Missouri woman gets more than 4 years in prison for trying to sell off
Elvis Presley's Graceland
[September 24, 2025]
By ADRIAN SAINZ
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — A Missouri woman who tried to use a fake company
and forged documents to sell off Elvis Presley's Graceland for millions
of dollars in a brazen and unrealistic foreclosure sale of the
home-turned-museum was sentenced Tuesday to more than four years in
federal prison.
U.S. District Judge John T. Fowlkes Jr. questioned the likelihood of the
plot's success when he sentenced Lisa Jeanine Findley in federal court
in Memphis to four years and nine months behind bars, plus an additional
three years of probation. Findley, 54, declined to speak on her own
behalf during the hearing.
Findley pleaded guilty in February to a charge of mail fraud related to
the scheme. She also had been indicted on a charge of aggravated
identity theft, but that charge was dropped as part of a plea agreement.
Findley, of Kimberling City, falsely claimed Presley’s daughter borrowed
$3.8 million from a bogus private lender and had pledged Graceland as
collateral for the loan before her death in January 2023, prosecutors
said when Findley was charged in August 2024. She then threatened to
sell Graceland to the highest bidder if Presley’s family didn’t pay a
$2.85 million settlement, according to authorities.
Findley posed as three different people allegedly involved with the fake
lender, fabricated loan documents and published a fraudulent foreclosure
notice in a Memphis newspaper announcing the auction of Graceland in May
2024, prosecutors said. A judge stopped the sale after Presley’s
granddaughter sued.

Experts were baffled by the attempt to sell off one of the most storied
pieces of real estate in the country using names, emails and documents
that were quickly suspected to be phony.
Graceland served as Presley's home in Memphis before he died in August
1977 at the age of 42. It opened as a museum and tourist attraction in
1982 and draws hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. A large
Presley-themed entertainment complex across the street from the museum
is owned by Elvis Presley Enterprises.
The public notice for the foreclosure sale of the 13-acre (5-hectare)
estate said Promenade Trust, which controls the Graceland museum, owed
$3.8 million after failing to repay a 2018 loan. Actor Riley Keough,
Presley’s granddaughter, inherited the trust and ownership of the home
after the death of her mother, Lisa Marie Presley.
Keough filed a lawsuit claiming fraud, and a judge halted the proposed
auction with an injunction. Naussany Investments and Private Lending —
the bogus lender authorities say Findley created — said Lisa Marie
Presley had used Graceland as collateral for the loan, according to the
foreclosure sale notice. Keough’s lawsuit alleged that Naussany
presented fraudulent documents regarding the loan in September 2023 and
that Lisa Marie Presley never borrowed money from Naussany.
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Graceland, Elvis Presley's home, is pictured, Jan. 7, 2011, in
Memphis, Tenn. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey, File)
 Kimberly Philbrick, the notary whose
name is listed on Naussany’s documents, indicated she never met Lisa
Marie Presley nor notarized any documents for her, according to the
estate’s lawsuit. The judge said the notary’s affidavit brought into
question the authenticity of the signature.
A statement emailed to The Associated Press after the judge stopped
the sale said Naussany would not proceed with the sale because a key
document in the case and the loan were recorded and obtained in a
different state, meaning “legal action would have to be filed in
multiple states.” The statement, sent from an email address for
Naussany listed in court documents, did not specify the other state.
After the scheme fell apart, Findley, who has a criminal history
that includes attempts at passing bad checks, tried to make it look
like the person responsible was a Nigerian identity thief,
prosecutors said. An email sent May 25, 2024, to the AP from the
same email as the earlier statement said in Spanish that the
foreclosure sale attempt was made by a Nigerian fraud ring that
targets old and dead people in the U.S. and uses the internet to
steal money.
In arguing for a three-year sentence, defense attorney Tyrone Paylor
noted that Presley's estate did not suffer any loss of money and
countered the prosecution's stance that the scheme was executed in a
sophisticated manner.
Paylor added that the plot was a “concocted idea” that had no real
possibility of success.
Fowlkes, the judge, said it would have been a “travesty of justice”
if the sale had been completed. Fowlkes also questioned how Findley
thought the sale could be accomplished.
“This was a highly sophisticated scheme to defraud,” he said.
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