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Armstrong: Beloved grandson of WHAT's Mary Mason allegedly stole her savings

Mary Mason introduces then-Philly Mayor John Street, left, and former President Bill Clinton during a rally to help re-elect Street at the Marriott Hotel in Philadelphia on Oct. 31, 2003.
Mary Mason introduces then-Philly Mayor John Street, left, and former President Bill Clinton during a rally to help re-elect Street at the Marriott Hotel in Philadelphia on Oct. 31, 2003.Read moreDavid Maialetti / Staff Photographer

You didn't mess with Mary Mason. The sharp-tongued former radio host, whose real name is Beatrice E. Turner, was known for being tough on Philly politicians and anyone else who ran afoul of her or didn't do as she thought they should.

Mornings with Mary on WHAT radio was for decades required listening for thousands of Philadelphians. She regularly had politicians and other civic leaders shaking in their wingtips. No one was safe from her harangues, and she amassed a small fortune in the process.

But there was one person for whom she never had a harsh word: her grandson. Mason doted on that kid. She would go on and on about her precious "grandbaby."

I wonder what Mason, 86 and confined to a wheelchair by dementia, would say about him now --  if she knew that he stands accused of absconding with her entire estate and leaving her destitute.

Authorities say he stole $843,000 of Mason's savings and investments and spent it on everything from liquor and food to a Las Vegas strip club. It would have been a bigger amount, if another $62,000 had not been recovered by a court-appointed attorney from the sale of real estate Turner, 33, allegedly had purchased with his grandmother's money.

"It's a very sad case," said David A. Jaskowiak, the lawyer appointed in 2016 to handle Mason's finances.

"Suffice it to say that had she had the resources she had when she retired without any dissipation by her grandson, she would have more than ample resources to afford her good care for the rest of her life."

The airwaves surrounding Mason's finances started to develop static in 2012 following the sudden death of Turner's father, C. Steven Turner. By this time, she had been diagnosed with dementia.

As of last year, Mason's bill was going unpaid at Sunrise of Lafayette Hill, in Montgomery County, where she'd lived for 4 1/2 years. She has since moved to an undisclosed location.

Last April, Mason was granted a court-appointed attorney to act as her executor and oversee her finances.

A longtime family friend, Debbie Satterwhite, is in charge of looking out for Mason's physical needs. She has created a nonprofit called the Mary Mason Care Project to help her and other seniors who need niceties such as new nightgowns or TV sets.  Satterwhite also hopes to prepay Mason's funeral expenses at DeBaptiste Funeral Homes.

"I don't think she would go for him being prosecuted," Satterwhite replied. "She thought the sun rose and the moon set on him. I don't think she would go for this."

"He would have been a hero if he'd doubled or tripled the money ... His intentions weren't mischievous in nature. If he was stealing from anybody, it was ultimately himself."

Had it been anyone but her grandson, the Mary Mason I remember would have ripped him to shreds on the air.

Contributions to the Mary Mason Care Project can be mailed to 744 South St., Suite 767, Philadelphia, PA 19147.