junior. He fathered three children with his wife and two with Carlson.
The double life unraveled this spring only after Jean Ann Cone died at    75 and Cone married Hillary Carlson two weeks later. Friends said they    learned of his new marriage in Sumter County, about an hour north of    Tampa, when the local newspaper printed a listing of local marriages.
Interestingly, the lives of the two families bore many similarities but   nothing raised suspicions that both households were headed by the same   man.
Jean Ann Cone and Hillary Carlson circulated among Tampa’s rich and    powerful. They both served as trustees at their children’s prestigious prep school.   Facilities at the school bore their names — the Jean Ann Cone Library   and Carlson Field — after generous donations by their husbands.
With his grieving children and grandchildren stunned by the development,    Douglas Cone’s double life became all anyone in Tampa society talked    about.
‘I FEEL BETRAYED’
“It’s so mean,” said Panky Snow, a lifelong friend of Jean Ann Cone who    double-dated with the couple and was a bridesmaid in their 1951   wedding.  “I feel betrayed by him too.”
The Cone family isn’t talking. But friends say the Cones’ daughter,    Julianne McKeel, was badly shaken by her father’s behavior. Her only    public statement was a curt comment to the St. Petersburg Times: “My    mother died, my father made a mess. And we all just want to be left    alone about it.”
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Douglas Cone did not return telephone calls to his office and efforts to    reach Hillary Carlson were unsuccessful. The 67-acre estate he shared    with Carlson and their two grown children in Lutz, about 15 miles  north   of downtown Tampa, is gated and not accessible.
It is not clear when Douglas Cone met Hillary Carlson, although in the   late 1970s she worked as a secretary  for one of his companies. Those   close to the family also don’t know  exactly how he managed to keep his   secret, other than Douglas Cone was  away on business most days of the   week.
Jean Ann Cone had made a name for herself as a fun-loving, spirited    philanthropist that many described as the “life of the party.”
“All I can say is she was just a wonderful person,” said Norma Gotay, the Cones’ housekeeper. “He was as nice as she was.”
Cone was the daughter of renowned University of Florida athlete Ashley Wakefield Ramsdel. She raised champion bulldogs and so loved the breed she once threw a party for Uga, the University of Georgia mascot, at a swanky Tampa restaurant when the team was in town for the Outback Bowl.
WIFE FOUND DEAD
In March, she was found dead in the driver’s seat of her Rolls-Royce    in the garage of the Cones’ 4,000-square-foot brick home on the golf    course of the city’s most prestigious gathering spot, the Palma Ceia    Country Club.
‘My mother died, my father made a mess. And we all just want to be left alone about it.’
— JULIANNE MCKEEL
Daughter of Douglas S. Cone She had last been seen alive by a friend who    had escorted her home from a small social gathering and watched  her   drive into the garage and close the door behind her. Police  believed  she  passed out after she had parked the car but before she  turned the   engine off.
Douglas Cone was out of town at the time of his wife’s death. McKeel    found her mother and summoned her father and police. Detectives noted    that when Douglas Cone arrived, he was clearly distraught at the loss of    his wife.
“He was really depressed. They cared about each other,” said Gotay, the housekeeper. “They had been married for so many years.”
Police — who didn’t learn of Cone’s other relationship until it was    publicly revealed in the Times in June — reinvestigated Jean Ann Cone’s    death at the request of the Cones’ three children and said there was  no   evidence of foul play.
SUSPICIONS RAISED
“The family was only suspicious because he remarried too quickly,” said    Sgt. Jim Simonson, who heads Tampa Police’s homicide squad. “That can   be  easily explained; it’s not like he met the woman two weeks before.”
Norman Cannella, the Tampa attorney representing Douglas Cone Jr., said    the family is satisfied with investigators’ findings, although it has    done nothing to mend their relationship with their father.
What concerns Jean Ann Cone’s friends now is that her husband’s behavior    will overshadow her memory. They want her remembered as an   effervescent  personality, who when it came to secrets had one — albeit a   benevolent  one — of her own.
“She had a secret fund called the ‘Cone Charity’ with the veterinarians    in Tampa,” Snow said. “If people had animals they wanted to adopt and    couldn’t afford the fees, she would tell them just   to charge it to  the Cone Charity, but don’t tell Doug.”
John Edwards
The former senator and White House hopeful was exposed for having an    extramarital affair with his campaign videographer, who then bore his    child. He allegedly siphoned campaign funds to cover    it all up.There's a natural temptation to look the other way as the    John Edwards story plays out. Don't. This story matters. To use a    time-honored phrase, "it's not just about the sex." The preternaturally    pretty and youthful Edwards is the Dorian Gray of American politics.   His  story has a lot to teach us about our culture and the way we choose   our  leaders.  John Edwards + secret affair, John Edwards + allegedly  more than $925,000 in contributions, The National Enquirer + John  Edwards affair + 2007, John Edwards + indicted + six felony charges,  John Edwards + opening statements + April 23, John Edwards + Rielle  Hunter + sex tape, 
And like so many tales of power, it eventually leads back to Wall Street.
I'm a Celebrity Politician... Get Me Out of Here!
Want to know what's wrong with our politics? He-e-e-re's Johnny! Edwards    is a political Charlie Sheen, a media superstar fueled by his own    addictions and ego. Why didn't we see it before? His story indicts the    Usual Suspects, celebrity-driven campaigning and the media's herd mentality. But it also shines an unflattering light on progressives, the Democratic Party, and many of us who take pleasure in thinking that we're "better than" our broken political system.
As a contender for America's Next Top President. John Edwards had it    all: the eyes, the smile, the catwalk confidence. Had Edwards won the    nomination, he'd have played Tyra Banks to John McCain's Janice Dickinson. Fans know how that turned out.
