Australian businessman and former owner of the Sydney Swans AFL club, Geoffrey Edelsten, has died, aged 78.
Edelsten died on Friday at his home in Melbourne.
Victoria Police confirmed the discovery of a man's body in a St Kilda Road apartment on Friday afternoon. Mr Edelsten's death is not being treated as suspicious.
Edelsten was born in Melbourne on May 2, 1943, and spent most of his years surrounded by controversy.
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Born in Carlton to Jewish migrant parents, he studied at the University of Melbourne, graduating in 1966.
After working as a resident at the Royal Melbourne Hospital he became a GP, and with a colleague, established a practice in Sydney's eastern suburbs.
In the 1980s, he set up a string of open-all-hours medical clinics that featured grand pianos and chandeliers in the waiting rooms. Patients, who were bulk-billed, flocked to the clinics.
He was deregistered in NSW in 1988 and later in Victoria.
He became, by his own description, a "white knight" of the Sydney Swans in 1985 as they faced dire financial pressure and concerns they couldn't survive.
He spent time in jail after being found guilty in 1990 of soliciting a well-known hit-man, Christopher Dale Flannery, to assault a former patient.