Home Business Meet Bernard and Lisa Selz, the wealthy New York City couple who has donated millions to the anti-vax movement

Meet Bernard and Lisa Selz, the wealthy New York City couple who has donated millions to the anti-vax movement

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Meet Bernard and Lisa Selz, the wealthy New York City couple who has donated millions to the anti-vax movement
Bernard Lisa Selz
Bernard and Lisa Selz have donated millions to anti-vax organizations.

Bertrand Rindoff Petroff/Getty Images

New York City declared a public health crisis in April after a measles outbreak began in one Brooklyn neighborhood.

Two of the city’s wealthy residents have played a significant role in funding the anti-vax movement: Bernard and Lisa Selz have given more than $3 million to organizations that question the safety of vaccines, a review of their tax returns by The Washington Post revealed. The couple’s donations have been used to fund government lobbying by anti-vaccination activists and the controversial 2016 film “Vaxxed.”

Keep reading to learn how Bernard and Lisa Selz have helped fund the anti-vax movement.

Multiple attempts to reach the Selzes for comment were not returned.

Bernard Selz (right), 79, is a graduate of Columbia University and the manager of Selz Capital, a hedge fund he founded in 2003.


Bertrand Rindoff Petroff/Getty Images

Selz currently acts as Managing Member and Portfolio Manager at Selz Capital, according to Bloomberg.

According to The Washington Post, Lisa Selz, 68, held jobs at Manufacturers Hanover Trust and Tiffany and Co. before taking a role with the Selz Foundation in 1993.

The couple has two sons and lives on Manhattan’s Upper East Side.

The Selzes are known philanthropists.


Bertrand Rindoff Petroff/Getty Images

But in 2012, The Washington Post reports, the Selz Foundation began to focus on anti-vaccine organizations, starting with a donation to Andrew Wakefield.

Andrew Wakefield, anti-vax activist, pictured in center.

Anthony Devlin/PA Images via Getty Images

In 2012, the gave a $200,000 gift to a legal fund for anti-vax activist Andrew Wakefield. The reason for the foundation’s shift is unknown.

As Business Insider’s Erin Brodwin previously reported, Wakefield published a study linking the measles vaccine to autism in 1998. Wakefield was convicted of professional misconduct in 2010 and his license was revoked. The Lancet, the journal that published the study, retracted it twelve years after publishing it.

The Selzes later donated $1.6 million over several years to two organizations founded by Wakefield.


Tim Ireland/PA Images via Getty Images

Bigtree has hosted numerous events in Williamsburg, ground zero of New York City’s measles outbreak.


REUTERS/Carlo Allegri

In April, Business Insider reported that 285 cases of measles had been reported in Brooklyn. The outbreak began with the ultra-Orthodox Jewish community in Brooklyn’s Williamsburg neighborhood, many of whom rejected the vaccine for religious reasons.

The outbreak is so severe that New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio declared the outbreak a public health crisis.


REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton/File Photo/File Photo

More:

Features
New York City
Vaccines
Philanthrophy

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