What Edwards never had was a resumé. His political track record was    cloudy at best. He wrote an editorial on Iraq in 2002 in support of    Bush's war, not against it. In 2004 he ran as a cipher with a strong    personal presence but a content-free message. He fell flat in his one    critical performance that year, the Vice-Presidential debate with Dick    Cheney. He was a high-octane salesman, a David Mamet character  motivated   by the sale and not the product.
Yet the media never stopped referring to Edwards as an inevitable    Presidential contender. And when he ran in 2008 on an unambiguously left    platform, progressives embraced him without ever asking him how he   went  from being the hawkish John Edwards of 2002 to the proudly   anti-war  candidate of 2008.
Will the Real John Edwards Please Stand Up?
As the nation now knows, he also went from being "Johnny Reid Edwards"  to "John Edwards." As Zach Carter points out, "Johnny   Reid Edwards"  sounds like the name of a journeyman slide guitar player. But Edwards  dropped the "Johnny" to   distance himself from his roots. Like an  illicit lover, his Southern   upbringing was only brought out when it  was time to meet his needs.
I only saw Edwards in person once, at an impromptu press conference. He    seemed frenetic, agitated, wired, like a whippet dog whose Alpo had   been  laced with methedrine. Later that day I co-hosted The Young Turks   with  Cenk Uygur. Before the show Cenk said "Hey, something funny   happened  today. I was near the Beverly Hills Hotel and ran into John   Edwards..."  We now know that Edwards had visited Rielle Hunter at that   hotel the  night before.
Now we've all learned too much about John Edwards and his double life    with Rielle. Some of us feel a little dirty because we've read about the    secret payments, seen the sleazy video "interviews" (where she plies    him with flattering questions and he answers with flirty looks), and    heard about the pregnant sex video. Ugh. In the words of another    Northern guitar player, I "wish I didn't know now what I didn't know    then."
Old Money
But we do know. And we know that money kept his secret. Money's as big    an ingredient in the John Edwards story as sex. Edwards has shown us    that powerful politicians have a different relationship with money. Rich    and powerful people are all too happy to write them checks or provide    them with expensive favors.
Edwards had two financial benefactors for his cover-up -- the late Fred    Baron, and Bunny Mellon, the then 99-year-old heiress to the Mellon    fortune. Johnny Reid Edwards remained a Presidential contender only    because he was able to tap some of the oldest, most institutionalized    Wall Street money in the country through the Mellon family.
Bunny made her money the old-fashioned way: She inherited it. Born into a    rich family, she became a lot richer when she married Paul Mellon.    Paul's fortune originated with Thomas Mellon, who made his millions    during the robber-baron era when rich and unscrupulous people could    amass near-monopolistic wealth and then use it to crush competition,    kill the free market, and corrupt the political process.
You know, like now.
Paul's father was Andrew Mellon, Treasury Secretary under Warren Harding    and Herbert Hoover. Andrew's attitude toward Americans victimized by    Wall Street was brutal and shockingly direct: "... liquidate labor,    liquidate stocks, liquidate farmers, liquidate real estate... purge the    rottenness out of the system ... People will work harder, live a more    moral life. Values will be adjusted, and enterprising people will pick    up from less competent people."
Those sentiments might not seem out of place in a Treasury Department    meeting about home foreclosures today. And they'd fit in perfectly at    Republican meetings about any economic subject, from Medicare to    union-busting.
The Other "Other America"
Edwards' "The Two Americas" theme was destined to fail. While the vast    majority of Americans live in the rocky, real, America, they're  citizens   of that other America in their dreams -- dreams fueled by  media   celebrities like John Edwards. Without his wealthy friends,  Edwards'   dream candidacy would have died. How can a politician who  owes his   position to secrets favors from the wealthy ever be a real  reformer?
Here's another question: How many other politicians have owed this kind    of secret debt? It wasn't inevitable that Edwards' secret would come    out. Other secrets haven't.
Edwards may or may not have broken current law. But a system that allows    powerful politicians to be in thrall to wealthy "friends" should be  on   trial, and his case provides a strong argument for making actions  like   his illegal in the future.
Maybe the Edwards case makes some of us uncomfortable because we don't    like what it shows us about ourselves. Reporters who traveled with him    must have seen the strange and disturbing mania I saw that day, yet  they   ignored it. Progressives were all too willing to set skepticism  aside   to embrace what, in the end, turned out to be manipulation and   flattery.
And Democrats who feel superior to the GOP's field of trivial contenders    might be reminded that their 2008 primaries were dominated by   celebrity  candidates -- a pretty boy, a First Lady, and a new   politician made  famous by one televised speech. Their bitter primaries   were driven more  by Democrats' self-identification with one candidate   or another than by  substantial differences over the issues.
In Oscar Wilde's Picture of Dorian Gray, a man stays eternally youthful    while the face in his portrait reflects all the cynicism, corruption,    and ravages of his life. Here's an unpleasant possibility worth    considering: that if John Edwards is Dorian Gray, the rest of us are the    picture.
