Vicki Morgan Nude

Vicki Morgan Nude




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Vicki Morgan Nude
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^ "Vicki Morgan" . findagrave.com . Retrieved 2 April 2019 .

^ Jump up to: a b c d e f cantorjoeocho (18 June 2009). "Bacheche" . ancestry.it . Retrieved 1 April 2019 .

^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i Cheatle, Julian (19 March 2018). "Who really killed Alfred Bloomingdale's mistress Vicki Morgan? Vanity Fair Confidential exclusive" . Monsters and Critics . Retrieved 1 April 2019 .

^ Jump up to: a b c Green, Michelle (25 July 1983). "Vicki Morgan Is Buried, as Rumors of Scandal Stretch to the White House Gates" . People .com . Retrieved 1 April 2019 .

^ Jump up to: a b Dowie, Douglas (28 September 1982). "Bloomingdale's mistress describes sexual escapades" . UPI .com . Retrieved 2 April 2019 .

^ Jump up to: a b c d Collier, Peter (9 March 1986). "The Life and Loves of Vicki Morgan" . Washington Post . Retrieved 1 April 2019 .

^ Austin, John (1994). Hollywood's Babylon Women . SP Books. p. 134 . ISBN 9781561712885 . marvin pancoast.

^ "Vicki Morgan, a Model, Is Beaten to Death" . The New York Times . 8 July 1983. p. A6 . Retrieved 2 April 2019 .

^ Gewerrtz, Catherine (27 June 1984). "Marvin Pancoast, an admitted homosexual on trial for the..." UPI .com . Retrieved 2 April 2019 .

^ Finn, Terry (12 July 1984). "Marvin Pancoast was probably traumatized by the rejection of..." UPI.com . Retrieved 2 April 2019 .

^ "Marvin Pancoast" . Orlando Sentinel . Retrieved 2014-10-18 – via orlandosentinel.com.

^ "Estate of Mistress Wins Suit" . The New York Times . 1984-12-22 . Retrieved 2014-10-18 .

^ "Vanity Fair Confidential" . TVGuide .com . Retrieved 2018-03-31 .

^ People vs Larry Flynt, 1996, film

^ Toten, Hosen (19 November 1984). "Der Mord an Vicki Morgan" . Die Toten Hosen . Retrieved 12 August 2020 .


Victoria Lynn Morgan (August 9, 1952 – July 7, 1983) [2] was the mistress of Alfred S. Bloomingdale , heir to the Bloomingdale's department store fortune. The details of their tumultuous relationship became known after Morgan sued Bloomingdale's estate for palimony in 1982. [3] Morgan was murdered in 1983.

Vicki Morgan was born in Colorado Springs, Colorado . [2] Her mother, Constance Laney, and Vicki's father, a United States Air Force veteran, divorced soon after Vicki's birth. Constance remarried, but that husband died when Vicki was about 9 years old. Vicki and her mother relocated to Montclair, California . At 16, Vicki Morgan became pregnant, dropped out of Chaffey High School , and bore a son, Todd. Leaving Todd with her mother, [4] Morgan ran away from home in 1968. [3]

She found work as an usher at Grauman's Chinese Theatre in Los Angeles. [2] She soon married 47-year-old Earl Lamb. [3]

In August 1969, whilst still 17, Morgan met 54-year-old financier Alfred S. Bloomingdale , a married multi-millionaire from the famous department store family , in a restaurant on the Sunset Strip . [5] Bloomingdale soon took Morgan as a mistress , and would have her watch as he lashed naked prostitutes with his belt. [6] When Morgan was 18, Bloomingdale offered Lamb a large cash payment to end his marriage with Morgan. Bloomingdale provided an apartment for her. [6]

As Bloomingdale's mistress, her social circle would include politicians, businessmen, [3] and the wealthy playboy Bernie Cornfeld . [6] With Bloomingdale's financial support, she lived a lavish lifestyle. [2] In 1973, Bloomingdale's wife, Betsy , learned of Bloomingdale's affair and told him to break off the relationship. He complied, and Morgan spiraled into poverty and depression.

