
Robert F. Smith is the wealthiest African American man in the United States. Forbes estimates his net worth at over $9 billion dollars. But how did he get there?
Here’s the evolution of Robert F. Smith.
Robert F. Smith is the wealthiest African American man in the United States. Forbes estimates his net worth at over $9 billion dollars. But how did he get there?
Here’s the evolution of Robert F. Smith.
Robert F. Smith was born in Denver, Colorado in 1962 to Dr. Sylvia Myrna Smith and Dr. William Robert Smith.
While in high school, Smith snagged an internship at Bell Labs, a telecommunications and technology company.
Robert F. Smith attended Cornell University and graduated in 1985 with a chemical engineering degree. Cornell named the School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering after Smith after he donated $50 million to the University.
While at Cornell University, Smith joined the Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity.
Smith attended Columbia University. He received his Master of Business Administration degree.
Smith’s first job out of business school was at Goldman Sachs. According to Columbia Business School, Smith was the first M&A banker in Silicon Valley.
Smith met Suzanne McFayden at Cornell University where they both attended undergrad. The pair married in the 1988, separated in 2011, and divorced in 2014.
In 2000, Robert F. Smith founded Vista Equity Partners, a private equity firm specializing in technology, in Austin, Texas. The company now manages over $101 billion in assets. Smith is worth $9.2 billion.
In 2015, Smith married Hope Dworaczyk, a former Playboy model, television host, reality star, and skincare entrepreneur. John Legend serenaded the couple, who were then 52- and 30-years-old.
Smith has seven children — three with his first wife and four with his second wife.
According to federal prosecutors, for 15 years, Smith “engaged in an illegal scheme to conceal income and evade taxes he owed by using an offshore trust structure with related foreign corporations and offshore bank accounts, and by willfully filing a series of false documents with the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) and the Treasury Department.”
Prosecutors allege that the larger scheme involving Billionaire Robert Brockman was the biggest tax evasion scheme in U.S. history involving billions of dollars. Smith entered into a non-prosecution agreement with the government in October 2020. According to the New York Times, Smith was ordered to pay $139 million in fines. He remained at Vista Equity Partners.
Smith vowed to pay for the student loans of the entire Morehouse College graduating Class of 2019. He also received an honorary degree from the school.
Smith served as Chairman of the Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights organization from 2013 to 2020. He also won the human rights organization’s Ripple of Hope Award in 2010 for his work on racial inequities in the criminal justice system.
Smith is well known for his philanthropic work. In 2018, he was the largest individual donor at the City of Hope Gala, which supports prostate and breast cancer research for Black men and women. He also donated $50 million to his alma matter, Cornell University. He is the first African American person to sign the Giving Pledge to give away the majority of his wealth.