Michael Fenter
An organic farmer and boat repairman from Port Townsend seemed like your    typical married father of three. In October 2009, his unwitting wife    found out he was a suspected serial bank robber.The call came out of  the   blue a week ago Friday. It was the FBI, asking to speak with  Kateen   Fenter.They said her husband, Michael, was in jail and that he  was   accused of bank robbery.From Washington all the way down to  California,   he is suspected of four armed robberies in all."We've been  married for   20 years," Kateen Fenter said Saturday. "Everything's  been beautiful  and  wonderful. Now my whole life is falling apart."On  Thursday, Michael   Fenter was charged in U.S. District Court with  robbing a bank in  Tacoma.  Michael Fenter + double life, Michael Fenter  + $73,000, Michael Fenter +  "John Doe bandit" , Michael Fenter +  Seattle, Tacoma, San Francisco and Sacramento, Michael Fenter sentenced  to 10 years in prison, 
Before that, he had never been charged with a crime. He had Kateen, and    three kids, and a Port Townsend farm to take care of. Until earlier   this  year, he had a job with a boat-repair business. And now he may be    facing years in prison."No one can understand it," Kateen Fenter said.    "It's very out of character. Even the FBI says they don't    understand."Kateen and Michael, 40, had known each other for 25 years,    since they were kids.
In 2007, they had bought 40 acres near Discovery Bay, called Compass    Rose Farm. They arranged for the stream and the woods to remain    protected in perpetuity through a land trust. They raised sheep and grew    produce and hay. They had a trickle of income, but it was enough.
"Our lives are simple," Kateen Fenter said. "We're not a credit-card    family." She said other than the farm, they have no debt. Her parents    live with them and help out with the mortgage.
According to charging documents, Fenter is accused of entering a Bank of    America branch in Tacoma on Oct. 8, demanding an employee fill a sack    with money and claiming to have a bomb in a box that he carried. He   said  he represented a group of people who were angry at the    government.Fenter allegedly left the bank with $73,000.
Police were waiting outside, tipped off by a 911 call. They arrested    their suspect, who was carrying a .40 caliber handgun in his waistband,    court documents state. The box contained a blasting cap, a small    explosive device. Police said there were stacks of money and two more    weapons in his car, and that his fingertips were coated in Super Glue.
Initially, Fenter declined to identify himself, instead saying his name    was Patrick Henry, which prompted the FBI to nickname him the "John  Doe   bandit." Eventually, they determined John Doe was Fenter.Even    authorities are scratching their heads.
"It is very unusual for us to find a bank robber who is just a normal    upstanding citizen," FBI spokeswoman Robbie Burroughs said. A typical    bank robber, she said, is someone who is "extremely down on their luck."    They are often drug users."It is unusual to find somebody who is a    working family man involved in this kind of activity," Burroughs    said.She declined to comment on possible motives.
The FBI is investigating whether Fenter robbed a Washington Mutual    branch in downtown Seattle on Feb. 4, leaving a suspicious bag behind    that prompted an evacuation of the building and a street closure. Fenter    also is being investigated in connection with two bank holdups in    Sacramento and San Francisco, an FBI official said Saturday.When the FBI    called, Kateen Fenter recalled: "I couldn't believe what they were    saying could be true."
Kateen managed the farm, which sold eggs, lamb meat and produce, while    Mike worked at a boat-repair yard 14 miles away in Port Townsend. A    friend said he quit last January, for reasons that are unclear."They    were farmers, and he was a working guy," recalled Matt Elder, owner of    the Sea Marine boat repair yard.
Elder called the news of Fenter's arrest "bizarre. ... It comes as a    huge shock to anyone who knew him and the family, and the hard work that    was going on out at the farm."
A friend, Becca Lupton, said, "I just have been walking around in a fog    because it seems unbelievable." She met Fenter four years ago when he    was a student at the Northwest School of Wooden Boatbuilding in nearby    Port Hadlock and she was a waitress at the Ajax Café across the  street.
"He was just a really nice, solid, friendly person. He would always help    out with anything," Lupton said. She said he was excited about    acquiring the farm property, going back to the land and homesteading.
Since Michael Fenter has been jailed, Kateen has spoken with him only    once. She sits by the phone in case he calls again — inmates can only    call collect, she said, and they can't call collect to a cellphone.
She steeled herself for his first court appearance, which she expected to occur last Monday, but it kept getting pushed back.
On Friday, Kateen Fenter finally went to court and saw her husband.
Afterward, in the lobby, she broke down sobbing.
He has not yet entered a plea.
Over the past few days, friends and family have tried to be supportive.
Fenter said her kids are devastated.
"I love my husband," she said. "I don't know what will happen to us."
Nicholas Francisco
When this former ad man returned home to his pregnant wife and two kids,    police started a search and an online campaign got under way. He was    later found living under a different name and leading a swinging    lifestyle in clubs and online.To his wife and college sweetheart,    Nicholas Francisco seemed to be a perfect prince.Francisco and Christine    Carter met, fell in love, married and settled into a suburban life    outside Seattle. Daughter Zea came along, followed by a son, Noah. The    family became regulars at a conservative church. And Francisco got a  job   as art director for a top ad agency.  Nicholas Francisco + double  life, Nicholas Francisco + Alex Martin, Nicholas Francisco + wife found  secret bank account, Nicholas Francisco + America's Most Wanted,  Nicholas Francisco + There are lots of kids that don't have dads., 
With a third child on the way, their budget was stretched some. But to    Carter, life with Francisco was all right."He was everything that I had    dreamed of,'' she said. "I felt like Cinderella."
But on a winter morning in 2008, Francisco, 28, leaned in to kiss his    pregnant wife goodbye. "Oh, my poor, sweet Bella, I love you," he said.    Carter would not know until several weeks later that her prince was    saying goodbye forever.
Watch the full story Tuesday on "Primetime: Family Secrets" at 10 p.m. ET
That night, Francisco vanished on his way home from work. What followed    was a mystery that began with nightmarish worries of foul play and   ended  in a different kind of nightmare.
Francisco was very much alive. And he had been leading a troubling double life.
