作者 人物列表
斯蒂芬·里柯克 Stephen Leacock康拉德·布莱克 Conrad Black黎全恩 David Chuenyan Lai
康拉德·布莱克 Conrad Black
作者  (1944年8月25日)

传记 biography《罗斯福传》

阅读康拉德·布莱克 Conrad Black在小说之家的作品!!!
  康拉德·布莱克是—个传奇人物。他从大学时代开始涉猎报纸,借助资本市场运作技巧,建立起排名世界第三的跨国报业公司——霍林格国际公司,旗下有《每日电讯报》、《芝加哥太阳报》、《耶路撒冷邮报》等知名报刊。
  传媒巨子康拉德·布莱克演技高超。这位63岁、加拿大最富影响力和传奇色彩的富豪至今已扮演了许多角色——被学校开除的学生、记者、激进的改革者、历史传记作家、拿破仑研究权威、贵族、媒体巨头以及生活奢侈的社交名流。
  最近,他又将饰演了一个新角色——阶下囚。
  
  7月13日,美国芝加哥联邦地区法院最终判定布莱克3项财务欺诈指控罪名和一项妨碍司法罪名成立,这位与默多克齐名的报业巨头将可能面临最高35年的监禁。除此之外,他亦须支付高达百万美元的罚款。刑期将在11月30日宣判,布莱克的律师团表明会上诉。
  
  英国《每日邮报》政治编辑琼斯形容:“作为曾与他共事的人……这是极大的悲剧,他曾经营一份好报章、厚待下属,我们却要亲眼看他逐渐堕落。”
  
  买卖报纸的游戏高手
  
  康拉德·布莱克在世界传媒业曾经叱咤风云。他1944年出生于加拿大富豪之庭,从收购一家小报干起。他的大学成绩单一塌胡涂,还因为涉嫌偷窃和出售试卷而被加拿大学院开除过。
  
  1978年,33岁的布莱克收购了加拿大的阿格斯公司,为打造他的传媒帝国奠定了基础。他在极短的时间内卖掉了公司旗下的超市业务,将阿格斯转变为一家报业集团,就是后来的霍林格国际。
  
  1985年,布莱克收购了英国老牌报纸《每日电讯报》51%的股权,他的传媒业务从此面貌一新。《每日电讯报》的销量曾高居英国高尚日报之首,但上世纪70年代由于英国经济不景气陷入亏损。布莱克收购《每日电讯报》之后,短短两年内就令这家报纸扭亏为盈。有传媒评论称,布莱克“以有史以来最小的钩,钓到了有史以来最大的鱼”。
  
  1989年他又收购了资不抵债的《耶路撒冷邮报》,将其彻底改组,三年后这张报纸就开始盈利。1994年他收购濒临倒闭的《芝加哥太阳时报》,两年后又转为盈利。由此,业内称布莱克为“能把亏损报纸改造成赚钱机器的大师”。
  
  作为霍林格国际的董事长和首席执行官的布莱克就这样扩张他的传媒帝国,最终成为世界第三大报业集团,拥有大小600余家报刊。英国《每日电讯报》、以色列《耶路撒冷邮报》和美国《芝加哥太阳时报》等著名报纸均在其名下,公司年利润达20亿美元。
  
  在此期间,布莱克与其第一任妻子离婚,娶了颇具知名度的专栏作家芭芭拉·安密尔。与安密尔在肯辛顿区一座宅邸安家后,布莱克进入一个新的社交圈,他与皇室成员和政治家交往,并组建了一个董事会。美国前国务卿基辛格和前国务部副部长理查德·佩里都是这个董事会的成员。传媒曾经如此形容霍林格国际的董事局会议:“董事会备有美酒佳肴,而独立董事几乎从来不问业务问题,布莱克则像国王一样上朝。”
  
  中饱私囊,走向沉沦
  
  布莱克的耀眼光环2003年起开始消退,他的人生也步入转折。
  
  霍林格国际公司2003年11月进行内部审计时发现,管理层存在秘密转移资金问题,布莱克巨额收入来源不明。在股东的批评声浪中,布莱克辞去了霍林格国际公司董事长的职务。
  
  布莱克在2005年底遭到正式起诉,检方指控布莱克与其他3名前高管涉嫌在出售公司报纸交易中不法牟利8400万美元,而这些收益原应交给公司股东。当时他在接受采访时说,所有指控都是“不真实的”和“没有根据的”。
  
