Athina Onassis is the sole heiress of Christina Onassis, who inherited 55% of Aristotle Onassis's fortune. The remaining 45% of Aristotle's fortune (minus $26 million settled upon
Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis) was left to the
Alexander S. Onassis Foundation, established in honor of
Alexander Onassis, Christina's late brother, who had died in January 1973, at the age of 24, after his airplane crashed in Athens. In 2018
The New York Times cited a report from the Associated Press, naming Onassis one of the year's new billionaires, and even though she is often credited as a "billionaire heiress" throughout the media, the true extent of her wealth remains unknown. There have been several estimates of her inheritance, including the island of
Skorpios, which was later sold to trusts connected with
Ekaterina Rybolovleva, with some accounts claiming that Onassis's net worth is less than $1 billion. Rybolovleva bought the island for $153 million.
Disputes over Onassis estate Onassis' mother Christina never trusted Thierry Roussel completely, which led the family to arrange for a board of administrators to control the family's money until Athina came of age. During Athina's childhood and adolescence, all expenditures made on her behalf by her father (using money from the inheritance) had to be approved by the board, which led to her father threatening to move back to France, where the estate would have had to pay much higher income tax. At that time, aged 13, Onassis stated that she felt "great aversion to anything Greek". In one of her few interviews, published in
Oggi, an Italian magazine, she later stated that she blamed "all the problems" on the Onassis name. Similarly, her stepmother, Gaby Landhage, stated on American television show
20/20 that Athina had told her "if she could burn all the Onassis money, she would do it." On her 18th birthday, Athina took control of her mother's inheritance. After her 21st birthday in 2006, her lawyers unsuccessfully fought to instate her as President of the Onassis Foundation, as the board claimed she was unqualified and denied that she was an heir to the estate of Aristotle Onassis. Invoking her grandfather's legacy in memory of Alexander Onassis, the board's representatives stated that she had no connection with the Greek culture, religion, language or shared experience, that she never went to college, and had no work experience. ==References==