The couple had met nine years before at art school. Carter was    interested even before "hello." He was so good-looking that her jaw    dropped when she first set eyes on him, she said. Soon the two would    discover that they both had troubled childhoods.
Courtesy Christine Carter
Nicholas and Christine Francisco with their two children in 2005.
Francisco's father had walked out on his family when he was 16. Carter    said she had been abused as a child. But in him, she found someone she    could trust. And with her, he was not too afraid to tie the knot.
"When you're a little girl, and you're thinking about your knight in shining armor, he was it," said Carter.
His friends and co-workers say he was likeable, fun and sometimes a little nutty.
"He was kind of a little bit crazy, the guy sticking his head out the    window yelling and screaming as we're driving," said Matt Donovan, his    best friend.
But he was also mysterious, said Kristina Muller-Eberhard, his    supervisor at Publicis, the multinational advertising and communications    firm. "There's a bit of a dark side to him, troubled, I should say.  He   kept a lot to himself."
Just after 6:00 p.m. on February 13, Francisco called his wife and    promised to be home soon to bake Valentine's Day cookies with the kids.    It had been a fairly ordinary work day, said Muller-Eberhard.  Francisco   seemed happy that day. He had been making jokes.
At home, the children were excited to begin baking with their father.
When Daddy Disappears: Family Fears Foul Play
As time ticked by, Zea asked, "Mommy, why didn't Daddy come home and    make cookies?" At first, Carter was irritated. He had promised to be    home. But by 9 o'clock, her aggravation was giving way to worry.
"That wasn't like him. He always called me," she said. When Francisco    was stuck in traffic and just 15 minutes late, he would routinely call.
Finally, after he did not call and she could not reach him on his cell,    Carter put the kids to bed. At 10 p.m., she called 911. She was told  to   wait three more hours and call back if she still had not heard from   him.
She paced for a while. And then she started calling hospitals, friends, and family. But no one had any information.
At 1 a.m. she called 911 again. "I said, 'You don't understand. He's not    the same as every other man. This man wouldn't leave me. He wouldn't    just walk out.'"
Police responded quickly, assigning a detective to the case in the    morning."We had no known motive,'' said Detective John Holland.
Francisco seemed to be clear of any connections to the drug world, or    anyone on the outskirts of society. And he seemed to be an ordinary    homebody, Holland said.
An army of friends, family, church members and co-workers organized a    massive search for Francisco, scouring the streets for hours along his    route home, hanging "Missing" posters everywhere. The ad agency where  he   had worked hired a private investigator, and, for a time, shut down   his  department so employees could hit the streets and hand out  flyers.
"We were really worried,'' said Muller-Eberhard. "One of your co-workers    go missing, you know, you want to do something about it."
Carter gave interviews to reporters, hoping to unearth some leads for authorities.
"If you can't find him, these kids don't have a daddy,'' she said in one television interview.
The national media picked up the story and Francisco's disappearance was featured on the "America's Most Wanted" website.
The attention brought more volunteers and other community support. "The donations kept flooding in. I was overwhelmed."
People gave money, and brought clothes and food.
Amateur sleuths from around the country offered clues and proffered    plots. Some wondered if Francisco's wife had killed him. At least two    psychics told police he was dead.Police also wondered if Carter was    responsible and brought her in for interrogation. "I was accused of    things that never even crossed my mind,'' she said. "Murdering him.    Cheating on him. Scamming the public for donation money."
Authorities asked about life insurance and the donations she'd received. "All I wanted was my husband to be found,'' she said.
The Search Continues
Six days after Francisco went missing, his red Toyota was found. But the    car yielded no evidence of foul play, or much of anything else, said    Holland. Search dogs could not find a scent to follow.
Still, buoyed by the finding, volunteers rallied. "It gave us some more    hope,'' said Lee Brown, a family friend. "So we actually got another    search party together, right there in the middle of the condo complex  at   night. It was pretty heartwarming to see this many people want to  get   involved."
"I just remember screaming,'' said Carter, after hearing his car was found. "But I knew it was the beginning of the end."
Police were checking every dead body that turned up in the area. They    also tried, without success, to obtain Francisco's cellphone records.    Since it was not yet clear that any crime had been committed, the court    would not grant police access."
But police had more luck at Francisco's job site. When they searched his    office, they made a stunning discovery on his desk: a receipt for    condoms.
When police told Carter, she said, "There's no way."
"I'm pregnant. We've been trying for a year to have a baby. And I finally got pregnant. We have not used condoms."
Carter grasped at explanations and suggested to police that a clerk must have made a mistake.
But then she found evidence on her husband's computer that he was hiding    money in a secret bank account and using it to pay for things he did    not want her to know about.
While she was home struggling to feed the kids, he was eating out. And    when police finally got hold of Francisco's cell phone records, they    discovered that the supposedly devoted husband and father had been    leading a double life.He was seeing other women. And not only had he    been cheating, but he was a player and a swinger, authorities said. He    had Internet names like "Fun Time Steve" and "Horny Steven." His  MySpace   page listed his interests as "women," "couples," "sex" and  "nudity."  He  listed his sexual orientation as "bi."
They also found that some of the money in the secret bank account had    been used to pay for adult websites specializing in hooking up.
"He was soliciting sex," Carter said. "I felt so sick."
Clues led police and Carter to an anything-goes sex club in Seattle, the    "Wet Spot," and a local bar where he met swingers at their weekly    parties.
By now, Carter was re-evaluating her feelings about the life they had led. She was realizing that she had missed many clues.
Hope Turns into Heartache: Missing Man Left for New Life
"I feel like an idiot,'' she said. "How did I not see this stuff?"
She was forced to choose between two horrible versions of reality: a    dead husband or one who would leave her and her children. It was easier    to think of him as dead.