  被判定成立的三项欺诈指控中,布莱克均利用出售公司旗下的报纸中饱私囊。他串通公司高层,将一些报纸卖给企业内部的子公司,同时签订所谓“非竞争协议”,要求子公司支付“非竞争费”,随后就把这笔钱收入自己腰包。
  
  签订“非竞争协议”是不同公司间买卖报纸时的常用手段,是指买方向卖方支付一定费用,卖方则承诺不再与其售出的这份报纸竞争。
  
  布莱克及同伙用这种方式共骗得320万英镑(约合649.6万美元),布莱克获利170万英镑(约合345.1万美元),他的律师认为这一数字应为140万英镑(约合284.2万美元)。
  
  此外,布莱克曾来到他在加拿大多伦多的办公室,把一些文件取走,企图躲避司法调查,不料被闭路电视摄像头拍下,因此被判妨碍司法罪。
  
  《公民凯恩》的最新翻版
  
  13日裁决前,布莱克被指控罪名共有13项,陪审团用12天的时间听取了控辩双方的陈词和辩论。
  
  媒体也对布莱克受审一事给予极大关注。法新社报道说,当天前往法院采访的记者超过100人,分别来自加拿大、英国、爱尔兰和美国,其中许多记者供职的媒体曾被布莱克领导。
  
  《每日电讯报》评论说,历时4个月的庭审展现在人们面前的是一出关于贪婪、虚荣、欺骗和盛极而衰的人间戏剧,几乎是电影《公民凯恩》的最新翻版。
  
  当陪审团主席判定第一项罪名成立时,布莱克低下了头,面色发白,但他很快又端坐身躯,表现出沉着镇静的模样,他没有看坐在他身后旁听席第一排神情凝重的女儿和妻子,只是递给妻子一张纸条。
  
  他所涉嫌的每项欺诈罪最高可判刑5年,而妨碍司法罪最高可判20年。法官定于今年11月30日宣布最终量刑结果。尽管洗脱了13项指控(其中包括最为严重的敲诈勒索罪)中的9项,但布莱克仍面临最长达35年的监禁,其大部分财产——包括他在棕榈海滩的家——将被没收。
  
  “我们准备上诉,”布莱克的律师爱德华·格林斯潘表示,“他当时面临13项指控,现在所有关键的指控都没成立。我们认为,刑期应短得多。”
  
  英国《每日邮报》政治编辑琼斯形容:“作为曾与他共事的人……这是极大的悲剧,他曾经营一份好报章、厚待下属,我们却要亲眼看他逐渐堕落。”
  
  告别极尽奢靡生活
  
  布莱克生活极尽豪奢,游走于政客、明星等社会名流之间。美国前国务卿亨利·基辛格、前国防部官员理查·佩里都是霍林格公司董事。他是英国前首相玛格丽特·撒切尔夫人的好友,于2001年加入英国国籍,被封为勋爵,跻身英国上议院。
  
  布莱克在多伦多、纽约、伦敦、佛罗里达的黄金地段均拥有多处豪宅,配备“劳斯莱斯”等豪华轿车。他的纽约豪宅中不仅有精美瓷器、大理石雕和名贵地毯,甚至还有拿破仑入侵俄国时使用过的瓷杯。
  
  路透社报道说,布莱克在伦敦、纽约和佛罗里达检方称,布莱克经常在自己家中大搞名流派对,而费用往往由公司来“埋单”。检方说,布莱克为妻子举办生日宴会就花费3万英镑(约合6.09万美元),他们随后还乘坐公司飞机前往法属波利尼西亚度假,而这些花销多由公司公款支付。
  
  “他经营公司完全是为了个人利益,而对股东的态度则像路易十六一样。”美国证券交易委员会前法律顾问罗斯·艾伯特告诉法新社记者。
  
  美国司法专家指出,平日喜爱贵价艺术品、奢华派对、出入乘坐私人飞机,连毛巾也要经消毒加热才使用的布莱克一旦入狱,未来数十年将要与毒贩等黑道人物为伍,挤在监仓吃大锅饭。无论他被判入哪个监狱,他都会被脱衣检查、打指纹、没收私人物品,仅可保留手表和结婚指环。
  
