Who is Trump's new mega-donor, Timothy Mellon?

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29 minutes ago

By Bernd Debusmann Jr, BBC News, Washington

Getty Images Billboard put up by Democrats to highlight Timothy Mellon's donationsGetty Images

Timothy Mellon has donated both to RFK Jr and Donald Trump in the 2024 electoral cycle.

An octogenarian billionaire scion of one of America's wealthiest families has emerged as a major figure backing Donald Trump's 2024 election campaign.

With a $50m (£39.5m) donation made on 31 May, 81-year-old Timothy Mellon has become the largest donor to the former president in this electoral cycle.

Mr Mellon, the heir to the Pittsburgh-based Mellon banking family, also has been the biggest donor to independent candidate Robert F Kennedy's campaign.

Known as a recluse, the Wyoming-based Mr Mellon avoids the spotlight and social circles of other US billionaires.

Here's what we know.

Getty Images Andrew MellonGetty Images

Mr Mellon's grandfather Andrew was treasury secretary between between 1921 and 1932

Who is Timothy Mellon?

According to Forbes magazine, Mr Mellon is a descendant of Thomas Mellon, an Irish immigrant who arrived in the US in 1818, then amassed a fortune in real estate and banking.

The Mellon family - which also included Mr Mellon's grandfather Andrew, a former US treasury secretary - is today worth over $14bn (£11bn). Forbes estimates that it is the 34th richest family in the US.

Born in 1942, Mr Mellon attended Yale and in 1997, he founded Guilford Transportation Industries, a holding company named after his hometown of Guilford, Connecticut.

In 1998, the firm, which mainly invested in railways, bought the brand of famed - but then-bankrupt - Pan American World Airways.

He also developed a love for flying around this time, logging more than 11,500 hours in the cockpit.

"As owner of the company [Pan Am] and with the skill necessary to do the job, he became a commercial pilot and quite literally kept the American institution that is Pan Am flying," reads a synopsis for an upcoming autobiography due to be published in 2025.

For 21 years, he also was trustee of the Andew W. Mellon Foundation, stepping down in 2002.

Three years later, in 2005, Mr Mellon left his native Connecticut for Wyoming.

He has lived there since, avoiding the spotlight and only rarely speaking to the media.

Mellon's political views

Even before his recent donation to the Trump campaign, Mr Mellon has a history of donating to conservative candidates and causes.

In 2010, Mr Mellon donated about $1.5m to the state of Arizona to help fund legal costs to defend SB 1070, a controversial anti-immigration bill.

More recently, in 2021 Mr Mellon helped bankroll Texas governor Greg Abbott's construction of a wall along the Mexican border, providing more than $53m for the project.

He also has given money to various Republican-aligned super PACS - or "political action committees" - to support conservative candidates.

Mr Mellon highlighted some of his political views when he wrote a self-published 2015 memoir. In it, he condemned what he termed "Slavery Redux" social safety net programmes.

Mr Mellon also wrote that black voters were awarded "freebies" in exchange for "delivering votes". He claimed this "largess" is "funded by the hardworking folks...who are too honest or too proud to allow themselves to sink into this morass".

In exchange, he claimed, black Americans became "more belligerent" and "slaves of a new master, Uncle Sam".

Mr Mellon, however, has occasionally made small donations to Democrats, including $2,700 for progressive New York representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's 2018 campaign.

He later told Bloomberg News that she tried to return the donation, but that he refused to cash the cheque.

The BBC has contacted him for comment on his political donations.

Mellon's quest for Amelia Earhart

In 2012, Mr Mellon donated $1m to a group dedicated to finding the remains and aircraft of Amelia Earhart, a famous American aviator who vanished while flying over the Pacific in 1937.

Ric Gillespie, the executive director of the group - International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery - later told US media outlet NOTUS that Mr Mellon joined them on a fruitless expedition to search for the plane.

“We didn’t find anything," Mr Gillespie said. "But he wasn’t complaining at anything, he was just along for the ride and he didn’t involve himself very much. He spent most of his time sitting on the ship, reading."

A year later, Mr Mellon filed a lawsuit against the organisation in which he claimed the plane already had been discovered before he gave them the money.

A judge ruled against him, however, noting that Mr Mellon's own experts were unable to prove the plane had been found.

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