Suspicion | The Billionaire Murders: The hunt for the killers of Honey and Barry Sherman - S2 The Billionaire Murders | E9 Succession
Episode Date: May 26, 2023The four children of slain billionaires Honey and Barry Sherman squabble over their new-found riches, but only two really want power. Hanging over all of this is the possibility that Honey had a will.... This is the final episode of “The Billionaire Murders: The hunt for the killers of Honey and Barry Sherman,” a “Suspicion” podcast probing the strange case of the famous Toronto couple who were found strangled in their north Toronto home in 2017. For five years, reporter Kevin Donovan has covered the case for the Star, fought court battles to access documents on the police investigation and the Sherman estate, and wrote a book about it. Audio Sources: Facebook, CTV, Alex Krawczyk Spotify, Green Storage, Apotex, HBO, NBC News, The One Residences, Bahamas Government, Sicilian Vampire, City News, Bank Hapaolim, Octupus, Baycrest, Sherman Memorial, Brothers for Life, Samfiru Tumarkin LLP, Toronto Police
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What would you do if you were suddenly wildly rich?
Anyone visiting Israel has many options to choose from when it comes to selecting a hotel.
For those seeking the luxury, the view of the Marina,
or top of the line restaurants, the Ritz Carlton is the place.
This luxury hotel is located in an amazing location overlooking the Marina and Herzlia,
where there are hundreds of sailboats from all over the world
and surrounded by shops, fine dining restaurants,
entertainment options, and a romantic atmosphere.
In 2021, three years after Honey and Barry Sherman died,
Kaelin, their youngest daughter, paid $45 million
to purchase a half-stake in a hotel in Israel.
This is the same young woman Barry overruled
when she wanted to buy a $60,000
car. It is a world-class destination. People come from everywhere to come here. And although
it's known mostly for skiing, this is my favorite time of year to be there. The hiking,
the biking, you have the fantastic restaurants, the pedestrian-only village. So this is the
nice combination of a little bit out Dorsey, very family-friendly, you have the nightlife, and you have the comforts of
everything you need.
That's a CTV morning report describing Whistler, British Columbia. That's where the eldest
Sherman child, Lauren, lives a quiet life with her son and husband. An online bio from
a few years ago, lists Lauren as a yoga instructor,
a registered clinical counselor,
and a therapeutic chef.
She says her goal is to make her clients
the most unrestrained, powerful,
and healthy version of themselves.
Must be the rhythm of the room,
eternal drummers on the coast. With songs like Rhythm of the Road, Sherman daughter Alexander Krochek has launched a music
career and was recently nominated for a Canadian folk music award.
She told me singing is her way to process grief over the death of her parents.
She's also pursuing a master's degree in public health.
I really enjoy the green storage. My favorite part about it is actually the staff that works here.
Everything's so easy and amazing and it's nice to go into a garage when you're loading
and unloading.
But thank you for everything you do and I am a very happy customer.
That's one of more than 100 video testimonials on Jonathan Sherman's company website.
Not a lot has changed since 2017.
He and Adam Paulin have the same nine locations they did back then.
Out on Shandos Lake, North East of Toronto, Jonathan continues to operate his small marina
and cottage rental business.
He never acted on the expansion plan he pitched to his father, but the canoe he was building
when I interviewed him, it's in the water now.
One thing Jonathan has done is grow a real estate investment business
called Harlow Capital, which he started in the fall of 2017. It now has 11 projects on the go,
many of them high-end condominiums. Seeing what the four children have and have not done since
their parents died, I often wonder what they think of Barry's credo.
Heard here in this promotional Apatex video. I'm Kevin Donovan, and this is the billionaire murders, the hunt for the killers of Honey and Barry Sherman.
Episode 9. Succession.
succession. Manufacturing operations at Apatex span across four countries, Canada, the United States,
Mexico, and India, with a global manufacturing capacity of more than 20 billion tablets
and capsules.
We export these to more than 100 countries and territories and operate in dozens of
countries.
In this episode, I'm going to tell you about the battle for control of the Sherman Empire.
Now it's hard to talk about succession without calling to mind the hit HBO show.