  作为非美国公民,若惩教部门认为他有逃狱风险,他将会被安排入住中度设防监狱,在有刺铁丝网内被狱卒严密看守,并被要求协助清洁、煮食,挣取每小时少于1美元的酬劳。


  Conrad Moffat Black, Baron Black of Crossharbour, OC, PC (Can.), KCSG (born 25 August 1944) is an expatriate Canadian historian, columnist and publisher who was for a time the third largest newspaper magnate in the world. He was convicted of fraud in a US court in 2007 and sentenced to six and a half years' imprisonment. On July 19, 2010 Black was granted bail. He was released from Coleman Federal Correctional Complex in Florida, U.S., two days later pending a decision by the court on whether to retry his 2008 criminal fraud conviction.
  Before the regulatory investigation that led to his conviction, Black controlled Hollinger International, Inc. Through affiliates, the company published major newspapers including The Daily Telegraph (UK), Chicago Sun Times (U.S.), Jerusalem Post (Israel), National Post (Canada), and hundreds of community newspapers in North America.
  
  Early life and family
  
  Conrad Black was born in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, to a wealthy family originally from Winnipeg, Manitoba. His father, George Montegu Black, Jr., C.A., was the president of Canadian Breweries Limited, an international brewing conglomerate that had earlier absorbed Winnipeg Breweries (founded by George Black Sr.). Conrad Black's mother was the former Jean Elizabeth Riley, a daughter of Conrad Stephenson Riley, whose father founded the Great-West Life Assurance Company, and a great-granddaughter of an early co-owner of the Daily Telegraph.
  Biographer George Toombs said of Black's motivations: "he was born into a very large family of athletic, handsome people. He wasn't particularly athletic or handsome like they were, so he developed a different skill – wordplay, which he practiced a lot with his father."
  
  Education
  Black was first educated at Upper Canada College (UCC), during which time, at age 8, he purchased shares in General Motors. Six years later, according to Tom Bower's biography Dancing on the Edge, he was expelled from UCC for selling stolen exam papers. He then attended Trinity College School where he lasted less than a year, being expelled for insubordinate behaviour. Black eventually graduated from a small, now defunct, private school in Toronto called Thornton Hall, continuing on to post-secondary education at Carleton University (History, 1965). For a time, he attended Toronto's Osgoode Hall Law School of York University; however, his studies ended after he failed his first year exams. He completed a law degree at Université Laval (Law, 1970), and in 1973 completed a Master of Arts degree in history at McGill University. Black's thesis, later published as a biography, was on Quebec premier Maurice Duplessis.
  
  Marriage
  Conrad Black's first marriage was in 1978 to Joanna Hishon of Montreal, who worked as a secretary in his brother Montegu's brokerage office. The couple had two sons and a daughter. The couple separated in 1991. Their divorce was finalized in 1992; the same year Black married Watford-born journalist Barbara Amiel. Black flattered Amiel, describing her variously as "beautiful, brilliant, ideologically a robust spirit" and "chic, humorous and preternaturally sexy". Courtroom evidence revealed that the couple exchanged over 11,000 emails.
  
  Religion
  "My family," Black wrote in 2009, "was divided between atheism and agnosticism, and I followed rather unthinkingly and inactively in those paths into my 20s." By his early 30s, however, he "no longer had any confidence in the non-existence of God." Thereafter, he "approached Rome at a snail's pace," and was finally received into the Catholic Church on June 18, 1986.
  
  Career
  
  Black became involved in a number of businesses, mainly publishing newspapers, and briefly in mining. In 1966, Black bought his first newspaper, the Eastern Townships Advertiser in Quebec. Following the foundation, as an investment vehicle, of the Ravelston Corporation by the Black family in 1969, Black, together with friends David Radler and Peter G. White, purchased and operated the Sherbrooke Record, the small English language daily in Sherbrooke, Quebec. In 1971, the three formed Sterling Newspapers Limited, a holding company that would acquire several other small Canadian regional newspapers.
  