"That means that he didn't actually choose to leave me and my children, that he didn't actually choose to walk away," she said.
Carter filed for divorce. She later gave birth to their third child, a boy.
Police could not find Francisco. They made him "King of Spades" on a    missing persons card deck.Eventually the case lost momentum.
But then Carter received a call from a state employee telling her that a    child support check was waiting for her. When she had filed for    divorce, the absent Nicholas Francisco was classified as a deadbeat dad.
He then made the mistake of opening a bank account in Los Angeles and it    was flagged by Washington State, which confiscated his money.
Francisco, who was living under an assumed name, tried to get his money back before closing the account and disappearing again.
ABC News tracked Francisco down outside his new home in Los Angeles. He    did not want to see photos of his children and he had little to say.
He told one Seattle reporter he felt guilty about wasting everyone's    time, energy and sympathy. Then he said no, they did it for selfish    reasons.
"It doesn't surprise me,'' he said. "It's what people do. They want to    feel good about themselves, that they're doing something."
His old friend, Donovan, said he feels betrayed. "You just feel like,    like you've been like you've been…played for a fool. And now he's gonna    get away with it."
Now divorced, Carter lost their house to foreclosure. She has remarried    and lives with her new husband and her three children, squeezed into a    basement apartment. She is forced to pay off Francisco's student  loans,   since she signed on as a co-borrower.
After those initial garnished wages, he hasn't given her another cent.    So far the state of California has yet to go after Francisco for more.    As Detective Holland told ABC News: so far, Francisco appears to be    getting away with it.
Today, as she tries to get by, she has to explain it all to her children. Zea, now seven, still remembers her father.
"We remember the good memories. And we cry together about the good    memories. I mean, she always asks at the very end, 'Why did Daddy    leave?'
"My answer is the same. 'Because he decided he didn't want to be a daddy or a husband anymore because he was being selfish.'"
Vito Fossella  He's a former five-term congressman who fathered a child in an    extramarital affair with a retired Air Force lieutenant colonel.    Meanwhile, he had a wife and three kids at home.Rep. Vito Fossella could    be looking to get back into the race for his House seat.Nobody seems   to  know for sure, but rumors to that effect exploded across the 13th    Congressional District last night after voters this weekend began    receiving calls from a polling firm, asking them for their opinions    about the scandal-scarred representative.  Vito Fossella + DWI arrest  led to admitting affair, Vito Fossella + Staten Island GOP endorsement, 
"I assume the poll is being done by him, or on his behalf," said one    veteran Island political observer who believes Fossella might be angling    to get back in the race.
"Why else would you poll now? Nothing else makes sense."
Said another: "I heard that Vito's back in. How true that is, I don't    know. It could be a trial balloon. If there's a big public outcry, maybe    they won't go through with it."
Fossella (R-Staten Island/Brooklyn), who declined to run for re-election    after revelations that he'd fathered a child with a Virginia woman    during an extramarital affair, couldn't be reached for comment last    night.
Of course, there is one large obstacle to Fossella getting the GOP    nomination for the race: Former Assemblyman Robert Straniere, who won a    Republican primary for the nod last Tuesday.
The only way Straniere, who is an attorney, can be removed from the    ballot at this late date is if he dies, moves out of state or is    nominated to run for a judgeship.
Straniere, whose brother, Philip, is an acting state Supreme Court judge, last night said he wasn't going anywhere.
"Why would I step aside?" Straniere told the Advance. "I just won a    Republican primary. They've got the wrong Straniere. My brother's the    judge. I have one ambition: To be the representative for the 13th    Congressional District. I'm the Republican candidate, and I fully expect    to be the next congressman."
While sources said that a deal had been struck in the last day or two    for Straniere to step aside, Straniere last night said that he knew    nothing of any plan, and had not been approached about getting off the    ballot.
"This sounds like more spin and dirty tricks from disgruntled members of    the GOP," said Straniere, who has had a rocky relationship with   borough  Republican Party chieftains for years.
State Sen. Andrew Lanza (R-Staten Island) is the only GOP elected    official who has backed Straniere's bid. Others have stayed on the fence    or have said outright that they will not support Straniere.
Fossella could also get back in the race on the Conservative Party line    if Paul Atanasio, who is also an attorney, can be persuaded to step    aside and run for a judgeship. But political observers said that it    would be difficult for an incumbent even with Fossella's name    recognition to win on a third-party line.
Complicating matters is the fact that Fossella faces an October court    date for his May 1 DWI arrest in Virginia, the event that led to the    revelations about his affair and love child. That court appearance, if    it's not postponed, would occur right in the heart of the campaign    season.
Republican elected officials and borough GOP chairman John Friscia did    not return phone calls last night, but one person familiar with the    situation said that if a movement is afoot to put Fossella on the    ballot, it's been a closely guarded secret.
"Everybody's in the dark," he said. The Fossella camp could also be    waiting to see the results of the poll before making any decision. One    person who heard about the poll said respondents were asked  specifically   about their feelings regarding Fossella's DWI arrest and  secret double   life in Virginia.
Strong voter sentiment against Fossella in the poll could be enough to scotch the whole effort.
Fossella's re-entry into the race would provide yet another twist to an    Island political scene that's already been turned upside down.
The party's original replacement candidate for Fossella, Frank Powers,    died in the spring, and the GOP had great difficulty finding another    candidate until the Republican leadership, including, by most accounts,    Fossella, settled on Straniere.
City Councilman Michael McMahon, the Democratic nominee   in the race,  did not immediately return a phone call seeking comment   last night.