And this comment from fictional patriarch Logan Roy to his four children.
Everything I've done in my life, I've done for my children.
I know I made mistakes, but I've always tried to do the best by them because I love them.
Barry liked to use similar words when talking to his children.
Though unlike Logan Roy, Barry never admitted to making mistakes. I think Barry did love his children, but he missed so much of their lives.
Jonathan talked about that in his eulogy.
He said their dad was just never around.
But before we get to the battle for control, just what did Barry own?
Barry Sherman built a pharmaceutical giant among the world's biggest generic drug makers,
the Sherman's estimated worth over $4.5 billion.
Apatex was just one part of Barry's portfolio.
There were so many others.
The most recent investment came less than five months before the murders.
Barry kicked in $65 million to rescue Sam as Raihi's bid to build the tallest residential tower in the murders. Barry kicked in $65 million to rescue Sam
as Rahe's bid to build the tallest residential tower
in the country.
Here's Sam announcing the one residences.
Good afternoon and welcome.
Thank you all for coming today.
This is a big day and moment.
You know, when you work on a project of the importance
and scale of the one.
Sam's funding was falling apart.
Not only did Barry kick in money, he helped bring in other investors.
In his sales pitch, Sam said the 85 story building will be a centerpiece of Canada's
largest city, with a main floor ceiling tall enough to hold a giant Christmas tree like
the one in New York's Rockefeller Center,
and LED lighting on the outside.
The building will be matched and will flow with LED colors that will match the emotional content
of the city and what's happening at the time. For example, Canada Day, red and white.
For example, it's breast cancer month. Pink. For example, if the
leaf's wind, the Stanley Cup, which they will, because we put in the lighting
system to make the building blue. Some investments flew below the radar.
Barry indirectly put a billion dollars into a pharmacy chain, which is
interesting given that his own company made drugs sold
by that chain.
And then there was cash salted away down south.
With the Bahamas being blessed with so much natural beauty, it is only natural that we
want to welcome people to come and experience first hand our various islands.
Now, Barry wasn't a beach guy.
The tourism minister you heard in that promotional video.
She never mentions it, but billionaires like Barry Sherman
love a good tax haven.
One insider at Barry's holding company told me,
his boss had at least $2 billion hidden away down there.
The financial press estimates Barry was worth 4.5 billion,
but insiders say it was closer to 10.
We always use the kibbits, they're going to live to 120 in Jewish, that Moses lived to 120.
And he wanted to live bees of 100 in Swantzik, means up to 120.
And then I said, one, you get 120, Barry, you're going to want another, what? He says, of course.
Jack K. Barry's second in command said succession planning wasn't a big thing for Barry.
But he did muse about one of his children learning the world of generic drugs.
Daughter Lauren told homicide detectives their father wanted both her and Jonathan to take over
Apatex. Neither were interested. But Jonathan and
business partner Adam Paulin did have their eyes on the overall Sherman holdings.
We have many things to discuss, but Frank will have to be one of them. My genuine goal is to
understand this situation and then move on to more important matters like
succession and whether Adam and I can play some role in that.
That's an email Jonathan sent Barry in 2015 voiced by an actor.
It was just before Jonathan suggested to his sisters that their father be declared incompetent
due to his continued funding of businessman Frank D'Angelo. It's the email chain that led to Barry sending Jonathan this trailer for Frank's latest movie,
The Sicilian Vampire.
Frank, as in all of the films Barry funded,
produces, directs, and stars.
Life is timing
and timing is life.
Things can change in a millisecond. Families the most important thing in a man's life.
Don't matter how many cars are much cash,
and how powerful they are.
If he doesn't have no family, he's nothing.
Barry never responded to the suggestion that Jonathan and Adam Paulin play a role in succession,
though I do know Barry was no fan of his son's business partner.
But in other emails, Barry does call Jonathan the heir to the empire, and Jonathan refers
to himself as the heir apparent.
I found that this conflicted with what Barry told his close friends that all his children
were a disappointment.
Now who was mining the finances when the murders took place?
Shocking news from the business world tonight, the founder of Canadian drug giant, Apatex,
Barry Sherman and his wife, Honey, have been found dead in the York Mills mansion.
