Tuesday, November 28, 2017

Glen Campbell Will Excludes Three Children


By Walter F. Roche Jr.

Famed singer Glen Campbell, who died in the final stages of Alzheimer's Disease earlier this year, specifically excluded three of his children from benefiting from his estate, according to records filed in Davidson Probate Court in Nashville, Tenn.
The 13-page will, which was dated Sept. 1, 2006, excludes daughter Kelli and sons William and Wesley from any direct benefit from his estate.
Stating that he was "specifically excluding" the three children from receiving anything under the will or a related trust, the filing names his wife Kimberly as executor
Campbell died on Aug. 8 shortly after his wife disclosed he was in the final stages of Alzheimer's Disease. Campbell, who was 81 at the time of his death, was first diagnosed with Alzheimer's in August of 2011.
According to the court filings, Campbell's five other children are Debra Cloyd, Dillon, Nicklaus, Shannon and Ashley Campbell.
Campbell had three children with Kimberly and the others by prior marriages.
A hearing on the will is scheduled for Jan. 18 before Davidson Probate Judge David "Randy" Kennedy.
The filing sets the stage for what is likely to be a lengthy court battle between factions of the Campbell family over what is estimated to be a $50 million or more estate. In fact the battle already was engaged when efforts were initiated to place Campbell was placed in a conservatorship. 
Under the will one half of Kimberly's bequest will go to the family trust. The petition states that while Campbell owned no real estate in Nashville, he does have holdings elsewhere.
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Tuesday, November 7, 2017

Fees Charged to Woman Who Fought Conservatorship


By Walter F. Roche Jr.

A Nashville judge has ordered a woman to pay over $20,000 in legal fees from a conservatorship that she heatedly opposed.
In two separate orders Davidson Probate Judge David "Randy" Kennedy ordered Reba Sherrill of Sumner County to pay the fees requested by her court appointed conservator and another lawyer who was charged with investigating her case.
Sherrill was placed in the conservatorship on a petition originally filed by lawyers for the Vanderbilt University Medical Center, where she was a patient at the time.
Under Kennedy's order Sherrill or her new conservator, her brother, must pay $7,605 to Corletra Mance, who served as guardian ad litem, and $12,500 to Cathryn Armistead, who served as conservator.
Kennedy did reduce Armistead's original fee request of $13,468, but his order did not specify which items he reduced or eliminated. Her original bill included a $437.50 item for a 2.5 hour shopping trip to pick up shampoo and soap for Sherrill. She also billed $297.50 to make a trip to Regions Bank to check on an account balance and open an account for the conservatorship
Armistead billed at the rate of $175 an hour. She was eventually replaced as conservator by Sherrill's brother. Mance billed $150 an hour for her services.
In similar cases in Kennedy's court, legal fees have often been charged to the original petitioner, in this case Vanderbilt. Vanderbilt, however, was dismissed from the case several weeks ago.
Sherrill stated earlier that she did not believe she should be liable for the legal fees for a conservatorship that was unnecessary to begin with.
Contact: wfrochejr999@gmail.com


Thursday, October 19, 2017

Conservator Charges $437 for Soap Run

By Walter F. Roche Jr.

The court appointed conservator for a Sumner County woman, who was placed under court control despite her protest, charged $437.50 to pick up shampoo and soap for her ward, court records show.
Records in the case of Reba Sherrill, who was placed under a conservatorship at the request of the Vanderbilt University Medical Center, show the shopping trip, which took 2.5 hours, was just one of dozens of charges billed by Cathryn Armistead, who was appointed as conservator over Reba Sherrill.
Overall Armistead has requested payment of $13,298.50 at the rate of $175 an hour.
Other items on the 11-page payment request filed by Armistead in Davidson Probate Court include $595 to attend an August hearing on the conservatorship case and $297.50 to go to Regions Bank to check on a bank balance and set up a new account for the conservatorship.
Sherrill has fought the conservatorship and eventually managed to have her brother replace Armistead as her conservator.
Other items on Armistead's bill include $577.50 to attend a recent hearing in the case and $560 to prepare for that hearing.
Armistead, in response to questions, indicated she expects Sherrill's brother, who was appointed as her conservator, to be responsible for paying her bill.
Contact: wfrochejr999@gmail.com

Tuesday, October 17, 2017

Legal Bills Pile Up In Unwanted Conservatorship


By Walter F. Roche Jr.