  Corporate ownership through holding companie
  George Black died in June 1976, leaving Conrad and his older brother, Montegu, a 22.4% stake in Ravelston Corporation, which by then owned 61% voting control of Argus Corporation, an influential holding company in Canada. Argus controlled large stakes in 7 major Canadian corporations, Labrador Mining, Noranda Mines, Hollinger Mines, Standard Broadcasting, Dominion Stores, Domtar and Massey-Ferguson.
  Through his father's holdings in Ravelston, Conrad Black gained early association with two of Canada's most prominent businessmen: Bud McDougald and E. P. Taylor, president and founder of Argus, respectively. Following McDougald's death in 1978, Conrad Black paid $30-million to take control of Ravelston and thereby, control of Toronto-based Argus. This controversial arrangement resulted in accusations that Black had taken advantage of the aging widows of Ravelston Directors McDougald and Eric Phillips. Other observers admired Black for marshalling enough investor support to win control without committing a large block of personal assets.
  Some of the Argus assets were already troubled, others did not fit Black's long term vision. Black resigned as Chairman of Massey Ferguson company in 1979, after which Argus donated its shares to the employee's pension funds (both salaried and union.) Hollinger Mines was then turned into a holding company that initially focused on resource businesses.
  In 1981 Norcen Energy, one of his companies, acquired a minority position in Ohio-based Hanna Mining Co. A filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission stated that Norcen took "an investment position" in Hanna. However, the filing failed to disclose that Norcen's board planned to seek majority control. Black subsequently was charged by the SEC with filing misleading public statements, charges that were later withdrawn by "consent decree" after Black and Norcen agreed not to break securities laws in the future.
  
  Dominion pension dispute
  In 1984, Black withdrew over $56 million from the Dominion workers' pension plan surplus without consulting plan members. The firm said it considered the surplus the rightful property of the employer (Dominion Stores Ltd.). The Dominion Union complained, a public outcry ensued, and the case went to court. The Supreme Court of Ontario eventually ruled against the company, and ordered the company to return the money to the pension fund, claiming that though the most recent language in the plan suggested the employer had ownership of the surplus, the original intention was to keep the surplus in the plan to increase members' benefits. The company appealed the case all the way to the Supreme Court of Canada, which upheld the lower court's decision.
  
  Industrial holdings shifted to publishing
  Over time, Black focused formerly diverse activities of his companies on newspaper publishing. Argus Corporation, once Canada's most important conglomerate, divested itself of interests in manufacturing, mining, retailing, banking and broadcasting. Canadian writer John Ralston Saul argued in 2008, "Lord Black was never a real "capitalist" because he never created wealth, only dismantled wealth. His career has been largely about stripping corporations. Destroying them."
  
  Growth and divestment of press holding
  In 1985, Andrew Knight, then editor of The Economist, asked Black to invest in the ailing Telegraph Group. By this investment, Black made his first entry into British press ownership. Five years later, he bought the Jerusalem Post, and subsequently fired the majority of its staff. By 1990, his companies ran over 400 newspaper titles in North America, the majority of them small community papers.
  Hollinger bought a minority stake in the Southam newspaper chain in 1993 and acquired the Chicago Sun Times in 1994. Hollinger International shares were listed on New York Stock Exchange in 1996, at which time the company boosted its stake in Southam to a control position. Becoming a public company trading in the U.S. has been called "a fateful move, exposing Black's empire to America's more rigorous regulatory regime and its more aggressive institutional shareholders."
  Under Black, Hollinger launched the National Post in Toronto in 1998. From 1999 to 2000 Hollinger International sold several newspapers in five deals worth a total of US$679-million, a total that included millions of dollars in "non-compete agreements" for Hollinger insiders. Later in the year, Hollinger International announced the sale of thirteen major Canadian newspapers, 126 community newspapers, internet properties and half of the National Post to CanWest Global Communications Corp. Hollinger International sold the rest of the National Post to CanWest in the summer of 2001.
  
  Lifestyle
  
  Born to a rich family, Black acquired the family home and 7 acres (28,000 m2) of land in Toronto's exclusive Bridle Path neighbourhood after his father's death in 1976. Black and first wife Joanna Hishon maintained homes in Palm Beach, Toronto and London. After he married Barbara Amiel, he acquired a luxury Park Avenue apartment in New York. When sold in 2005, the U.S. Department of Justice seized net proceeds of $8.5 million, pending resolution of court actions. His London townhouse in the Kensington district sold in 2005 for about US$25 million. Black's Palm Beach mansion was listed for sale in 2004 at $36 million.
  According to biographer Tom Bower, "They flaunted their wealth." Black's critics, including former Daily Telegraph editor Charles Moore, suggested it was Black's second wife, Amiel, who pushed him towards a life of opulence, citing extravagant expenditures such as items billed to Hollinger expenses that included $2,463 (£1,272) on handbags, $2,785 in opera tickets, and $140 for Amiel's "jogging attire."
  Black was ranked 238th wealthiest in Britain by the Sunday Times Rich List 2003, with an estimated wealth of £136m. He was dropped from the 2004 list.
  