Gordon Getty
The oil heir billionaire had a longtime affair and fathered three    children with his L.A. mistress, while his wife raised their four sons    in his hometown.San Fransisco high society was in uproar yesterday  after   learning that its leading light and one of the world's richest  men,   Gordon Getty, had admitted leading a dual existence by keeping a  secret   second family in Los Angeles.  Gordon Getty + double life,  Cynthia Beck + Gordon Getty, Ann Getty + Gordon Getty, Gordon Getty +  family fully supportive, Gordon Getty + daughters filed petition + name  change, 
Mr Getty, who has a wife and four children in San Fransisco, confessed    to his double life after a Los Angeles woman, Cynthia Beck, went to    court on behalf of her three daughters.
She is asking the judge to allow the girls to change their name to Getty and lodge claims for a share in the family fortune.
The three girls are 8, 10 and 14 years old, suggesting that Mr Getty had    lived with his secret since the mid-80s at least. The philanthropist    and composer - the fourth of five sons of the oil magnate J Paul Getty  -   was reported to be on a sailing holiday in Europe, but his  spokesman,   Larry Kramer, issued a statement on his behalf.
The statement appeared to have been written several months earlier in anticipation of the scandal becoming public.
"Nicolette, Kendalle and Alexandra are my children. Their mother,    Cynthia Beck, and I love them very much. The most important concern is    that the children's needs be addressed … this will be our first    priority," the statement said.
"The Getty family has been fully supportive throughout this situation, and for that I am very grateful," it said.
According to the California press, Mr Getty's wife Ann and his four sons    had known about his other children for some time. Family friends  cited   by the San Jose Mercury said Mrs Getty, who is known for her  interests   in book publishing, anthropology and interior decor, was not  seeking a   divorce, although other sources claimed that there were  problems in  the  marriage.
A lawyer for the three girls, Stephen Burgin, said that he did not expect any opposition from Mr Getty to their name change.
"The father has not expressed any problems with that," he said,    referring to it as a "pretty perfunctory" process. However, the next    hearing on the case has been postponed until November.
Mr Burgin said that the girls were the motive force for the court case.    "They know and love their dad and wanted to bear his name. It's fairly    straightforward. Their mother is aware of it, but this is not her   issue,  it's their issue," he said.
The revelations about Mr Getty's double life are just the latest chapter    in a colourful, mega-wealthy dynastic history. For many years the    family led a reclusive life after one of Gordon Getty's nephews, Jean    Paul Getty III, was kidnapped in 1973. The dynasty's patriarch, J Paul    Getty, helped pay the $3.2m (£2m) ransom and the 16-year-old boy was    returned, but not before the kidnappers had cut off his ear.
In the 80s, Mr Getty got out of the oil business, selling the company    his father founded to Texaco for $10.1bn, making him the richest man in    the United States, according to Forbes magazine. Instead, with assets    valued last year at over $2bn, he became a leading member of the San    Fransisco music scene.
He attended the San Francisco Conservatory and turned his hand to    composing. His opera, Plump Jack, was performed by the San Fransisco    Symphony Orchestra.
While his brother John-Paul Getty II has chosen to lead a reclusive life    in London, Gordon and Ann Getty have revelled in their role as the    monarchs of San Francisco society. They have hosted grandiose    fundraising dinners for President Bill Clinton and the Democrats, and    have lent their Pacific Heights mansion for high profile social events    such as the wedding of US television star Don Johnson.
Anna Gristina
She’s a suburban mom of four who rescues animals by day but was arrested    for allegedly running a high-profile brothel by night. The Scottish    mother-of-four accused of running a high-class Manhattan prostitute  ring   has told how she is resisting police attempts to pressure her  into   naming alleged clients.In an interview from her jail cell on the    notorious Rikers Island prison, Anna Gristina denied being the madam  of a   brothel catering to wealthy high-fliers.
She disclosed that she was refusing to betray the men to the police,  insisting they are merely friends and business associates.  Anna  Gristina + five-year DA investigation, Anna Gristina + one count of  promoting prostitution, Anna Gristina + $2 million bond at Rikers  Island, Alleged partner Jaynie Baker turns herself in, 
“I’d bite my tongue off before I’d tell them anything,” she told the New    York Daily Post. “They are trying to sweat me out, they are clearly    trying to break me.”
In a rambling interview, Miss Gristina also complained about the    conditions on Rikers Island, where she is being held in solitary    confinement as she awaits trial on a single charge of prostitution.
Prosecutors say they have hundreds of hours of secret recordings of Miss    Gristina, including discussions of connections in the law enforcement    world who she said would tip her off if she was under investigation.
She is alleged to have boasted of having made more than $10 million    (£6.4 million) from prostitution over a 15 year period, most of which    she had sent out of the country to avoid detection.
In the interview, however, Miss Gristina insisted that she was a    suburban “hockey mom” who has a modest income from the real estate    development firm she owns with her third husband, Kelvin Gorr, out of    their home in upstate New York, where she also runs a pot-bellied pig    sanctuary.
Her lawyers claim that she was seeking funds to establish a legitimate    dating website when she was arrested as she met a banker from JP Morgan    on Manhattan’s Madison Avenue last month.
“They say I’ve made millions for years, and I have – for other people,”    she said. “I know people. It’s like a politician. You say things to   make  yourself sound better.
“We live very much a simple life. I’ve been struggling to keep my    daughter in college to pay the tuition. Our utilities are always on the    verge of being cut off. I can show you the bills.”
Miss Gristina, who grew up in a small village near Edinburgh before    emigrating to the United States in her early 20s, claimed that the    reason she was not facing more charges was because prosecutors had    little evidence against her as she had refused to co-operate with    police.
