

“I have hope but no expectation that what we will do with the center will benefit me personally.

“I saw the opportunity to really make a difference,” Mr. “I don’t know how long it will take," Cudkowicz said about finding a cure for the disease that took Mr. It was his intellect, it was his business acumen.” “He became a good friend and a partner in this fight against ALS,” Cudkowicz said in an interview, and described Mr. Healey/AMG Center for ALS at the hospital, which opened in November 2018 with Dr.

Healey’s friends, family, colleagues, and business partners also donated at least $15 million. Healey donated $5 million to Massachusetts General Hospital. In 2018, shortly after being diagnosed with ALS, Mr. “Sean was my friend, mentor, and an imitable leader, always exhibiting an indefatigable entrepreneurial spirit and unwavering dedication to friends, colleagues and Affiliate partners,” AMG chief executive Jay Horgen said in a prepared statement. Healey joined Goldman Sachs until 1995, when he was recruited by startup Affiliated Managers Group (AMG).Īt AMG he rose quickly, to president and CEO in 2005, and to chairman and CEO in 2011. Healey went on to attend Harvard Law School, where he was an editor of the Harvard Law Review.įollowing law school, Mr. He earned a master’s degree in philosophy with first-class honors from University College in Dublin in 1984. Healey was awarded a Rotary Scholarship to study philosophy in Dublin, where he met his first wife, Kerry. He graduated magna cum laude with a degree in history and literature.Īfter Harvard, Mr. He was 59 years old, and the husband of Amy Broch-Healey.īorn May 9, 1961, in San Rafael, California, he was the son of Yvonne and the late Edward “Mike” Healey.Īfter graduating from high school in Oceanside, California, he attended Harvard, where he was a member of the varsity wrestling team and Phi Beta Kappa. Healey, an investment executive who for more than a decade led Affiliated Managers Group (AMG), died on Friday, from Lou Gehrig’s Disease.
