Melvin Dummar: Howard Hughes Will

Melvin Dummar: Howard Hughes Will

Melvin Dummar: Howard Hughes Will Melvin Earl Dummar (August 28, 1944 – December 9, 2018) was a Utah man who earned attention when he claimed to have saved reclusive business tycoon Howard Hughes in the Nevada desert in 1967, and to have been awarded...
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Melvin Dummar: Howard Hughes Will
Melvin Earl Dummar (August 28, 1944 – December 9, 2018) was a Utah
man who earned attention when he claimed to have saved reclusive
business tycoon Howard Hughes in the Nevada desert in 1967, and to
have been awarded part of Hughes' vast estate. Dummar's claims
resulted in a series of court battles that all ended in rulings
against Dummar.[3] A Las Vegas jury determined in 1978 that the
will, leaving Dummar $156 million, was a forgery.[4] Dummar's story
was later adapted into Jonathan Demme's film Melvin and Howard in
1980. A 2005 reinvestigation of the circumstances surrounding the
so-called Dummar Will yielded new evidence not previously
known.
Dummar's purported meeting with Hughes

While working at a service station in Willard, Utah, Dummar claimed
to have discovered a disheveled and lost man lying on the side of a
stretch of U.S. Route 95 about 150 miles (240 km) north of Las
Vegas, Nevada, near Lida Junction. The man asked Dummar to take him
to the Sands Hotel in Las Vegas. Dummar claimed that only in the
final minutes of their encounter did the man reveal his identity as
Hughes.
The "Mormon Will"
After Hughes' death in April 1976, a handwritten will was
discovered in the Salt Lake City, Utah headquarters of The Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Though purportedly written by
Hughes in 1968, the will had many strange discrepancies. It named
Noah Dietrich as an executor, despite the fact that Dietrich had
left Hughes' employ on bad terms in the late 1950s. The will left
approximately $156,000,000 to the LDS Church and although Hughes
had employed many LDS workers, he had never been a member of that
church. The will left money to his two ex-wives, Ella Rice and Jean
Peters, even though both women had alimony settlements that barred
claims on Hughes' estate. The will was rife with misspellings,
including misspelling the name of Hughes' cousin. It called Hughes'
famous flying boat, the Hughes H-4 Hercules, the "spruce goose" — a
derisive nickname that Hughes had always despised.[5] Most oddly,
the will left one "Melvin DuMar" of Gabbs, Nevada one-sixteenth of
Hughes' estate.

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