Monday, August 19, 2019

Aretha Franklin's Son Scores in Court Over Singer's Alleged Handwritten Wills

The three handwritten wills found in Aretha Franklin’s home, following her death, will now be examined to determine if they are authentic.

According to court documents obtained by The Blast, a Michigan Court Judge has granted a motion filed by Aretha’s son, Kecalf Franklin, to have the wills looked at by an expert.

The judge ruled that an expert will have four hours with the handwritten wills and can bring a microscope to the court.

Kecalf has been demanding an expert be allowed to look at the wills, which all grant him more power with Aretha’s estate than he has currently.

Earlier this year, Kecalf Franklin went to court to file docs seeking to take complete control of Aretha’s estate and wants Owens removed ASAP.

He accused her of mismanaging the estate and failing to perform her duties. Kecalf requested the judge appoint him as the successor and allow him to completely manage all aspects of Franklin’s business.

Kecalf claimed Owens has failed to provide the heirs any accounting or inventory of his mother’s property and assets. He wants to a full list of her jewelry, masters, Grammys, gold records and other awards.

He called Owens out for not communicating about the new business deals being negotiated. Kecalf claimed to know nothing about the announced television show Genius and the scheduled MGM biopic about Aretha’s life.

The heir even claimed they have been given no information about the investigation of her music catalog worth or the investigation of forgery of her checks. He also wants information about the audits being done on her IRS tax returns from 2012 – 2018.

Owens fired back denying Kecalf’s allegations she has left the heirs in the dark. She claims to be handling all responsibilities of the estate on time and properly.

She said inventory hasn’t been done yet but blamed the heirs for delays. Owens was adamant Kecalf and the other siblings have been updated constantly about the business affairs.

Owens also revealed since police did not press charges over alleged stolen property of Franklins, the estate is preparing a civil lawsuit. She asked the court to deny all requests by Kecalf and keep her on.
Recently, Kecalf went to court accusing the personal representative of the estate of failing to tell him or his siblings about a variety of issues.

As The Blast previously reported, the estate rep recently claimed to have found three handwritten wills that Franklin left in secret spots around her home.

Aretha’s son Edward Franklin also filed docs backing his brother Kecalf in the move to remove the current personal representative of the estate and put himself in charge.

Full Article & Source:
Aretha Franklin's Son Scores in Court Over Singer's Alleged Handwritten Wills

1 comment:

bluesneakerdog said...

Two of her kids out of three want the administrator removed and two want one son to take over. If the wills are shown to be authentic her wishes should be respected. My question us--who chose the expert?