She said she had been presented with a list of 10 well-connected New York men who officials alleged were her clients.
“Some I knew, some I didn’t,” Miss Gristina said. “In effect it was,    ‘Tell us what we want, and we’ll let you go.’ The ones I knew were    people I’ve known for a long time who are in politics, investing and    real estate.
“I didn’t have anything to tell them. I got the impression they were    trying to make a case, but they didn’t really know what it was.
“You know what it was? It was fishing. They are trying to squeeze me for information that I don’t even know what it is or have.
“It’s not about me, it’s bigger than me. If I’m such a big, high-profile    madam making all this money, and they had to investigate me for five    years, why did they arrest me on a single promoting prostitution    charge?”
Miss Gristina complained that she was being kept in a “sweltering,” smelly cell in isolation on Rikers Island.
“Picture an old military barracks, with plastic mattresses and rusty    springs. I’m in there by myself. It smells like cat urine. It’s just    deplorable,” she said.
Chris Hutcheson
Hutcheson — a longtime business partner with his celebrity chef    son-in-law — was discovered hiding a second family of two children with    his mistress.The celebrity chef was awarded £250,000 in legal costs    after a judge found his father-in-law Chris Hutcheson and other members    of his family had illegally accessed his computers.  Chris Hutcheson +  second family, Chris Hutcheson + Frances Collins, Gordon Ramsay + hired  private detectives to investigate father-in-law, Chris Hutcheson +  obtained super-injunction, Chris Hutcheson + Sara Stewart + £5,000  retainer, 
It came after Ramsay, 44, launched legal action earlier this year after    discovering that personal messages between himself and his wife Tana   had  been read.
This week the court ordered her family pay £250,000 in legal costs after    Mr Justice Briggs ruled they had hacked into their personal emails  and   company computers.
Mr Justice Briggs found Mr Hutcheson, and his daughter Orlanda Butland    and son Adam Hutcheson were liable for breach of confidence. He also    ordered the trio hand over documents obtained as a result.
Making his order on Tuesday, Mr Justice Briggs said there was "no real    prospect of ... successfully defending the claims for breaches of    confidence", the paper said.
He said the three defendants should "pay to the claimants the sum of    £250,000 on account of the said costs, by 4.30pm on March 20, 2012".    Ramsay, who was not in court, was said to feel "vindicated" by his win.
The action came after he sacked Mr Hutcheson, 63, as chief executive of    his company following the discovery that he had raised a secret  family.
The High Court was told that Mr Hutcheson had raised two children with    Frances Collins, his mistress, funding them with his six-figure salary    as head of his son-in-law's global empire.
He also had four children with Greta, his unsuspecting wife, dividing his time and wealth between his two families.
The former chief executive of Gordon Ramsay Holdings, was accused of    withdrawing £1.42 million from the company to fund a double life with    his secret second 'wife' and family and paying £5,000 a month to a    separate mistress for doing nothing.
Details of Mr Hutcheson’s double-life were disclosed last year after the    Court of Appeal lifted a super-injunction he obtained in an attempt  to   keep his second life secret.
Ramsay then launched legal action, in which his 42-page writ alleged that dozens of highly personal messages were read.
They contained details of the couple's private lives, conversations about their four children and plans for a skiing holiday.
All other claims in the writ including allegations that Hutcheson, 63,    took the money his firm to fund his double life and paying alleged    mistress Sara Stewart will be heard in a later trial. Hutcheson and the    other parties deny the other allegations.
A source close to Ramsay told the Daily Mirror: "Given what Chris and    members of his family did, Gordon and Tana had no choice but to take    legal action. After what they have been subjected to they of course feel    vindicated by the decision."
Thomas Jefferson
The third U.S. president and author of the nation’s "self-evident    truths" is believed to have had a slave mistress and fathered at least    one (if not all) of her six children.Is it possible that one of the    first presidents was, in fact, a father to an unacknowledged child? DNA    tests have provided compelling evidence surrounding the speculation   that  Jefferson sired at least one child with his slave, Sally Hemings.    According to the museum dedicated to his estate, the rumor first found    footing in the public arena when a journalist published a story about   it  in 1802. Neither Jefferson nor Hemings ever addressed the   accusation.  To this day, Jefferson's paternity of any of her children   has not been  established with any absolute certainty.  James T.  Callender + Richmond newspaper accusation + Thomas Jefferson + Sally  Hemings , Thomas Jefferson + Sally Hemings + DNA analysis in 1998, Sally  Hemings + Martha Jefferson + half-sisters, 
Genetic testing conducting in the 1990s suggested that Heming's last    child was fathered by someone from the Jefferson clan, but the testing    used DNA from the descendants of Jefferson's uncle, since Jefferson    himself had no sons.
In September 2011, Robert Turner published a book drawing together    reports commissioned by the Thomas Jefferson Heritage Society that did    not show much support for the accusations. Yet the myth of Jefferson's    double life lives on.
Francois Mitterrand
France's former president started a long-term extramarital affair before    entering office and his mistress gave birth to a    daughter. The secret went public shortly before his death in 1996. A   new  book is set to reopen one of France's most enduring political   scandals  by revealing previously unpublished details of the affair   between former  president François Mitterrand and Anne Pingeot.
Une Famille au Secret (A Secret Family) describes how the middle-aged    politician met the 18-year-old schoolgirl and used his friendship with    her parents to later seduce her.