A few hours before it went public, news reached a two-story brick building north of Toronto.
It's the headquarters of Sherfham, the center of Barry's financial universe.
Unlike his home on Old Colony, there are multiple cameras and a high-tech series of locks
on a heavy steel door.
In his office, Alex Glassenberg, the president of Sherfham, answered his cell phone, then quickly left.
Short, bearded, a banker originally from South Africa, Glassenberg was the one person who knew as much about Barry's empire as Barry.
Glassenberg immediately reached out to contacts at the Sherfam Bank in Israel. As a leader in the Israeli economy,
Bunkapua-Leam works tirelessly
towards the financial freedom of all its customers.
Glassenberg asked the bank to recommend protection
for the Sherman family, key executives,
and the trustees of Berries estate.
Within a day, security guards with combat training
arrived.
In addition to 24-7 coverage, the guards installed a special app on everyone's phone.
We're going to show you the Office of Perseucision System, which is an innovative, integrated,
PCM Command and Control software that manages all your security operations, risks, emergency response, cyber facility management.
It's really a one-stop-stop solution.
Along with the personal security coverage, the app would track everyone's location and
provide a panic button to summon help.
There was special concern for the safety of the four executors of the estate, also called
trustees.
Two of them were Jonathan Sherman and Alex Glassenberg.
The other two were Jack K and Brad Crotchack,
daughter Alexander's husband, who also worked at Sherfham.
It is the last will and testament of the man
at the center of one of the biggest unsolved murder cases in Canada.
After Barion Honey died, there was a private reading of the will, but it would remain sealed
from public eyes for three years, though sources told me what was in it.
Here's a CTV newsreader the day I won access at the Supreme Court.
Recently released court documents shedding light on how Barry and Honey Sherman divided
up their massive estates.
The document showed that if Honey Sherman had survived her husband, she would have inherited
his estate, given that she didn't, the estate would be equally split between the couple's
four children.
There are two things I found of interest in the will.
First, Barry had earlier that year reduced the number of his executors from 8 to 4,
removing his three daughters and his sister's husband.
2. There was a caveat in Barry's will. Yes, the kids split the cash, but it was metered
out over time. One quarter of their share when each turned 24, one third at age 30, and
the balance at age 35. Lauren was already over 40,
and Jonathan was just turning 35.
Surprisingly, there was nothing in the will for charity
or other family members, including Honey's best friend,
her sister, Aunt Mary.
What they were doing, I already knew I was going to get fucked.
How do I do it?
Honey had told me a long time ago they'd thought things. Mary told me that Honey had promised she'd be getting $500 million in Honey's lifetime.
She told the Sherman children about this, but downgraded the amount to $300 million,
what she saw as an easier amount to swallow.
It didn't go well.
I believe Honey did make that promise to Mary because Honey spoke about it
to one of my sources. Mary remains devastated, cut off. One day, two garbage bags were
fed X to her house, old clothes, a few mementos, from when the Sherman family cleaned out Honey
and Barry's Florida condo before selling it. Mary says her family has PTSD from how they've been treated.
I lost my death's press!
Tensions over who would control Barry's holding company began immediately.
Jonathan thought it should be him and Adam Paulin, and Jonathan wanted to manage his
siblings' money. The sisters disagreed and allied themselves with Alex Glassenberg at
Sherfham. Meanwhile, there was a growing tension between Jonathan and Jack K,
who is now running Apatex. daughter Alexandra noticed it.
Jack and John were fighting and then I turned it back away from both of them to
take a step back being like whoa, anyone's like two bolts but it had.
Jonathan did successfully push to streamline Apatex for eventual sale.
A Florida opioid production plant Barry bought for $50 million US was sold, but at a $20 million
loss.
Apatex European operations were divested, and the breaks were put on the plan to build
the mansion that was Honey's dream.
Nobody wanted it.
Then, Jonathan marched Jack K out the door.
Under a negotiated deal, Jack resigned as one of the four executors of his best friends
estate and received a major settlement.
He lost his Israeli security when he was fired, though the app was left on his phone.
