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Tuesday, February 28, 2023

Clintons get to star at Lee Lincoln Center funeral

 Thomas H. Lee, the billionaire financier who suddenly took his own life last week, was mourned Monday as both a financial genius and a humble family man.

High-profile attendees, including the Clintons and Dr. Oz, rubbed elbows with former associates and grieving relatives at funeral services at Lincoln Center’s Alice Tully Hall for the man once known as the “envy of Wall Street.”

His widow, Ann Tenenbaum, shared a somber thought through Lee’s brother-in-law during the service.

“Ann wanted to share this with you,” David Bensinger said. “Let us all remember the 79 amazing years of Tom’s life and not let all that be obscured by one bad moment at the end.”

Lee’s brother, meanwhile, called the dead man “my rock and my pillar” — while noting even the family may never know why he decided to take his own life.

“As we all know, Tom left us too early and we will never have an answer,” Jon Lee said. “There’s a lot about each other we don’t know. We want everybody to think everything is okay all the time.Thomas H. Lee.

Financier Thomas H. Lee, once dubbed the “envy of Wall Street,” was found dead in his Manhattan office last week of a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
Bloomberg via Getty Images
Friends and family attend memorial services for Thomas H. Lee
Cars lined up for the memorial service in Manhattan.
James Messerschmidt for NY Post

“We owe it to Tom and we owe it to ourselves to talk to each other and not to hide behind walls,” Lee continued. “So, Tom, you were the master of the universe. In your own quirky way, I know you’re at peace.”

Lee, 78, was found dead of a single gunshot wound to the head inside the bathroom of his family office on Thursday, with the city medical examiner ruling his death a suicide.

A married father of five and grandfather of two, Lee was a financial titan who was once dubbed the “envy of Wall Street” for his business savvy — and powerful friends.

“Tom was a constant presence,” said Hillary Clinton, a longtime Lee pal who was joined by her husband, former President Bill Clinton, at the funeral.

Former President Bill Clinton
Former President Bill Clinton arrives at the celebration of life ceremony for Thomas Haskell Lee.
Jack Morphet/NY Post
Hillary Clinton
“I was exhausted and disappointed and the first people who said, ‘Hey, come be with us’ were Tom and Ann,” Hillary Clinton said.
Stefan Jeremiah for NY Post

“We’ve shared births and weddings and anniversaries, state dinners at the White House, lively parties from New York City to Martha’s Vineyard to the Hamptons during good times and tough ones,” she told mourners.

“We’re here expressing our gratitude for years as friends, as colleagues and certainly as family members for his long, successful life.”

Dr. Mehmet Oz, speaking to The Post outside Lincoln Center, called the funeral service “one of the most elegant and beautiful events,” and described it as “an outpouring of love” for Lee.

Dr. Mehmet Oz at the funeral of financier Thomas H. Lee.
Dr. Mehmet Oz was among the mourners for financier Thomas H. Lee, who was found dead in his Manhattan office last week from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
James Messerschmidt for NY Post
Thomas Lee
Lee was a married father of five and grandfather of two.
James Messerschmidt for NY Post
Friends and family attend memorial services for Thomas H. Lee at Alice Tully Hall
Attendees embrace each other over the loss of a loved one.
James Messerschmidt for NY Post

Lee was a Harvard grad who went on to become the king of lucrative leveraged buyouts.

At the height of his career, Lee invested $30 million to buy soft drink giant Snapple in 1992 — and flipped it just two years later by selling it to Quaker Oats for $1.7 billion.

In 1996, he teamed with Mitt Romney’s Bain Capital to buy credit reporting company TRW for $1.1 billion in a leveraged buyout and sold it for $1.7 billion just seven weeks later.

A close pal of the Clintons — who were frequent guests at his Hamptons mansion — Lee was also known for his art collection and his philanthropic endeavors.

Thomas H. Lee
Lee’s brother called him “my rock and my pillar” — while noting the family may never know why he decided to take his own life.
BLOOMBERG NEWS

“While the world knew him as one of the pioneers in the private equity business and a successful businessman, we knew him as a devoted husband, father, grandfather, sibling, friend and philanthropist who always put others’ needs before his own,” Lee family friend and spokesman Michael Sitrick said in a statement last week.