A Sumner County woman who won a partial victory in an attempt to get out of a conservatorship now may be faced with some $20,000 in legal bills and nearly as much in health care costs she never agreed to incur.
Records show two attorneys have filed fee claims totaling $21,074.19 in the conservatorship of Reba Sherrill who was first placed in a temporary health care conservatorship and then a regular conservatorship over her protests.
The fee requests were filed by Corletra Mance and Cathryn Armistead. Mance is seeking $7,605, while Armistead is asking for $13,469.19. Mance billed at $150 an hour while Armistead billed $175 an hour.
"I didn't hire those people. I didn't ask for these people" Sherrill said in reaction to the billings."They held me hostage. Vanderbilt should pay the bills."
Both Armistead and Mance were appointed by Davidson Probate Judge David "Randy" Kennedy after Vanderbilt University Medical Center petitioned the court to appoint a temporary conservator who could approve the transfer of Sherrill to another facility. The petition stated that she no longer needed the level of care provided by Vanderbilt.
Kennedy approved Vanderbilt's requested appointment of Armistead as Sherrill's temporary conservator and he named Mance, as a guardian ad litem, with the assignment of investigating the case and making a recommendation to the court.
No sooner had Sherrill been placed in a nursing home over her strong objections than she was shuttled back to Vanderbilt and then off to a second nursing home.
Meanwhile Vanderbilt had petitioned the court to make Sherrill's conservatorship permanent with Armistead as her permanent conservator. Kennedy ultimately agreed to make the conservatorship permanent but with Sherrill's brother as the conservator.
He also issued an order forcing Sherrill's lawyer to turn over to the court the little over $1 million she won in the settlement of a claim filed in following an automobile mishap which left her as a paraplegic. She was hit be a car over a year ago.
Vanderbilt officials and their attorneys have not responded to questions about the reasons for their actions.
Sherrill said Vanderbilt should be paying the legal bills.
"I didn't start this mess. Vanderbilt did," she said.
Though court records show that the medical institution that filed the petition often is charged with paying such legal fees, Kennedy dismissed Vanderbilt from the case when he appointed Alexander Sherrill, Reba's brother as her conservator.
Asked who she expected would have to pay her bill, Armistead said that under the circumstances she would expect that Alexander Sherrill would be the one to pay the bill, since Reba is under a conservatorship she lacks the legal capacity to execute a contract.
"I expect the conservator of her estate to pay," she wrote in an email response to questions.
She noted that Sherrill's attorneys had entered into an agreed order acknowledging their client was in need of a conservator.
Mance said that she also has been dismissed from the case adding that in the past on such cases when a person being conserved has assets the fee is collected from the filer of the original petition.
Ultimately, both Mance and Armistead said, it will be up to Kennedy to decide who pays the legal bills.
Meanwhile Sherrill says she received a bill for $19,000 from the nursing home where she was sent.
The billing records submitted by the two lawyers show Mance billed 3.25 hours for talking to Armistead on the case and Armistead billed 4.6 hours for talking to Mance.
In addition to the legal fees, court papers indicate a bill will be filed for the time Sherrill spent in the nursing home.
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Wednesday, October 11, 2017

Sumner County Woman Wins Partial Victory

By Walter F. Roche Jr.

After a lengthy court hearing today, a Sumner county woman won a partial victory when a Davidson probate judge agreed to replace her current court appointed conservator with her brother.
Judge David "Randy" Kennedy agreed to name Alex Sherrill as the conservator of his 53-year-old sister Reba.
Reba Sherrill had been placed in a limited health care conservatorship in August based on a petition filed by attorneys for the Vanderbilt University Medical Center. The hospital said in its filing that she no longer needed acute hospital care but needed to be transferred to an appropriate facility.
Sherrill, who is a paraplegic, had originally been admitted to Vanderbilt on Aug. 8 for medical treatment.
The hospital also petition sought to have Cathryn Armistead, a Nashville attorney appointed as a temporary conservator with the power to transfer Sherrill.
Kennedy approved the petition, including the appointment of Armistead.
Interviewed today following the lengthy hearing, Sherrill said she was happy with the outcome even though her motion to have the conservatorship finally terminated was denied.
"We made a compromise," she wrote in an email.
Just after Sherrill was transferred to a Nashville nursing home under Kennedy's original order, she was brought under protest back to Vanderbilt. She has charged that she was injected with a powerful anti-psychotic drug, Haldol, to which she is allergic.
Sherrill was brought back to Vanderbilt after her newly appointed conservator filed a report with the court showing she had a substantial settlement from the accident which left her as a paraplegic.
From Vanderbilt she was transferred to a Robertson County nursing home, once again over her protests.
Attorneys involved in the litigation have not responded to requests for comment.

