Priscilla Presley has questioned the “authenticity and validity” of her daughter’s will, Lisa Marie Presley.
The ‘Bare Gun’ actress has raised issues about an “alleged 2016 modification” to her late offspring’s Promenade Belief, which named the singer’s daughter Riley Keough a co-trustee, and questioned whether or not the star’s signature on the doc was real.
Priscilla filed authorized papers in Los Angeles on Thursday (01.26.23) difficult the modification naming Riley and her brother Benjamin, who took his personal life in 2020, as co-trustees, claiming that she and her deceased former enterprise supervisor daughter, Barry Siegel. that they had been appointed co-trustees on January 29, 1993 when Lisa Marie “executed a revocable residing belief, which she utterly modified and reformulated on January 27, 2010.”
Priscilla additionally famous that “each the unique 1993 belief and the 2010 reformulation seem to have been rigorously drafted by competent property planning attorneys.”
Following Lisa Marie’s demise earlier this month, Priscilla discovered a doc dated March 11, 2016, which “was an modification” to the belief, eradicating her and Barry as co-trustees and as an alternative putting in the kids Of the singer.
The 77-year-old actress wrote in paperwork obtained by ‘Leisure Tonight’ that “there are a lot of points surrounding the authenticity and validity of the alleged 2016 modification,” together with the misspelling of Priscilla’s title and that the modification “was by no means made.” delivered to [Priscilla] throughout Lisa Marie Presley’s lifetime as required by the categorical phrases of the Belief.”
He additionally argued that Lisa Marie’s signature on the 2016 paperwork “appears inconsistent together with her standard and customary signature.”
Priscilla desires the modification declared invalid by a choose.
On the time of Lisa Marie’s demise, she and Barry had been concerned in a court docket battle over the administration of her fortune.
The Promenade Belief has a 15 per cent curiosity in Lisa Marie’s father, the late Elvis Presley’s Graceland property and the license to his mental property.