By 1979, Morgan had been through two more marriages and long periods of sex work, and had become a drug addict. That year she entered rehabilitation , where she met Marvin Pancoast, [4] a gay man who was infatuated with Morgan and her stories of the high life she led with Bloomingdale. They vowed to live together once released from treatment. [4] Three years later, Bloomingdale was diagnosed with terminal cancer. [3] He purportedly told Morgan that he had only two months to live and assured her she would be well cared for and never have to worry about money again. [7]

The financial situation for the 30-year-old Morgan quickly turned desperate. To protect herself, she hired the famous Hollywood palimony attorney Marvin Mitchelson to file an $11 million lawsuit [5] ($30.9 million today) for financial compensation as Bloomingdale's mistress. [2] The pre-trial media coverage of the initial complaint revealed details of the couple's sexual relationship that grabbed headlines nationwide, [3] causing particular embarrassment amongst Bloomingdale's friends in Washington, D.C. However, when Morgan learned that Mitchelson had dinner and a meeting with President Ronald Reagan and his wife Nancy – the latter of whom was friends with Betsy Bloomingdale – Morgan lost trust in Mitchelson, fired him, and hired attorney Robert Steinberg in his place.

Later court documents and news stories revealed that Morgan supported herself by selling off the jewelry and the expensive car purchased for her by Bloomingdale. It was later reported that she was preparing to write a tell-all book which was going to name influential politicians and businessmen who had been clients of hers. [3] Bloomingdale died of cancer less than two months after the lawsuit was filed. [8]

Morgan contacted her friend from rehab, Marvin Pancoast, and moved into an apartment with him. [6] She returned to working as a prostitute while he worked odd jobs. Although Pancoast was a homosexual, their relationship was occasionally sexual. Pancoast thought he had contracted HIV and was terminally ill. [9] He was distraught and unstable after his daily counseling sessions were terminated by psychiatrist Dr. Paul Cantalupo. [10]

On the evening of July 7, 1983, less than eleven months after Bloomingdale's death, Pancoast walked into a police station and confessed to murdering Morgan in their apartment. [3] Police found Morgan, apparently beaten to death with a baseball bat. [2] She was buried at the Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Hollywood Hills . Pancoast was sentenced to 26 years-to- life in prison [3] and died in 1991 in Chino, California , while undergoing treatment for AIDS-related illnesses. [11]

Morgan's 1982 palimony lawsuit against Bloomingdale's estate continued on behalf of her son Todd (born c. 1968 ). She had referred to a contract in which Bloomingdale would have given her $240,000, but instead she was given $40,000. During the trial, the judge ruled the agreement unenforceable as it was for the illegal act of "sex for hire." In December 1984, a jury awarded Morgan's estate the remaining $200,000 ($522,000 today). [12]

Morgan's story received considerable print coverage and in 1985 author Gordon Basichis wrote the book Beautiful Bad Girl: The Vicki Morgan Story . In 1990, Dominick Dunne wrote a fictional portrayal of Morgan in his book, An Inconvenient Woman . The story of her life and death was the topic of Vanity Fair Confidential (Season 4, Episode 7: Murder Most Obsessive) which first aired on March 19, 2018. Her BDSM-based relationships with Alfred Bloomingdale and Marvin Pancoast are also explored in the Poisoned Passions episode titled "Sadistic Pleasure". [13]

Morgan's story is mentioned in the 1996 film The People vs. Larry Flynt in a courtroom scene in which Larry is asked about his source of the John DeLorean video. [14]

In the movie "Fletch", Chevy Chase's character Fletch mentions "Vicki Morgan tapes" when talking to his boss about two witnesses rummaging through his boss's office.

The Song "Der Mord an Vicky Morgan" from the German music Group "Die Toten Hosen" is based on the story of Vicki Morgan. [15]