Authorities have not revealed why Lee took his own life.

According to a source who knew Lee well, the billionaire lost about 60 pounds in the last nine months, telling people he had been on a crash diet.

“He went from one extreme to another,” the source said.

Funeral for financier Thomas H. Lee.
Mourners gathered Monday at Alice Tully Hall to pay their final respects to financier Thomas H. Lee, who took his own life inside his Manhattan office last week.
James Messerschmidt for NY Post
Friends and family attend memorial services
High-profile attendees arrived to honor their dear friend.
James Messerschmidt for NY Post
Chelsea Clinton
Chelsea Clinton paid her respects to the Lee family.
James Messerschmidt for NY Post
Friends and family attend memorial services for Thomas H. Lee
Friends and family attend memorial services for Thomas H. Lee at Alice Tully Hall.
James Messerschmidt for NY Post

Lee was also a major political contributor whose massive mansion in the trendy Hamptons famously provided a sanctuary for the Clintons after a bruising 2008 presidential primary.

“I was exhausted and disappointed and the first people who said, ‘Hey, come be with us’ were Tom and Ann,” Hillary Clinton said Monday. “We got away from it all at their beautiful home in the Hamptons.

“It was a perfect place to escape, sleep, eat well and be in good company,” she said.

She described Lee as “a dedicated supporter” who “would demonstrate his partisan, even rabid political beliefs without much urging.”

https://nypost.com/2023/02/27/billionaire-thomas-h-lee-mourned-at-nyc-funeral-following-suicide/

US murderers stand a 50% chance of getting away with it: report

 Unprecedented increases in US homicides are being met with the lowest-ever clearance rate — leaving at least half of the killings unsolved, according to alarming data and experts.

Analyses of FBI data show that 71% of homicides were deemed solved in 1980 — dropping to an all-time low of only about 50% in 2020, the last time the data were compiled.

“We’re on the verge of being the first developed nation where the majority of homicides go uncleared,” Thomas Hargrove, founder of the Murder Accountability Project, told the Guardian.

A graph by the group shows that the clearance rate was even higher before 1980, seemingly marked as high as 90% in 1965.

A separate graphic shows a sudden spike in homicides in 2020 — with the number marked as solved barely increasing from preceding years.

Homicide clearance graphic.

The red for homicides shows a rapid rise around 2020, with the dull color representing solved cases barely increasing.
Murder Accountability Project

The Marshall Project — another nonprofit focused on criminal justice — also noted a “historic low” in 2020 of only “about 1 of every 2 murders” being solved.

Some experts blame the spike in 2020 on the pandemic, with the Big Apple among major cities to see shootings and murders skyrocket that year but later show signs of settling.

The Marshall Project and Murder Accountability Project compile data because there is no publicly available government database tracking homicides and the outcomes of police investigations into them.

The research is confounded by the fact that different agencies have different criteria for marking a case cleared.

Graph showing sharo decline of cleared homicides to around just 50%.
Statistics shows a dramatic decline in the number of homicides being cleared.
Murder Accountability Project

For most, it means someone has been arrested, charged and turned over to a court for prosecution.

However, the FBI also allows homicides to be marked clear over “exceptional means,” including when a victim refuses to cooperate to take a case to trial or when a suspect is being tried elsewhere for other crimes.

It also applies when the suspect dies, which critics call putting “bodies on bodies” to help boost clearance numbers, the Marshall Project noted.

Some experts, however, caution that the data do not take into account key factors that have also changed over the decades — suggesting that the lower clearance rate could in fact be a sign of progress.

“It also could be that the standards for making an arrest have gone up and some of the tricks they were using in 1965 are no longer available,” said Philip Cook, a public policy researcher at the University of Chicago Urban Labs who has been studying clearance rates since the 1970s.

He noted to the Marshall Project that outrageous cases where convicts are cleared because of “shoddy” evidence were at the time listed as a “successful” homicide clearance.