It claims that when Ms Pingeot fell pregnant by Mitterrand she was    packed off to London to avoid a scandal, and returned to give birth in    secret. Francois Mitterrand + prostate cancer, Paris Match + Francois  Mitterrand + photo of illegitimate daughter, French journalists kept  Mitterrand secret, Mazarine Pingeot Mitterrand + Not a Word + Bouche  Cousue, 
The authors, journalists Ariane Chemin and Géraldine Catalano, who    interviewed more than 80 figures from Mitterrand's circle, uncover    intimate details of a double life that was kept from the French public    for 18 years. Extracts from the book, published in L'Express magazine,    describe how Mitterrand, then 45, and Ms Pingeot - "a brunette with a    wasp-like waist" - met after he was introduced to her father in 1961 -    20 years before he became president. "The socialist leader seduced    everyone ... Anne listened, charmed ... He had charisma. She had    character."
Their affair is believed to have started some time around 1968. The    child was conceived during Mitterrand's unsuccessful presidential    campaign in 1974.
While the pregnancy did not show, Ms Pingeot continued to "shadow"    Mitterrand. Later, when it became obvious, she was sent to London for    four months, returning to a clinic in Avignon in December 1974 where she    gave birth to a daughter, Mazarine. Only her sister was present.  After   Mitterrand was elected in 1981, security chiefs were ordered to   protect  Ms Pingeot and Mazarine with "the greatest discretion".
L'Express said the book sought "to judge neither the use of public    money" to support Mitterrand's second family, "nor the private duplicity    of the former president", but to "dissipate the shadows" over the    affair.
Arnold Schwarzenegger
After a decade of secrecy, the former California governor and Hollywood    action hero came clean about fathering a child with a household   staffer.  The baby was born less than a week after his famous wife gave   birth to  their son.The child fathered by Arnold Schwarzenegger and  kept  a secret  is facing a changed life, but Schwarzenegger most likely   won't be  affected professionally by the scandal, experts say.
Schwarzenegger acknowledged Tuesday that he had fathered a child with a    household staffer during his 25-year marriage to Maria Shriver and  kept   it a secret. Last week, Schwarzenegger and Shriver announced  their   decision to separate.  Arnold Schwarzenegger + affair,   Schwarzenegger + After leaving the governor's office I told my wife  about this event,  Arnold Schwarzenegger + Maria Shriver + therapy, 
Schwarzenegger's camp has declined to confirm or deny the former    employee's name, which has been reported by ABC and People magazine as    Mildred Baena of Bakersfield, Calif. Schwarzenegger released a  statement   in which he apologized to his wife and four children and  asked for   privacy for his family.
The private world for the newest child in question, however, is quickly    becoming a thing of the past."There's going to be a very difficult    transition for this mother and child who have been unwittingly brought    into the limelight," says Jennifer Freed, a marriage, family and child    therapist who specializes in teenagers.
The child's life will be forever changed, which Freed calls a    "double-edged sword." If he didn't already know who his real father is,    that will bring a "shock" to the child, Freed says. Consequently,   "doors  could open to him that he never had before. Now he's Arnold    Schwarzenegger's son. It really is an entire leap of status overnight."
"These are just mind-blowing moments in life," says Gary Neuman, a    family therapist and author of Connect to Love. "One of the worst    feelings is embarrassment and humiliaition, especially in public. There    will be an emotional fallout for the child."
Neuman says the child has been put in an "unfair" situation.
"He's still going to have to go to school and might have to put up with    public ribbing," Neuman says. "He's lost his ability to be judged on   his  own. It's even harder because it comes out of the blue. It's not   like  he was born to a famous person."
Freed predicts that the child, who had no choice in his parents'    decision to keep him a secret, will be well-received by the general    public.
"People will pour their sympathy and compassion toward him. He will be    the recipient of a lot of love, but he will also have to bear the  shadow   of an illicit affair."
As for Baena, who will forever be known as the woman who helped rip    apart Schwarzenneger and Shriver's marriage, opportunities will arise    for her, as well.
"On the good side, it's going to empower this woman to be able to speak    out if she chooses to talk about this secret that she's kept for   years,"  Freed says. "That's never a healthy situation for anybody. When   we keep  a secret, we increase our level of shame and unworthiness.   This child  has been shrouded with this stigma since Day One, even   though it's just  now come out."
But now that the secret is out, Baena can take the proper steps forward to heal.
"When a mother gives birth it should be a celebration, but if you have    to silence your maternal nature, that's not healthy," she says. "To cut    that off because of protection for Arnold, possibly for herself, is   also  a deep wound in what is usually very celebratory moment in one's   life  cycle."
Freed and Neuman recommend intensive therapy for all parties involved    but especially the child. "Children are extremely resilient," Freed    says. "He (or she) can work it out."
Despite Schwarzenegger's behavior, his return to Hollywood probably won't be affected, experts say.
"This is not going to prevent the majority of people from seeing his    movies," says Patricia Leavy, associate professor of sociology at    Stonehill College in Easton, Mass.
"When there is such a public scandal there is a stain maybe forever, so I    don't think people will forget this. But at the end of the day, will    this impact whether people see his movies? I don't think so. In a    perverse way, it's a lot of free publicity."
Pop Eater columnist Rob Shuter says the scandal could actually help Schwarzenegger's return to the big screen.
"It certainly put him back in the public eye," Shuter says. "It's not as    shocking, as it's not something that is out of character. He's made a    lot of money by being a guy's guy. ... I think it reinforces his   brand."
Shuter says blaming Hollywood for tolerating bad behavior by celebrities is not fair.
"It's the people who buy the tickets who determine if he will be a    success or not," Shuter says. "The public has shown that with Mel    Gibson; they did not turn out to see The Beaver. We'll have an option"    about whether to support Schwarzenegger.
It will probably be awhile before a new Schwarzenegger film hits theaters.
"We'll probably have moved on to our next celebrity scandal or divorce" by then, Shuter says.
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