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Robert K. Steinberg is a civil law specialist in partner- ship with celebrated criminal lawyer Vincent Bugliosi. Why Steinberg, of all the name attorneys in Los Angeles, was selected to receive the three tapes is anybody’s guess. The only conceivable link is a mutual friend of Steinberg and Marvin Pancoast named Cindy Stone- house. But there is also a report that another attorney got two of the tapes, which he intends to hold for a while before putting them up for auction.
On July 12, 1983 Steinberg held a press conference to announce the existence of the tapes. He said that he and two others - one a lawyer, the other a federal employee - had viewed them over a weekend. They appeared to be a few years old, and showed Bloomingdale and five other men, one a former U.S. Congressman and two others currently holding high posts in the Reagan ad- ministration. The sex tapes, Steinberg asserted, could “bring down the Reagan government.”
A few days later Steinberg’s bombshell scoop was reduced to ashes when, faced with a court order to turn the tapes over to the police, he alibied that they had been stolen from a jogging bag in his office during the press conference. A mocking media turned the tapes into the Maltese Falcon of the Vicki Morgan case. But The Rebel has interviewed a person close to the situation (not Steinberg) who contends that the tapes do exist, and show three separate sessions: (1) Vicki Morgan, Alfred Bloomingdale and an unidentified female; (2) Barry Goldwater Jr., Edwin Meese and one of Bloomingdale’s oldtime pals, and (3) unnamed Reagan associates with females.
The Rebel’s investigation has also developed a source who claims to have seen the tapes and whose description of them and their contents is convincingly specific:
- The tapes are in black and white, on Betamax cas- settes.
- The cassettes are protected by a spongy material, deep maroon in color.
- The tapes run for approximately 18 to 20 minutes.
- All three tapes were filmed in the same location, a recreation or large conference room devoid of furniture except for several couches against the walls.
- The sex acts are for the most part oral copulation, either on the couches or the floor.
- Although apparently taken with a hand-held cam- era, the tapes are quite clear.
The flip side of what could be called, for journalistic convenience, the Steinberg tapes, is the Flynt tape. When Steinberg hit the news with his announcement of the tapes, The Rebel publisher Larry Hynt began nego- tiations to buy them for $100 million. But before a deal could be struck Steinberg issued his second announce- ment that they had been stolen. Shortly thereafter Flynt somehow came into the possession of several additional sex tapes. He has played one of them for a number of media people, among them representatives of the ABC, NBC and CNN television networks and the Los Angeles Times.
Its vintage is uncertain but it depicts a man closely resembling Ronald Reagan taking off his clothes and fondling a young woman attired in English riding habit, complete with boots and crop. She has a dildo strapped to her pelvis. After a brief blank section the tape picks up with the pair on a couch, the woman performing anal sex with the dildo. The journalists who viewed this tape have not reported it either in their profiles of Flynt or separately. To the media it is apparently non-news, too touchy to touch without ironclad proof of its pedigree, possibly even a film Flynt himself produced and directed.
In fact the tale of the tapes has been largely ignored by the bloodhounds of the Fourth Estate. Only the parochial LA. Weekly, which ran the Bardach article, has named names. In a sidebar to the Ann Bardach article, the editors declared that “sources the Weekly would tend to believe are reliable say that Meese almost certainly appears to be one of the men on such tapes, even given the difficulty of making a positive identification of someone on a videotape. According to an extremely reliable source, Vicki knew Meese and met with him both before and after the elections. Meese, it might be noted, was a friend of Bloomingdale’s who met Vicki through Bloomingdale and, according to the source, saw her several times more.”
If members of Reagan’s upper management do appear on the tapes it would not be wildly out of character. They are the type of men who call their women “Honey,” play with them like Barbie Dolls, and attend the annual summer stag parties of the Bohemian Club on the bu- colic Russian River in Northern California. This Bac- chanalian rite shrouded by the redwoods commingles the most powerful business and government leaders in the country, figures such as Henry Kissinger, Gen. Alex- ander Haig and Caspar Weinberger. In recent years the encampment has attracted the attention of the local sheriff, who noticed a sudden influx of prostitutes just as the festivities were getting under way. One hooker interviewed by the LA. Weekly boasted of a dalliance a few years ago with George Shultz, then a top officer of the Bechtel Corporation and now Secretary of State.
The Bloomingdale Affair hangs like a thread-sus- pended sword over the Reagan re-election bid. Should the tapes somehow be authenticated, they would be far more graphic evidence than “Deep Throat” was able to furnish Woodward and Bernstein. Unlike Watergate, the issue is not the cover-up of dirty tricks, but keeping the lid on a sex scandal in which the national security may well have been compromised.
