Marriages In 1968, Ebbers married Linda Pigott and the couple raised three daughters. Ebbers filed for divorce in July 1997 and married his second wife, Kristie Webb, in the spring of 1999. She filed for divorce on April 16, 2008, approximately a year and half after he entered prison.
Personal holdings At his peak in early 1999, Ebbers was worth an estimated $1.4 billion and listed as 174th on the
Forbes 400. His personal holdings included: •
Douglas Lake Canada's biggest ranch – 500,000 acres (2,000 km2) in
British Columbia. General partner/president. Acquired in 1998 for about $65 million. Sold on May 30, 2003, by MCI to
E. Stanley Kroenke. •
Angelina Plantation – 21,000 acres (85 km2) farm in
Monterey, Louisiana. Co-owner with brother, John Ebbers. Acquired in 1998. •
Joshua Holdings – which combined with Joshua Timberlands and Joshua Timber totals 540,000 acres (2,200 km2) of timberlands in Mississippi, Tennessee, Louisiana, and Alabama. Majority owner. Acquired properties in 1999 for about $600 million. •
Pine Ridge Farm – Livestock and crop farm in Mississippi. Owner.
LLC formed in 1997. •
Columbus Lumber – High-tech lumber mill in
Brookhaven, Mississippi. Majority owner since at least 1996. •
Yachts – BCT Holdings, owner of Intermarine, a yacht building and repair company in
Georgia. Primary owner. Intermarine acquired in 1998 for about $14 million. •
Hotels – Nine hotels in
Mississippi and
Tennessee: Co-owner or owner. Acquired over many years. •
Trucking – KLLM, a trucking firm in Mississippi. Director. Acquired with partner in 2000 for about $30 million. Was at one point led by K. William Grothe, who was an executive at
WorldCom. •
Sports – Mississippi Indoor Sports/
Jackson Bandits, a minor league hockey team. 50% owner. Acquired in 1999. Sold stake in September 2003.
Other activities From 1993 through 1995, Ebbers served as chairman of the
board of directors of the Competitive Telecommunications Association, where he pleaded with the
United States Congress to improve competition with the incumbent telecommunications companies. In 1997, he became the chair for Mississippi College's New Dawn Campaign, a $100 million fundraising campaign to improve campus facilities. In July 2001, Ebbers was proposed by
George W. Bush as the chair for the
President's National Security Telecommunications Advisory Committee.
Religious faith While CEO of WorldCom, Ebbers was a member of the Easthaven Baptist Church in
Brookhaven, Mississippi. As a high-profile member of the congregation, Ebbers regularly taught
Sunday school and attended the morning
church service with his family. His faith was overt, and he often started corporate meetings with prayer. When the allegations of conspiracy and fraud were first brought to light in 2002, Ebbers addressed the congregation and insisted on his innocence. "I just want you to know you aren't going to church with a crook," he said. "No one will find me to have knowingly committed fraud."
Death Ebbers died at his home in
Brookhaven, Mississippi, on February 2, 2020, at the age of 78, just over a month after being granted
compassionate release from prison due to his ill health. His lawyers said that he was, by the time of his death,
legally blind and suffering from
dementia,
anemia and significant weight loss. ==References==