Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti announced last
month his office was investigating whether any fraud had been
carried out.
Director of communications for the Tennessee Attorney General's
Office Amy Lannom Wilhite said it became apparent that "this was
a matter best suited for federal law enforcement."
"We have faith in our federal partners and know they will handle
this appropriately," Wilhite said in a statement.
According to a public notice of an intended sale, Naussany
Investments said that Presley's late daughter, Lisa Marie
Presley, had used Graceland as collateral when borrowing $3.8
million that was never repaid. She died last year at age 54.
Lisa Marie's daughter, Riley Keough, who inherited the estate
after her mother's death, sued Naussany, saying her mother had
never taken out the loan and that Naussany was engaged in fraud.
A day before the auction was due to take place on May 23, Shelby
County Chancellor JoeDae Jenkins issued an injunction, halting
the sale.
A Naussany representative told Reuters just after the judge
blocked the sale that it would withdraw all of its claims over
Graceland.
Graceland, where Elvis Presley is buried, is a popular tourist
attraction, drawing more than 600,000 visitors a year.
Presley, dubbed the "King of Rock and Roll," died in 1977 at age
42.
(Reporting by Jasper Ward; Editing by Donna Bryson and Sandra
Maler)
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