Prince Rupert Loewenstein, an aristocrat who helped make the Rolling...

Prince Rupert Loewenstein, an aristocrat who helped make the Rolling Stones as rich as kings, has died. He was 80. Credit: WireImage / Nick Harvey

LONDON -- Prince Rupert Loewenstein, an aristocrat who helped make the Rolling Stones as rich as kings, has died. He was 80.

Friend Hugo Vickers says Loewenstein, the band's former business manager, died Tuesday in a London hospital.

The Oxford-educated German aristocrat -- full name Prince Rupert Ludwig Ferdinand zu Loewenstein-Wertheim-Freudenberg -- advised the Stones for almost four decades from 1968. He masterminded their transformation from a financially rackety rock group to a formidable moneymaking machine.

Despite the relationship, he always said he didn't like the band's music. Last year Loewenstein published a memoir, "A Prince Among Stones." Mick Jagger was not amused.-- AP

Police are only addressing the supply, but demand is what fuels the illicit sex trade, experts say. Newsday political reporter Bahar Ostadan has the story. Credit: Newsday Staff

'If you don't address demand, you don't address the problem' Police are only addressing the supply, but demand is what fuels the illicit sex trade, experts say. Newsday political reporter Bahar Ostadan has the story.

Police are only addressing the supply, but demand is what fuels the illicit sex trade, experts say. Newsday political reporter Bahar Ostadan has the story. Credit: Newsday Staff

'If you don't address demand, you don't address the problem' Police are only addressing the supply, but demand is what fuels the illicit sex trade, experts say. Newsday political reporter Bahar Ostadan has the story.

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