But Alex Glassenberg, he's still there.
In our garage interview, Jonathan told me he hoped to one day get rid of Glassenberg.
My ultimate goal is Alex will be off the board, and we will bring in independent board members.
That never happened. As to the Sherman family ties since the murders, the only Sherman couple still together is
Jonathan and Fred.
Lauren was not with anyone at the time, but has since married.
Alexandra and Brad are divorced, but I'm told it's amicable, and Brad received a very
generous settlement in the tens of millions of dollars.
At the time of the murders,
Kaelin was engaged to Jared Render,
an electrician who got a job at Apatex after they began dating,
and whom she called her shining night.
They married five months later,
but Kaelin asked for a divorce within two months.
Jared received about $100,000 in a settlement, and his postings on Facebook are blunt and
angry.
He says, Kaelin treated him like garbage.
The Sherman's are all liars.
And if police want to find out who killed Barry Sherman, they should try and learn who
he really was and who he pissed off.
Of the 250 people interviewed by police, the only
former relationship partner they spoke to was Andrew Liss, who had dated Jonathan
before he met Fred. Andrew told police about how Barry gave him millions of
dollars to start a home building company on the condition that Jonathan not
be involved. Yet another example of how controlling Barry was.
In an email exchange, Andrew told me,
John and I are on amicable terms, and like back then, we just want what's best for each other.
Andrew, who also goes by the name Andrew London, now markets himself as a pampered nomad offering luxury guided trips.
We'll be right back. There was a second succession battle, this one for the philanthropic side of the Sherman
Empire.
I am stepping out of my comfort zone, but I'm willing to work hard to try to not fall
flat on my face on the night of.
That's Honey the Fund Razor.
This was a take on dancing with the stars
to raise money for Baycrest,
a health sciences center that provides care for older adults.
She hired Michael, a Russian-born dance instructor,
and made a fun promotional video,
including a clip recorded while traveling
with girlfriends in Asia.
Michael and I have been practicing all the time and everywhere we go.
Dancing in the coffee shop.
Dancing in the shoe store.
Dancing in the park.
Dancing in the drug store.
We have Appetitex products.
Dancing on the Great Wall of China.
The Sherman's gave away well over a hundred million dollars in their lifetime.
Mark Greif, who was fundraising campaign director for the United Jewish Appeal, told me that
he saw good things from Jonathan and Alexandra in 2018.
I really got involved with Jonathan and Alex after the event, unfortunately, where they
were suddenly thrust into this situation
of having to deal with commitments made by their parents
and having all kinds of wealth available
and trying to figure out what to do.
Jonathan's interest in philanthropy was a pleasant surprise.
In the course of that, I had some really interesting
conversations with both Jonathan and Alex.
And John is interesting in that he has done, and I learned this from others as well. I had some really interesting conversations with both Jonathan and Alex.
And John is interesting in that he has done and I learned this from others as well.
He did a lot before his parents passed away.
Very quietly, never seeking recognition.
Lots of stuff with kids, specifically in sports or underprivileged kids and providing
funding that allowed them to do stuff and access programs that they otherwise would not be able to access.
Even as involved as I am in the community, I knew nothing about it.
He really was under the radar.
He's a very low key guy.
Mark said Alexandra handles the big picture stuff.
Well, she's taking a lead on the family perspective on the charitable giving, but the kids are all involved. They're all engaged. picture stuff. I spoke to Alexandra about her parents in charity.
She said her father planned to give most of his money away.
I felt like I've never been to that many, many, many times.
But like, you know, who really needs this amount of money?
There's a lot of need in our world.
There's a lot of extreme poverty.
And people they can't afford medication.
And he was definitely cognizant of that unjust balance in the world, and how we have so much
money and there's so much need.
And I was definitely, yeah, he wants to give it away.
He was inspired by Warren Buffett.
Billionaires Warren Buffett and Bill Gates have signed what's called the Giving Pledge,
a promise by the wealthy to give most of their money away in their lifetimes.
Barry Sherman never signed it, though his daughter and two of Barry's closest friends say
they heard him talk seriously about the concept.
