Control of Murdoch media empire at stake as hearing to proceed with
mogul and children
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[September 17, 2024]
By SCOTT SONNER AND ALEX VEIGA
RENO, Nev. (AP) — Rupert Murdoch and four of his children on Monday went
before a Nevada probate commissioner behind closed doors to an
evidentiary hearing that could decide who controls Murdoch's media
empire after his death.
The hearing scheduled to resume Tuesday and continue into next week
comes after Murdoch, 93, moved last year to change the terms of his
irrevocable family trust.
The New York Times reported, based on a sealed Washoe County court
document, that it was part of a bid to ensure that his eldest son,
Lachlan, remains in charge of his cadre of newspapers and television
networks, including The Wall Street Journal and Fox News Channel.
The court has kept the hearings closed to the public and most documents
sealed, largely rejecting requests for access by news organizations
including The Associated Press.
The trust was originally set up to give equal control over Rupert
Murdoch’s businesses to his four oldest children upon his death,
according to the Times.
Murdoch stepped down as leader of both Fox News’ parent company and his
News Corp. media holdings last fall. He is arguing that to preserve his
businesses’ commercial value for all his heirs, the trust must be
changed so Lachlan can ensure his newspapers and TV networks continue to
have a conservative editorial outlook, the Times reported.
Lachlan succeeded his father as chairman of News Corp. in November. He's
also executive officer at Fox Corp., home to conservative news network
Fox News, the Fox broadcast and sports networks, and local TV stations.
The media empire spans continents and helped to shape modern American
politics.
Rupert Murdoch's bid to change the trust has pitted him against his
other three children named as beneficiaries: James, Elisabeth and
Prudence, and they have united to stop their father from revising the
trust, according to the Times.
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Rupert Murdoch, center, and his wife Elena Zhukova Murdoch arrive at
the Second Judicial District Court in Reno, Nev., Monday Sept. 16,
2024. (AP Photo/Andy Barron)
Irrevocable trusts are typically used to limit estate taxes, among other
reasons, and can’t be changed without permission from the beneficiaries
or via a court order.
Nevada Probate Commissioner Edmund J. Gorman of the Second Judicial
District Court in Reno ruled this summer that Rupert Murdoch could amend
the trust if he can show that he is acting in good faith and for the
sole benefit of his heirs, the Times reported.
The court's ruling notes that Murdoch sought to give Lachlan permanent
and exclusive control over his companies because the mogul was worried
that a lack of consensus among his children could affect the strategic
direction at his companies, including potentially leading to a change in
editorial policy and content, according to the Times report.
The hearing is scheduled to continue into next week. More than 40
lawyers are listed on the court docket.
The first of the carloads of attorneys began to arrive Monday an hour
before the hearing, some divvying up boxes of legal documents to haul up
the courthouse steps through a throng of reporters with cameras and a
half-dozen sheriff’s deputies a few blocks south of Reno's main casino
district.
James Murdoch and his wife, Karen, and sister, Elisabeth Murdoch, came
next in separate vehicles in the same convoy of black SUVs. About 20
minutes later, Rupert Murdoch arrived with his wife, followed by Lachlan
Murdoch and wife, Sarah.
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Veiga reported from Los Angeles
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