More Details On The Buzz Aldrin Battle Against The Evil Ones
They Rode His Coat Tails..Then Decided To Take It All
WSJ
In April, Col. Aldrin voluntarily submitted to a mental evaluation by Dr. James Spar, a professor of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral sciences at UCLA Medical School. Dr. Spar concluded that Col. Aldrin is âcognitively intact and retains all forms of decisional capacity,â according to the report, reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.
Col. Aldrin, who grew up in Montclair, N.J., graduated third in his class at West Point and earned a PhD in astronautics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. But he has never paid much attention to money matters, said his longtime lawyer and friend Robert Tourtelot.
âBuzz is a genius, heâs the smartest guy I ever met,â Mr. Tourtelot said. âBut Buzz has never been street smart.â
His relationship with his kids has been a rocky ride, according to Mr. Tourtelot. There have been periodic estrangements, Mr. Tourtelot said. Col. Aldrin was rarely home when they were young. His eldest son, James Michael, is not involved in the legal dispute between his father and siblings.
Col. Aldrin said he has tried unsuccessfully to bring all the children together in recent years. âI intend to disengage as a repairman of family ruptures,â he said.
Janice Aldrin, 11, and her brothers, Andrew, 10, and James Michael 13, give a thumbs up after the 1969 launch of Apollo 11 spaceflight carrying their father.
Janice Aldrin, 11, and her brothers, Andrew, 10, and James Michael 13, give a thumbs up after the 1969 launch of Apollo 11 spaceflight carrying their father. Photo: Associated Press
He divorced his childrenâs mother, Joan, in 1974, remarried and divorced two more times after that. Mr. Aldrin has spoken publicly about his bouts with depression and alcoholism after he returned from the moon. He said heâs been sober for nearly 40 years.
It was after his last divorce in 2013 that Ms. Korp gradually took over the business, according to Col. Aldrin and Mr Tourtelot. Hired as an executive secretary at the Aldrin operation around 2007, she is a director of the ShareSpace Foundation with Janice Aldrin. Andrew Aldrin is president.
An aspiring singer and songwriter, Ms. Korp had worked for radio personality John Tesh more than a decade ago, her LinkedIn profile says. In 2005, court records show, she filed for bankruptcy owing $22,500.After working for Buzz Aldrin Enterprises, she set up Christina Korp Management in 2016 âto manage media and entertainment projects and interesting world changing personalities,â according to her LinkedIn page. âMy motto is:
I bring astronauts back down to Earth.âIn 2015, the Aldrin operation was newly incorporated with a board consisting of Col. Aldrin, Andrew Aldrin and Janice Aldrin. After a share transaction, Col. Aldrin lost control of the company, and had just one vote out of three, according to Mr. Tourtelot who has examined the transaction.
Buzz Aldrin stands beside an American flag at Tranquility Base on the surface of the moon during the Apollo 11 mission.
Buzz Aldrin stands beside an American flag at Tranquility Base on the surface of the moon during the Apollo 11 mission. Photo: NASA/Corbis/Getty Images
That year, the Florida Institute of Technology launched the Buzz Aldrin Space Institute. Col. Aldrin joined the university faculty as research professor of aeronautics and served as the instituteâs senior faculty adviser.
Andrew wasnât working at the time, Col. Aldrin said, and he asked him to assume the position of a graduate assistant the university had offered him.
In the interview, Col. Aldrin said his son âbegan to broadly interpret that and soon he became the director of the Institute.â Meanwhile,Ms. Korp continued to oversee Buzz Aldrin Enterprises, planning annual fundraising galas for ShareSpace and managing the former astronautâs
Twitter and other social-media accounts, according to Col. Aldrin and Mr. Tourtelot.
The Florida Institute did not immediately return an email seeking comment.
She fired the agency sometime after 2013 that had been booking Mr. Aldrinâs speaking engagements and began making those arrangements herself, Mr. Tourtelot said. She received a 5% commission on any deals, he said, a set-up Col. Aldrin didnât know about or authorize.
By 2016, Col. Aldrin said he increasingly grew frustrated that his foundation wasnât moving in the direction he wanted. While it focused on educating elementary-school children about Mars through maps, he wanted to work more urgently on getting a permanent human settlement on the planet.
He said he also was booked for events he didnât want to attend and encouraged to pursue endorsement deals he didnât favor.
For instance, he ânever quite saw why I should get involved with Faberge eggs and French perfume,â Col. Aldrin said. He rejected the suggestions, he said.
Annual reports indicate that his foundation hasnât granted scholarships. Revenues are generated by annual galas and the sale of Mars maps and T-shirts, the reports shows; some, designed by Ms. Korp, say âGet Your Ass to Mars.â In 2016, the most recent figures available, those sales generated $59,101.
Last year, Mr. Tourtelot said, Col. Aldrin expressed concerns that he didnât know how much money he had.
In September, on his clientâs behalf, Mr. Tourtelot demanded seven years of financial records of Buzz Aldrin Enterprises and the ShareSpace Foundation. After months of back and forth, he said he recently received documents from 2017.
They show Buzz Aldrin Enterprises paid the former astronaut a salary of $36,000 in 2017 and reimbursed him for expenses, according to Mr. Tourtelot and documents reviewed by the Journal. Andrew Aldrin and Ms. Korp, meanwhile, each received salaries of $153,000 from the company as well as reimbursements for expenses such as first-class air travel, according to Mr. Tourtelot and documents reviewed by the Journal.Over the years, Mr. Tourtelot said, Ms. Korp has exerted control over Col. Aldrin.
At a birthday party for him at a Los Angeles restaurant a few years ago, Mr. Aldrin was speaking to the roughly 200 guests about his childhood, telling stories many had never heard. Mr. Tourtelot, who was there, said Ms. Korp strode to Mr. Aldrin and took the microphone away from him. âThatâs enough, Buzz,â she said, according to Mr. Tourtelot.
In October 2016, Col. Aldrin set up a new revocable trust with Andrew as trustee. In it, Andrew and Janice Aldrin are set to receive more than James Michael, their sibling. The trust, which was reviewed by the Journal, stipulates that no changes can be made to its terms without Andrewâs written permission.
The rift in the Aldrin family deepened later that year, after a trip to the South Pole with Col. Aldrin to generate revenues for the foundation. Several people paid to join him on the trip, which he said he was reluctant to take.
It required a long walk at over 9,000 feet above sea level from where the airplane landed near the Pole. Col. Aldrin tired and collapsed; medics said he appeared to have high-altitude pulmonary edema and had to be evacuated. He was flown to a New Zealand hospital to recover.
After that, Col Aldrin said, Andrew and Janice started limiting his activities. They have also told him he can no longer scuba dive, his favorite hobby, and have taken away his passport.
Recently, when Col. Aldrin fired Ms. Korp from his company, he said Andrew told him he did not have the authority to do so because the board had given Janice and Andrew control. Ms. Korp remains at the foundation.
âJim Oberman contributed to this article.
Write to Gretchen Morgenson at G
Wow The Foundation urged him to take the trip against his will and he almost died. They would have raked a windfall if he kicked the ice bucket...If that's not Evil..I don't know what is...