With Barry and Honey Gone, control over Sherman Charity proved to be a sore point between Jonathan
and Alexandra.
It started with the dispute over Jonathan's plan to use Sherman charity money for a hockey
ring.
Here's an email from Jonathan to Alexandra in April 2019.
It's around the time she went to police.
Hi, Alex and Brad.
Here is the latest update on the Rink project.
As we recall, UJA put together an initial budget and it was prohibitively expensive.
Since that time, I've done some more research.
In short, it is viable.
The budget would be in the 40-50 million range to do it right.
Essentially, the idea is to build a premium facility with additional features like training
gyms and rehab in order to attract the premium customers to use the facility during the downtime, like
summer when the leagues are off.
Jonathan and some of his business partners who all played beer league hockey were involved
in the plan.
Alexandra said that draining 40 to 50 million dollars from my parents' foundations to build
a premium facility to attract premium customers is definitely not
within the budget or the mandate of our foundations and not at all in line with my parents'
philosophies.
The rift between siblings deepened.
Jonathan disinvited Alexander to the baby shower for the two children he and Fred were
expecting through surrogacy.
As painful as this is for me to say, I would like to respectfully request that you please
do not attend the baby shower.
Alexandra wrote to lawyer Brian Greenspan, who at the time was representing the Sherman
family.
She didn't like that Jonathan was still pushing for the hockey rink.
From Alexandra Sherman to Brian Greenspan.
There are many parallels here.
John was used to bullying my dad into giving him money.
My dad would often ask John to take out financing
for his green storage buildings,
but John would refuse and kick and scream
until my dad gave in.
I have been avoiding John since December 2018,
when he and Adam Paulin made it very obvious
that they are money-hungry monsters.
Today, Alexandra is in control of the Sherman Philanthropy.
Each of the four children have also created
their own individual foundations.
And as to this vow, Jonathan made it the funeral.
We promise to honor you by staying together,
staying strong, and of course continuing your legacy of giving.
To that end, we would like to announce the creation
of the Honey and Berry Foundation of giving.
We would also like to ask our Aunt Mary,
Honey's sister, to help guide this foundation
in a way that best honors our parents.
Jonathan told Mary in an email that he and his siblings
had decided to keep her away from the charities
and from family events.
As to the Barian Honey Foundation, it never got off the ground, though Jonathan did unfurl a banner
with his proposed name on a hill in Israel when he and husband Fred and Alexander's husband at the
time Brad Crotchack joined the Massacumta, a grueling 90 kilometer march through the desert to support
wounded Israeli defense forest fighters.
A video was made by brothers for life, the charity that runs the event. your duty is to come, complete your task, and lead with great progress. This is one of the many
journeys that you will face in life." One of the team-building challenges involved all of the men
gathering on a magic carpet. They were instructed to turn it over without stepping on the sand.
Sources on the trip said there was great confusion until Jonathan stepped up and coolly started giving directions. The carpet was
quickly turned over. Nobody touched the sand. My sources said they saw a similarity between
father and son that day, both had in their words clever intelligence.
There was something in the news about Apatex, the drug company going on at the soul actually
and bought by another company, giving some details on that, what you know.
Yeah, so absolutely, the major Canadian pharmaceutical company is actually being purchased by an
American firm called SK Capital Partners.
It's an American private investment firm.
I'm told the four Sherman children received a total of $3 billion from the 2023 sale of
what was often referred to as Barry's fifth child.
That's just part of the disbursements that children have received and continue to receive
as the estate is wound down.
But here's something important.
Police say the estate of Barry Sherman is of interest to them.
When I questioned Detective Constable Dennis Hymn, the lone, full-time homicide investigator
on the Sherman file, he said the estate is embedded in the investigative documents.
He refused to say which parts and why they are in there, telling me that to reveal this
would hurt the investigation.
But after a lengthy court battle, he did release the references to the estate.
How if Barry died, Honey would inherit almost everything, and if both were dead, the children
would get it all.
But unlike other portions of the police documents,
he refused to release the commentary in the warrant pages
that would explain the reason the estate documents were there,
as in what theory the police are pursuing related to the estate.
