Mogul, facing trial, adopts girlfriend

Scott Wilson's cousin Anthony Logan, and Scott's mother, Lili Wilson, attach flowers to a memorial in July 2010 in Wellington, Fla. Scott Wilson drowned after his car was allegedly hit and knocked into a canal by John Goodman. A lawyer for Lili Wilson said in a court filing that Goodman's adoption of his 42-year-old girlfriend was meant to disguise his true wealth should he be found liable and forced to pay punitive damages.
Scott Wilson's cousin Anthony Logan, and Scott's mother, Lili Wilson, attach flowers to a memorial in July 2010 in Wellington, Fla. Scott Wilson drowned after his car was allegedly hit and knocked into a canal by John Goodman. A lawyer for Lili Wilson said in a court filing that Goodman's adoption of his 42-year-old girlfriend was meant to disguise his true wealth should he be found liable and forced to pay punitive damages.

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) - The story already had people's attention: A multimillionaire polo magnate was accused of causing a drunken-driving wreck that killed a young man. But now, with his criminal trial approaching, a strange twist has raised even more eyebrows: He has adopted his 42-year-old girlfriend.

Critics say it is an attempt by John Goodman to shield some of his fortune from the accident victim's family. But at least one legal expert says a judge is likely to see through the maneuver and prevent the 48-year-old owner of the International Polo Club in Palm Beach from benefiting from it.

The adoption was revealed in recently filed court papers, dumbfounding even the judge who will preside over the wrongful-death lawsuit brought by the victim's family. Circuit Judge Glenn Kelley said Goodman's actions "border on the surreal and take the court into a legal twilight zone."

"It's the kind of thing that you go, "Whoa. What?'" said Bob Jarvis, a law professor at Florida's Nova Southeastern University.

A lawyer for the mother of the man killed in the wreck said in a court filing that Goodman's move was meant to disguise his true wealth should he be found liable and forced to pay punitive damages.

"If, through a series of transactions, John B. Goodman succeeds in preventing the jury from considering evidence of his true wealth, the jury's punitive damage verdict may be far short of anything close to meaningful punishment," said Christian Searcy, who represents Lili Wilson.

Goodman was the heir to his family's business, a heater and air conditioner manufacturer, which he sold in 2004 for $1.43 billion. He built his polo club into one with an international reputation, drawing Palm Beach elites to watch matches and sip Veuve Clicquot champagne.

On the morning of Feb. 12, 2010, police say, a drunken Goodman was driving his black Bentley convertible home after a night out and ran a stop sign, slamming into a Hyundai Sonata. Behind the wheel was Scott Wilson, a 23-year-old recent college graduate.

Wilson's car rolled into a canal. Goodman, police say, left the scene, leaving Wilson to drown.

He waited about 50 minutes before calling 911. When police arrived, he reeked of alcohol, his eyes were bloodshot and glassy and his speech was slurred, authorities say. His blood alcohol level was 0.177 percent, more than twice the legal limit.

Goodman's criminal trial is scheduled for March 6, and he could get up to 30 years in prison if found guilty of DUI manslaughter and vehicular homicide. His fortune is also at stake because of the Wilson family's lawsuit, set for trial March 27. The family has not said exactly how much it is seeking.

Some of Goodman's fortune is already shielded because it is in a trust fund that was set up for his two biological children in 1991 and is estimated to be worth more than $300 million. He added a third beneficiary to the trust - girlfriend Heather Colby Hutchins - after adopting her last fall. Hutchins got immediate access to some of the funds because she is the only beneficiary who is an adult.

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