Elvis Presley’s widow challenges her dead daughter’s will

Priscilla Presley, the widow of Elvis Presley, is contesting the will of her daughter Lisa, who died in mid-January and did not include her mother in her estate, according to court documents.

Lisa Marie Presley died suddenly in Los Angeles on January 12 of cardiac arrest at the age of 54.

The singer had in 2010 named her mother, Priscilla, as one of the administrators of her large estate, both during her lifetime and in the event of her death, according to court documents.

But she seems to have withdrawn this quality from him in 2016, to designate his children Riley and Benjamin Keough as heirs after his death.

According to a document consulted by AFP and filed last week by her lawyer, Priscilla Presley only “discovered” these modifications after the recent death of her daughter.

The widow claims the invalidation of this new will, because it was never presented to her during the lifetime of her daughter. His lawyer points out in particular that Lisa Marie’s signature “seems inconsistent” compared to her usual signature.

A possible legal battle over this legacy would involve high stakes. Because Lisa Marie was Elvis’ only daughter.

She previously controlled Elvis Presley Enterprises, but sold most of her stake to a private equity firm in 2005. She mostly retained control of Graceland, the property her father owned in Memphis, Tennessee, and where he was found unconscious before his death in August 1977.

This mansion has become an important place of pilgrimage for fans of the rock’n’roll legend.

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His son Benjamin Keough, cited as a potential heir, committed suicide in 2020.

Her eldest daughter, Riley Keough, is a 33-year-old actress who starred in the blockbuster Mad Max: Fury Road and more recently in independent film Zola.

Lisa Marie also gave birth to twin daughters, Harper and Finley. The two teenagers are to inherit Graceland jointly with Riley, a property representative told the magazine. People.

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