  Criminal fraud conviction and Supreme Court review
  
  Main article: United States v. Conrad Black
  Conrad Black
  Charge(s) mail fraud, obstruction of justice
  Penalty Sentenced to 6½ years imprisonment
  Status Served 28 months before being granted bail pending a Supreme Court ordered review of his case
  Black was convicted in Illinois U.S. District Court on 13 July 2007 and sentenced to serve 78 months in federal prison, pay Hollinger $6.1 million, in addition to a fine of $125,000.
  Black was found guilty of diverting funds for personal benefit from money due Hollinger International when the company sold certain publishing assets and other irregularities. For example, in 2000, in an illegal and surreptitious arrangement that came to be known as the "Lerner Exchange," Black acquired Chicago's Lerner Newspapers and sold it to Hollinger. He also obstructed justice by taking possession of documents to which he was not entitled. The case is still under appeal.
  The Supreme Court of the United States heard an appeal of his case on 8 December 2009,and rendered a decision in June 2010. Black's application for bail was rejected by both the Supreme Court and the US District Court judge who sentenced him.
  On June 24, 2010, The U.S. Supreme Court ruled 9-0 that the definition of "honest services" fraud used in the trial judge's charge to the jury in Black's case was too broad and ordered the U.S. 7th Circuit Court of Appeals in Illinois to review three fraud convictions against Black in light of the Supreme Court's new definition. The appeal court will review Black's case and determine whether his fraud convictions will stand or if there should be a new trial. The jailed former media baron's obstruction of justice conviction, for which he is serving a concurrent 6 ½ year sentence, remains in place. Black's lawyers filed an application for bail pending the appeal court's review. Prosecutors contested Black's bail request arguing in court papers that Black's trial jury had proof that Black committed fraud. He was granted bail on July 19, 2010 by the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals and will be released on a $2 million unsecured bond put up by conservative philanthropist Roger Hertog. Black has been released from custody and has ordered to remain on bail in the continental United States until at least August 16 when his bail hearing shall resume, and the same day by which Black and the prosecution have been ordered by the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals to submit written arguments for that court's review of his case.
  Until July 21, 2010, Black, Federal Bureau of Prisons #18330-424, was incarcerated at Federal Correctional Institution Low, Coleman, a part of the Coleman Federal Correctional Complex Prior to being granted bail, his scheduled release date was October 30, 2013.
  Following his release, coincidentally on his 18th wedding anniversary, Black wrote a column for Canada's The National Post on his time in prison. Black described America's inmates as an "ostracized, voiceless legion of the walking dead." Black was to appear once again in a Chicago court on August 16 to provide full and detailed financial information to the judge after which she would consider his request to be allowed to return to Canada while on bail. In spite of his professed desire to return to his former home in Canada, Black's legal representatives advised the court that they would not provide the requisite accounting and would thusly not be interested in petitioning the court further on the matter and vacated the August 16 hearing. Although many have cited this refusal to disclose as more deception on the part of Black it is possible that the voluminous amounts of information that would have been required for complete disclosure could not be compiled in time or would have been used to further incriminate Black in later proceedings, a potential violation of the fifth amendment of the constitution in American law. He was, however, under no compulsion to make this disclosure as he had initiated the appeal for a bail variation of his own volition. His next court appearance, where he may reapply for permission to return to Canada, is Sept 20, 2010.
  On October 28, 2010 the U.S. Court of Appeals of the Seventh Circuit overturned two of the three remaining mail fraud counts. It left Black convicted of one count of mail fraud, and one count of obstruction of justice. The court also ruled that he must be resentenced.
  
  IRS action against Black
  
  In 2010, the Internal Revenue Service initiated a legal proceeding in the United States Tax Court against Black for $71 million in back taxes which it claims is owed on $120 million in unreported income between 1998 and 2003. Black is challenging the claim, arguing that he is not subject to US taxing authority claiming that he was, "neither a citizen nor a resident of the United States" and was not obliged to pay taxes in the U.S.
  