Stock image of a body in a morgue.
Experts are divided on what is to blame for the decreasing rate of homicides getting cleared.
Getty Images

Critics note previous reports that suggest the issue is particularly stark in
low-income black and Latino neighborhoods.

“People don’t need to see the data to know that the police are not doing their job,” Tinisch Hollins, executive director of a California justice reform group, told the Guardian.

“My perception is that police are failing to do their job.”

Others, however, suggest that the recent backlash against cops amid protests against police killings have also harmed investigations, both through defunded forces and witnesses unwilling to help.

“You hear every cop saying, ‘We can’t do better because they don’t cooperate,’” retired homicide detective John Skaggs, who now trains officers across the US, told the Guardian.

Peter Moskos, a professor at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice, previously told the Marshall Project that it was a vicious cycle.

“If people criticize the police constantly, it is natural that people would be less willing to talk to police,” Moskos said, with that handicapping any investigations and further raising criticism of cops.

The spike in cases has also overwhelmed many homicide squads.

“For us, it’s the volume,” veteran Philadelphia homicide detective Joe Murray previously told CBS News.

Murder Accountability chairman Thomas Hargrove, however, has blamed “a failure of political will by local leaders.”

“The Murder Accountability Project firmly believes declining homicide clearance rates are the result of inadequate allocation of resources — detectives, forensic technicians, crime laboratory capacity, and adequate training of personnel,” he said.

Either way, Jessica Pizzano of Survivors of Homicide noted the importance for families to see their loved ones’ killers taken off the streets.

“Is the murderer in my neighborhood? Will I run into them at the grocery store? Or when I’m pumping gas? … These are real fears that families live through,” Pizzano previously told the Marshall Project.

“They just want that person to never, ever do that to another family again.”

https://nypost.com/2023/02/28/us-homicide-clearance-rate-plunges-to-all-time-low/

Bioventus Agrees to $350m Potential Liability Reduction, Release of Future Claims from Acquisition

  Bioventus Inc. (Nasdaq: BVS) (“Bioventus” or the “Company”), a global leader in innovations for active healing, announced today that it has entered into a Settlement Agreement (the “Settlement Agreement”) with the former CartiHeal shareholders (the “CartiHeal Sellers”) regarding the Company’s obligations under the amended Option and Equity Purchase Agreement for its prior acquisition of CartiHeal (the “Amended Acquisition Agreement”).

The Settlement Agreement provides the Company with the option to eliminate the entirety of $350 million of deferred purchase price obligations plus accrued interest under the Amended Acquisition Agreement (which is comprised of $215 million of Post-Closing Tranches and a $135 million Sales Milestone payment, if applicable, each as defined in the Amended Acquisition Agreement, plus any applicable interest). The Settlement Agreement also releases the Company from any and all future claims or obligations by or to the CartiHeal Sellers that may have arisen under the Amended Acquisition Agreement.

The Company has been granted a 30-day period in which it may evaluate options to fund the remaining obligations under the Amended Acquisition Agreement in order to retain CartiHeal. Funding options will only be pursued by the Company on an opportunistic basis, on terms that the Company believes would be favorable to its stakeholders. If the Company does not obtain funding sufficient to satisfy the $215 million of Post-Closing Tranche obligations, plus any applicable interest, under the Amended Purchase Agreement by the expiration of the 30-day period, the Company has agreed to transfer ownership of CartiHeal to the CartiHeal Sellers. In addition, during the 30-day period, the CartiHeal shares have been transferred to a trust for the benefit of the CartiHeal Sellers.

In exchange for the release of the Company’s obligations and the 30-day period, the Company agreed to pay the CartiHeal Sellers $10,000,000 in cash as well as $150,000 in a non-refundable expense reimbursement payment. The Company will also have the option to exercise up to two extension periods of 15 days each in exchange for an additional $5,000,000 payment per extension.


Lilly cut to Sell by Soc Gen

 Eli Lilly: Societe Generale downgrades to sell from hold. PT down 12% to $278.

https://www.marketscreener.com/quote/stock/ELI-LILLY-AND-COMPANY-13401/