Priscilla Presley Sues for ‘Abhorrent’ Financial Elder Abuse, Claims Losses Over $1 Million

Priscilla Presley is suing four former business associates for financial elder abuse and fraud, claiming the group conned her out of more than $1 million.

According to the complaint filed Thursday in Los Angeles, the defendants, including Florida-based memorabilia auctioneer Brigitte Kruse, forced Presley “into a form of indentured servitude, where [she] was forced to work so that they could receive the lion’s share of any revenue that she was able to earn in the future.” The filing describes Kruse as a “con-artist and pathological liar” who stole more than $1 million from Presley and “fraudulently induced” her into signing contracts that gave the defendants in the lawsuit 80 percent of her income.

“This action arises out of a meticulously planned and abhorrent scheme by the defendants in this action to prey on an older woman by gaining her trust, isolating her from the most important people in her life, and duping her into believing that they would take care of her — personally and financially — while their real goal was to drain her of every last penny she had,” the lawsuit filed by Presley’s lawyer Martin Singer and obtained by Rolling Stone reads.

Lawyers for Kruse did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Kruse previously sued Presley for breach of contract in Florida. In that case, Kruse alleged that Presley, a world-famous actress and author who shot to fame through her marriage to Elvis Presley, illegally walked away from their business partnership after her circumstances changed in the wake of daughter Lisa Marie Presley’s untimely death.

As Rolling Stone reported last fall, Presley eventually reached a trust settlement with granddaughter Riley Keough that granted her a $1 million lump-sum payment, $100,000 annual salary, and burial rights near Elvis at Graceland.

In her new 45-page complaint, Presley says Kruse “quickly immersed herself in Presley’s life” after meeting her in 2021, “often sending her multiple text messages a day, and telling her how much she loved her and admired her.” Presley alleges Kruse and her business associates managed to convince Presley that her former advisors were “either deceitful or incompetent” and then began fabricating reasons for “massive payments they made to themselves from Presley’s bank accounts.” She alleges they charged her unnecessary fees, moved her accounts to their preferred banks, and allegedly had Presley paying the mortgage for a home owned by Kruse’s husband.

According to the lawsuit, Kruse and her associates allegedly “torpedoed” a deal that was close to being finalized in which Presley was set to receive an ownership stake in a cosmetics company. Instead of the “potentially lucrative” ongoing ownership interest, they negotiated a one-time payment, Presley claims.

“When it became clear to the defendants that their scheme had been uncovered, they attempted to falsely portray themselves as the victims by filing a lawsuit against Presley in Florida in the name of several of the sham companies they established,” the new lawsuit states. Presley says the defendants gave her a minority share in the companies while awarding themselves the “exclusive license to exploit and profit off of her name, image, and likeness, and to control and receive virtually all of her income from any of her professional ventures, including ones that pre-existed their involvement in her life.”

Trending

Presley, 79, is asking for general damages of at least $1 million as well as punitive damages and attorney’s fees. She also wants all the “fraudulently-induced agreements” with the defendants rescinded so she can regain control of her accounts and obtain a “full accounting of their financial malfeasance.”

“What Presley cannot accomplish through this action, however, is the rehabilitation of her personal friendships and relationships that were disrupted and/or materially harmed by the selfish, fraudulent acts of defendants, which could take years to accomplish, if at all,” the filing states.