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Quinn denied that and painted a very different portrait of his client: a self-made real estate magnate who is obsessed with privacy and works seven days a week, barely taking time off for vacations. "He doesn't have a chauffeur. He has only one car. He's a man who shines his own shoes, pumps his own gas," said Quinn. "We don't apologize for it -- he is a very wealthy man," said Quinn, who acknowledged that Donald Bren "lives a comfortable lifestyle." The billionaire's attitude toward the children was always clear to their mother, Quinn said. "Those promises were never made. There's not a scrap of paper. There are no witnesses. She never told anyone about these promises," Quinn said. Quinn showed jurors a series of four legal agreements involving child support entered into by Gold each time she became pregnant and after the children were born. The contracts, beginning in 1988, rose from $3,500 a month to $18,000 a month between 1992 and 2002. "These children never wanted for anything," he said. Chodos said that was not the issue. "They lived a nice life," he conceded. "But this is about what they were entitled to."
[Associated
Press;
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