  Peerage controversy and citizenship
  
  Main article: Black v. Chrétien
  Upon the advice of British Prime Minister, Tony Blair, Queen Elizabeth II was to honour Black by raising him to the peerage. However, Canadian Prime Minister, Jean Chrétien, gave the conflicting advice that a Canadian citizen should not receive a titular honour, citing the 1919 Nickle Resolution. Black at the time held dual Citizenship with Canada and Great Britain. As a result of the dispute, Black renounced his Canadian Citizenship in 2001 and is now a citizen only of Great Britain. He has applied to have his Canadian Citizenship returned to him, but currently this has not been granted. Some argue the motive for this is solely so that he may attempt to serve out a portion of his sentence in Canada rather than the US. Another view is that it would simply allow him to more easily cross the border into Canada, as his conviction in the US is sufficiently serious that he is considered inadmissible.
  
  Books and other publication
  
  A noted wit, Black has written an autobiography and three substantial biographies of controversial twentieth-century figures. In each he casts his hero as a man of incorrigible[clarification needed] intellectual strength buttressed and not weakened by partisan attack and personal malady. His revisionist works rescue Duplessis and Nixon from their status as moral pariahs, and portrays Roosevelt as an centrist who saved capitalism. Black writes in a highly erudite, if idiosyncratic, manner. His purple style and pointed criticism have been the subject of much derision in reviews.[citation needed]
  Duplessis: Black re-worked his 1973 Master's thesis on Maurice Duplessis into a rehabilatory biographical re-examination of the controversial long-serving Quebec premier, published in 1977.
  A Life in Progress: An autobiography, published in 1993.
  Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Champion of Freedom: While Black was CEO of Hollinger International, the company spent millions of dollars purchasing collections of private papers of US President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Black subsequently completed a 1,280-page biography, in 2003.
  What Might Have Been: A 2004 essay of speculative history depicting the latter half of the 20th century as it may have unfolded had Japan not bombed Pearl Harbor in 1941, edited by Andrew Roberts.
  Richard M. Nixon: A Life in Full: Continuing in the vein of Duplessis, Black's 1,152-page 2007 biography of Richard Nixon sought to rehabilitate the former U.S. President's legacy. This approach was criticized by some reviewers, who felt that it attempted to exculpate Nixon of some negative aspects of his time in office.
  Black continues to contribute regular features to the National Post, the newspaper he founded in 1998 and sold in 2001. In an article there, Black indicated that his next book will describe how his business empire was destroyed while court-protected managers enriched themselves and eradicated shareholder value. He says, "The judiciary and regulators in both countries are complicit in these events. They will have much to answer for. This is the real story, and I will publish it soon."
  In the November 2008 issue of Spear's magazine, Black wrote a diary piece from jail, detailing 'the putrification of the US justice system' and how 'the bloom is off my long-notorious affection for America'.
  On March 5, 2009, Black contributed a piece to the online version of the conservative magazine National Review (NRO). Called 'Roosevelt and the Revisionists' and based on his earlier biography of Roosevelt, it argued that FDR's New Deal was intended to save capitalism, and so deserved conservative support. In her March 9 critique of this piece on NRO, author Amity Shlaes observed, "I will be co-hosting, with Dean Thomas Cooley of NYU/Stern, a Second Look conference on March 30 to permit scholars to present the multiple studies that suggest the New Deal and Great Depression are worth taking a look at from every angle. The great shame here is that Conrad would have added much to this event, and yet he cannot attend."
  
  Biographies and portrayal in popular culture
  
  The documentary film Citizen Black, which premiered at the 2004 Montreal and Cambridge film festivals, traces Black's life and filmmaker Debbie Melnyk's attempts in 2003 to interview Black, and her eventual interview. US prosecutors subpoenaed unused footage of a 2003 shareholders meeting for use in Black's trial.
  Canadian actor Albert Schultz portrayed Black in the 2006 CTV movie Shades of Black.
  Tom Bower's biography Conrad and Lady Black: Dancing on the Edge (ISBN 0007232349) was published in 2006 by Harper Collins. It was republished in August 2007 with an additional chapter reporting on the trial and its outcomes.
  There is talk of two dramas based on his life: one from Tom Bower and Andrew Lloyd Webber and another from Alistair Beaton.
  The last authorized portrait busts of Conrad Black and Barbara Amiel were created between 2001–2002 by Canadian sculptor Dr. Elizabeth Bradford Holbrook and arranged by noted Canadian artist Christian Cardell Corbet who himself also created a portrait of Black.
  A book "Robber Baron: Lord Black of Crossharbour" was published in 2007 by ECW press and written by George Tombs. ISBN 978-1-55022-806-9
    

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