The woman tried to pressure Elvis Presley’s granddaughter, actress Riley Keough, to pay her millions or risk losing the family’s famous Memphis mansion.
A Missouri woman pleaded guilty on Tuesday to a federal charge related to a bogus attempt to sell Graceland mansion in a brazen plot to defraud Elvis Presley’s family out of millions.
Elvis Presley's cousin, Danny Smith, reveals the biggest rumor about the King of Rock and Roll that persists almost 50 years after his death.
Prosecutors had accused the woman of creating fraudulent loan documents and forging Lisa Marie Presley’s signature.
All of Tennessee is glad that Graceland remains safely in the possession of Elvis's heir and that it will remain a celebrated Memphis landmark for generations to come." Findley, of Kimberling City, falsely claimed Presley's daughter Lisa Marie Presley ...
Lisa Jeanine Findley on Tuesday pleaded guilty to one count of wire fraud for falsely claiming Lisa Marie Presley defaulted on a loan and used the Graceland mansion as collateral.
A scamming grandma has pleaded guilty to a brazen scheme to defraud Elvis Presley’s family out of millions of dollars and auction off his iconic Graceland estate.
Feb. 25, Lisa Jeanine Findley, a Missouri woman who was arrested and charged in an alleged scheme to sell Elvis Presley's Graceland, pleaded guilty to mail fraud. She was arrested in August 2024.
A Tennessee judge sided with Keough and stopped the sale of Graceland that same month. Days later, the scammers admitted to the plot, but who exactly was behind it remained a mystery as the then-unknown Findley attempted to pin the crime on Nigerian identity thieves.
As part of a plea deal, prosecutors agreed to dismiss one count of aggravated identity theft that was previously filed against her.
Since its 1982 public opening, Graceland, Elvis Presley’s former home in Memphis, Tennessee, has continued to draw in visitors. But the ownership of the property was nearly in jeopardy last year when one Missouri woman attempted to defraud the Presley family out of the property.