Janice Pottker

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Janice Pottker is a Potomac, Maryland, author. She has a Ph.D. in sociology from Columbia University. She has lectured for the Smithsonian Institution, for the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum and for the Corcoran Gallery of Art. [1]

Contents

Controversy

Around 1990,[ when? ] she wrote an article for Regardie's , a magazine that covered the Washington business area, about Feld Entertainment. The CEO of Feld, Kenneth Jeffrey Feld paid Clair George and his assistant Robert Eringer $2.3 million to have them and their associates wiretap, bug and spy on Pottker. [2] [3] [4] [5]

Publications

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References

  1. "Jan Pottker". Janice Pottker. Retrieved 2008-08-04.
  2. "The Greatest Vendetta on Earth". Salon.com . August 30, 2001. Archived from the original on May 14, 2008. Retrieved 2008-08-04. On a gloomy Veterans Day in 1998, Janice Pottker answered an unexpected knock on the door of her home in Potomac, Md., a woodsy, upscale suburb of Washington. Standing there was a man she'd never seen before, a private detective who introduced himself as Tim Tieff. He told Pottker, a freelance writer married to a senior government official, that he had a discreet message from Charles F. Smith, a former top executive with Feld Entertainment, owner of the Ringling Brothers-Barnum & Bailey Circuses, Disney Shows on Ice, and other subsidiaries that make it the largest live entertainment company in the world.
  3. Leiby, Richard. "Send In The Clowns". Washington Post . Retrieved 2008-08-04. The tale begins on a summer day 15 years ago when CEO Kenneth Feld opened his copy of Regardie's, a slick magazine that covered the Washington business scene. He turned to Page 44 and began reading a lengthy article about himself. It was written by Pottker, a freelancer who had once interviewed him for a book about corporate heirs. Headlined "The Family Circus," the piece began flatteringly enough, portraying Feld as a hands-on executive committed to providing quality entertainment.
  4. "Envisioning a Humane Economy".
  5. "The Jaw-Droppingly Sketchy Past of America's Newest Billionaire". Esquire. 2014-02-12. Retrieved 2022-09-28.