Months passed. The kidnappers, realizing the "Golden Boy" wasn't worth the gold they expected, sent a gruesome reminder through the mail—a lock of hair and a piece of Paul's ear.
J. Paul Getty died a few years later, surrounded by the finest things "all the money in the world" could buy, yet arguably owning nothing that truly mattered. He proved that while money can build a fortress, it often turns that fortress into a tomb. All the Money in the World
Back in Italy, the boy’s mother, Gail, was living a different reality. She was a Getty by name but lived on a budget. She fought a two-front war: negotiating with ruthless criminals who were losing their patience and pleading with a father-in-law who valued his ledger more than his blood. Months passed