Family circus Ringling Bros. heirs go to trial
By NEDRA PICKLER
Associated Press
WASHINGTON
The late multimillionaire owner of Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey circus, Irvin Feld, left a renowned business stunningly at odds with a bitter family legacy. He built an empire of wholesome entertainment meant to bring families together, yet his own two children are so estranged they couldn’t even mourn with one another in peace.
The often sad family history behind “the greatest show on Earth” is being aired in court at a trial that starts Monday before U.S. District Judge Ellen Segal Huvelle. Karen Feld filed a $110 million suit against her younger brother, Kenneth, for assault when they came together in the Jewish rite of sitting shiva for their dead aunt.
The suit filed by 63-year-old Karen Feld says her 62-year-old brother long wanted to harm her and control her life because he feared she would reveal facts about their father and family that could tarnish the image of the family business.
Irvin Feld created Feld Entertainment, which Kenneth Feld now runs and bills as the world’s largest source of live family entertainment, including the circus, Disney on Ice, drag racing and monster-truck shows.
Kenneth Feld has gone to great lengths to protect the family’s privacy; he even hired a prominent former top CIA covert operative to run a secret 8-year operation to spy on and divert an author who wanted to write a family history.
“What is more wholesome than Disney and the circus, on the surface? But I think what people have to realize is sometimes there’s a big difference between appearances and reality,” Karen Feld said in an interview with The Associated Press.
Karen Feld says her brother’s vendetta against her led to his ordering guards to throw her and the toy poodle that is her constant companion out of their aunt Shirley’s shiva in the Washington penthouse where they grew up. She said the guards beat her, inflicting severe injuries that required surgeries on her brain and knee.
Kenneth Feld, who lives in Tampa, Fla., declined to be interviewed. But in court filings he denies her allegations and has filed a counterclaim against his sister for trespassing, accusing her of desecrating their aunt’s memorial with a blasphemous outburst.
In court filings, Kenneth Feld’s lawyers describe his sister as narcissistic and prone to “temper tantrums” during which she behaves unreasonably, yells obscenities and becomes extremely aggressive.
They point out other incidents in which she was restrained by authorities after explosive confrontations in the months after the shiva, including a fight with Transportation Security Administration agents before she boarded a flight and another confrontation during an Arlo Guthrie concert.
Feld’s attorneys say Karen Feld tried to argue the same injuries and medical treatment arose after the concert as she did after the shiva.
Karen Feld responds that besides the physical injuries from the shiva assault, she has been suffering from post-traumatic stress that has ended her career as a local political and gossip columnist and made her “hyper-vigilant” around security officials.
Neither sibling is a stranger to lawsuits. Karen Feld has also sued a man involved in an auto accident with her, and her former private nurse, who countersued alleging Karen Feld was abusive. And Ken Feld was sued by writer Jan Pottker for a long-running covert operation to stop her from writing a book on the Felds that went as far to divert her as secretly funding a book deal for her to write about another wealthy family that controls the Mars candy business.
Kenneth and Karen Feld have been in legal disputes since their father’s unexpected death during his sleep in 1984. Irvin Feld gave his company to his son and left very little to his daughter. Kenneth Feld also took ownership of their father’s properties, including the Georgetown house where his sister lived. Karen Feld filed a lawsuit saying he was trying to have her thrown out of her home, and an eventual settlement allowed her to continue living there.
Both siblings have said Kenneth was groomed from an early age to take over the company. Karen Feld said her father didn’t believe women should go into business, and in her deposition she said he physically abused her to the point of giving her multiple concussions.
“I respect him for what he did in terms of his brains and creativity and what he built and his work ethic,” she said.
“That doesn’t make him a good father. And I think that a lot of what he created after the time my mother died particularly was to divide Kenny and I, not to bring us together.”
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