It was clear that someone else had been through the place looking for items of value
or hidden stashes of money.
Everything in the Master bedroom was overturned, with massive holes punched through the walls.
Remember the urban explorer from episode 1, the fellow who snuck into the Sherman home
before it was demolished?
He found a home ransacked, and he noted a series of big holes punched in the walls.
I have to wonder, was someone looking for Honey Sherman's will?
Which everyone has told me doesn't exist?
But what if Honey did have a will?
What I can tell you is that the possibility that she did have a will is in police interview
files.
It comes in a statement made by one of Honey's service providers who was a close coughodont
of Honey's.
I know it's there because I also interviewed this service provider.
What the service provider described to me is a very interesting interaction with Honey
three weeks before the murders.
I'm going to read to you from notes of my interview.
It was around November 20, 2017.
Honey and I were talking and she said,
meet me at Young in St. Clair Avenue.
Honey said she was just coming from her lawyer's office
and she had just updated her will.
She had done some amendments.
After hearing the Sherman's had been found dead, the service provider immediately reached
out to police.
It won't surprise you to know that a detective didn't follow up for six weeks.
I also want to tell you that the police documents I have seen show Honey was reaching out by
email to lawyers at the downtown corporate law firm
of Blaney's, just before she died.
Honey's sister Mary told me that a lawyer there, Doug Henler, had some role in the Sherman's
estate planning.
The police documents say those emails Honey was sending were never reviewed because they
were considered legally privileged.
And here's one final piece of information on this issue.
At 9.01 p.m. on Wednesday, December 13, 2017,
Doug Henler of the Blaney Law firm called Barry Sherman.
At a time, he was most likely dead.
Recently, I reached out to Doug Henler, asking him why he'd called Barry that night,
and if he, Barry and Honey, had any dealings regarding the estate, and in particular,
Honey's will. Here's his response.
From Doug Händler to Kevin Donovan. Good morning, and thank you for your email.
I regret that I cannot respond to your questions.
You are inquiring about matters that would be subject to Solister client privilege.
I would expect that, yes, the police looked at every family member, including me.
That's an email Jonathan sent to me just before our garage interview.
I think a lot about that email and about our five-hour talk.
You've heard me speak about the estate and the beneficiaries.
Way back when I began this investigation, Sherman lawyer Brian
Greenspan told me that in any homicide investigation, police started the center and moved out. This
has got me thinking, what if the killers are people with some connection to one or all
of the four children, and they saw an opportunity to help themselves financially.
In the hope that if money flowed to the children, it might then flow to them.
As to the unsolved murder investigation, Sherman-Dotter, Alexandra, released a statement just before
the fifth anniversary of the murders, reminding people
that the $10 million reward for information leading to a conviction still stands.
A few days later, Jonathan Sherman released his own statement, saying he was adding $25
million to the reward, bringing it to a total of $35 million.
He told one media outlet, ''Closure will not be possible until those responsible for this evil act are brought to justice.''
Meanwhile, police have recently told me that they are seeking information in five countries.
They won't name them. I think they have a suspect or suspects. Former Chief Mark Saunders, who was once a homicide detective, hinted at this in a press conference
on the Sherman case.
I have to be cognizant that the suspects or suspects are watching us right now.
I know that for a fact.
And 50-old Colney Road, where our story began, has been sold as a building lot.
It turns out the property was a double lot.
The new owners have changed the address to 48 old Colney Road.
Thank you for listening to The Billionaire Murders, the hunt for the killers of Honey and
Barry Sherman.
While this is the final episode, I'm not done with this case.
Sometimes, I feel like I'm just getting started.
Please follow us and stay tuned.
The billionaire murders, the hunt for the killers of Honey and Barry Sherman,
is written and narrated by me, Kevin Donovan.
It was produced by Sean Pattinson, Rezhu Moudar, Alexis
Green, and JP Foso. Additional production from Brian Bradley and Crawford Blair. Sound
of music was created by Sean Pattenden. In this episode, Jonathan Sherman was voiced by Mark
Ladder. Look out for my book, The Billionaire Murders, and coming later this year, the Crave Documentary by the
same name.