At this the administration has experience. In 1967, during Reagan’s first months as California governor, word began to seep out of a homosexual ring inside his staff which used a Lake Tahoe cabin as aparty pad. Since this was long before gay liberation, a full-blown sex scandal was in the making. Reagan moved quickly, forcing the resignation of several aides, and the threat blew over. Only feisty Drew Pearson in his Washington Merry-Go-Round column did any hard-core reporting on it. Reagan tipped his nasty side by waming, “If Drew Pearson ever sets foot in California he better not spit on the sidewalk.”
The American public may abide, even applaud such heroics as invading tiny Grenada, playing nuclear chick- en with the Russians and mounting covert actions against the socialist Third World. But it would have little tolerance for an administration populated by carnal cow- boys. It would have even less tolerance for men of great power and great responsibility being involved in the bloody silencing of Morgan. Verification of contents of the tapes could spell disaster for an entire collection of some very austere gentlemen. Their involvement in the murder of Morgan could undo a whole administration.
Alfred Bloomingdale: Merchant, Power Broker & Spymaster by Donald Freed
Alfred Bloomingdale was Victoria Morgan’s lover, patron and “sugar daddy.” And Alfred Blooming- dale was Ronald Reagan’s spy master.
The public image of Bloomingdale is almost complete- ly a myth. Painted in the press as a wealthy playboy and sometime member of Ronald Reagan’s “Kitchen Cab- inet,” Bloomingdale is just one more in a series of dirty old men in the public pantheon of scandal and gossip in high places. In reality, Bloomingdale lived a life astride the inner workings of power in America - one leg in organized crime, one leg in covert actions and espion- age.
The story begins in 1916. Bloomingdale is born into the great department story family. The young Bloom- ingdale attended Brown University and settled into the family store in 1938. He dabbled in show business, producing and financing Broadway shows, among them the Ziegfeld Follies. But his career as an entrepreneur was short-lived.
In 1946 Bloomingdale married L.A. socialite Betsy Newling, well-known even then for her frequent parties and charity affairs. During this period of the late 1940s Bloomingdale began his relationship, which was to last for decades, with Johnnie Roselli. Roselli was as hand- some as any movie star and indeed was closely as- sociated with the moguls at the major studios. Roselli was a gangster and the man to see in Hollywood when the fix had to be put in during the ferocious jurisdictional union struggles of the late 1940s and 50's It was during this time that Bloomingdale, Ronald Reagan and Johnnie Roselli crossed paths. Roselli was Reagan’s link to the studio heads, as well as to crime, unions and Teamsters. In the late 40s and early 50's Bloomingdale, Roselli, Reagan and Frank Sinatra were to find themsel- ves thrown together in a combination of union, enter- tainment and political projects.
During the 1950s Bloomingdale consolidated those relationships that he was to put to use when the time came to found the Diners Club. Now the department store heir was seen in the Bahamas, the Caribbean, in Havana; a habitue of the casinos, the clubs, the resorts, the leisure industries that were the fronts for both the Lansky organized crime operation as well as the Rosel- li-Sam Giancana wing of the underworld.
Skipping to the 1960s, we find Bloomingdale a prime mover in the group that was to become known as Ronald Reagan’s Kitchen Cabinet, also known as the “Friends of Ronald Reagan.” Bloomingdale was responsible for the Friends of Ronald Reagan’s concentration of psy- chologists, pollsters, behavior-modification experts and psychological warfare types who were to build the image of Ronald Reagan. Rubbing shoulders with Bloomingdale in the Kitchen Cabinet were such multi- millionaires as Walter Knott, Henry Salvatori, and Patrick Frawley. All of these men had or were to develop close ties to the ultra-right wing militant American Security Council.
Bloomingdale became a Reagan spy master sometime during the first year of the govemor’s power, 1966. It was Bloomingdale who was involved in a campaign to smash Cesar Chavez and his Farmworkers Union. This campaign involved break-ins, burglaries, beatings, and at least one assassination plot against Chavez. Working with Bloomingdale in Reagan’s master plan to stifle the dissent of students and minorities was none other than Edwin Meese III who would turn up years later on the famous Vicki Morgan “sex tapes.” During this entire period Bloomingdale worked closely with organized crime and Teamster officials. Charles Colson, Richard Nixon’s hatchet man, and linked to the Teamsters, was carrying on parallel activities at the national level, while Bloomingdale was in charge of pacifying California.
Once again Bloomingdale, through Roselli, brought thugs into smash the Farmworkers Union as Rosefli had done in the 1940s and early 50’s when Ronald Reagan first consolidated his power base at the Screen Actors Guild.
By the mid-1970s, Ronald Reagan had completed two terms of office in California. Bloomingdale’s friends, Johnnie Roselli and Sam Giancana, were murdered be- fore they could testify before Senate Select Committees looking into the murder of President John F. Kennedy in Dallas.
Because of Betsy Bloomingdale’s arrest in 1975 when Be
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