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King Siblings Reach Settlement

More news stories on Blacks in Charge

Ernie Suggs, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, October 13, 2009

The children of Coretta and Martin Luther King Jr. on Monday avoided a jury trial and settled their festering legal feud over control of the civil rights icon’s estate.

Following the order of Fulton County Superior Judge Ural D. Glanville, Martin Luther King III and Bernice King met with their brother, Dexter King, for close to 15 hours Monday to hash out a deal. Judge Glanville announced the settlement after 11:30 p.m.

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Under the settlement, a third-party custodian will be brought in temporarily to run King Inc., the corporation that controls the use of their father’s papers, intellectual property and materials. The move effectively pushes aside Dexter King, who now serves as president of King Inc.

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The King siblings spent all day Monday—from 8:30 a.m. until 11:30 p.m.—locked away working on a deal.

The appointment of a custodian strikes at the heart of what the original lawsuit, filed in July of 2008 was all about—power.

The King children’s feud became public when Bernice, 46, and Martin, 51, field suit against Dexter, 48, charging him with tainting their parents’ legacy through financial mismanagement.

Filed in Fulton County Superior Court, the suit specifically accused Dexter of mishandling funds from King Inc., improperly taking money from the estate of their mother, Coretta Scott King, and acting unilaterally regarding both parents’ estates without their permission or knowledge.

Bernice and Martin said they were kept in the dark by their brother, who had been installed as the head of King Inc. The board of King Inc. consists only of the three siblings and there has not been a shareholders meeting since before their mother died in 2006.

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At the center of the conflict is money and how Dexter managed and spent it. Martin and Bernice have long-contended that they didn’t get a fair split of the $32 million that the siblings got when they sold their father’s papers to the city of Atlanta.

Dexter was also accused of negotiating an $800,000 licensing deal with a foundation that is raising money for a King memorial on the National Mall without their knowledge. There were also book and movie deals that were done without their input.

Dexter countersued and tried to force Bernice to provide love letters between his parents.

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Original article

(Posted on October 14, 2009)

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Comments

1 — Chris N. wrote at 8:23 PM on October 14:

The appointment of a custodian strikes at the heart of what the original lawsuit, filed in July of 2008 was all about – power.

Huh? That sounds like wishful thinking and an editorial comment on the part of the writer. People don’t file lawsuits over power, they do it over money.

The only reason that Bernice and Martin III wanted to strip power away from Dexter was because they didn’t know where the money was going.

It doesn’t surprise me that all three wanted to avoid a public trial. Then the books of all three would be out in the open.

2 — Concerned citizen wrote at 12:13 PM on October 15:

The name MLK has been turned into a cash register. I remember a story about how our nation’s capital wanted to have a statue of MLK put up. His family would only allow it if they got paid $700K for his image. One would think it would be an honor and a privilege just to have the statute in DC, but to get paid for the statute?

They don’t care about civil rights all they care about is MONEY!!!!!


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