Tuesday, October 10, 2017

Woman Conserved Despite Protest


By Walter F. Roche Jr.

A 53-year-old woman who was placed in a temporary conservatorship at the request of attorneys for the Vanderbilt University Medical Center is fighting to keep the conservatorship from being made permanent even as she is being shuttled by ambulance from one facility to another.
Reba Sherrill, a paraplegic as a result of being hit by a car, said in an interview that she was taken  from Vanderbilt to a nursing home, then back to Vanderbilt over her protests and today to a nursing facility in Robertson County.
"It's the most atrocious thing I have ever experienced," she said.
Vanderbilt Medical Center did not respond to requests for comment as did the three attorneys representing the facility.
In late August, Vanderbilt's attorneys, petitioned Davidson Probate Court to place Sherrill in a temporary healthcare conservatorship so she could be transferred to another facility.
The petition stated that Sherrill, who was admitted to Vanderbilt on Aug. 8, "no longer requires acute hospital care but instead requires admission to an appropriate facility."
She had been admitted to Vanderbilt for treatment of physical ailments. 
One day after arriving at the nursing home, Richland Place in Nashville, a facility she chose, an ambulance driver appeared telling her he was going to take her for a ride.
She said she was brought back to Vanderbilt and was there  for five or six day when she was transferred to The Waters at Robertson.
Between  the time she went to Richland and her return to Vanderbilt, her conservator had filed a report showing she had won a substantial settlement from the accident. The conservator also moved to force the settlement money to be deposited with the court. The motion was granted.
As a result of the latest move, Sherrill said it is unlikely she will be able to attend a Wednesday hearing on the petition to make her conservatorship permanent with a lawyer, Cathryn Armistead, named in Vanderbilt's  original petition to act as the overseer of her health, finances and everything else.
Her attorney has filed a motion to have the conservatorship dismissed, or in the alternative, to have her brother named as conservator. The dismissal motion states that under state law, an action for a conservatorship must be filed in the county where the person resides and Sherrill owns a home in Sumner county and she and her family have lived there for decades.
Armistead did not respond to requests for comment.
In the meantime, Sherrill said she has been dosed with a powerful anti-psychotic drug, Haldol, to which she is allergic.
She said a doctor who has been overseeing her care for years filed an affidavit confirming she should not be administered the drug. She said she already has been injected with Haldol multiple times.




Tuesday, September 5, 2017

Abuse of Veterans Leads to Takeover

https://www.justice.gov/usao-nm/pr/justice-department-announces-closing-ayudando-guardians-office

Wednesday, July 19, 2017

Lawyer Fights Subpoena in Thompson Estate Case

By Walter F. Roche Jr.

With the deadline just days away, the original attorney for the estate of the late U.S. Senator Fred Thompson has filed an objection to a subpoena requiring his deposition testimony this week.
In papers filed Tuesday in Davidson Probate Court, Charles A. Trost charged that he had not been given proper notice for the deposition and, in fact, still has not been served.
The objection is but the latest development in a continuing battle over the late senator and presidential candidate's estate.
Thompson's widow Jeri has filed an objection to a $14,000 claim filed by Trost's law firm, Waller Lansden Dortch and Davis, for work performed in an abortive effort to make last minute changes in the television actor's estate.
In the one-page filing Trost's lawyer said the subpoena was not properly served and that the estate's new attorneys had failed to follow proper procedures including providing at least 21 days advance notice.
The dispute over the bill first surfaced last year, but was put on hold about the same time Thompson's two sons by his first marriage charged that changes had been made in the estate plan when the late senator was no longer competent to approve such changes.
That dispute ended abruptly after Jeri Thompson complied with an order to provide the sons with details on any last minute changes in her husband's estate. She said the only change had been in the secondary beneficiary on a life insurance policy, a change that turned out to be irrelevant.
Because of the failed effort to change the estate plan's, the will finally filed for Thompson by Trost was over a decade old and omitted the two children from his marriage to Jeri.
The subpoena calls for Trost to appear for a deposition on Friday.
Contact: wfrochejr999@gmail.com

Thursday, July 13, 2017

Fred Thompson Estate Fee Fight Heats Up


By Walter F. Roche Jr.

The battle over legal fees being sought from the estate of the late Fred Thompson is heating back up with a series of actions in Davidson Probate Court this week.
In papers filed Wednesday, Jeri Thompson, the widow of the late actor and U.S. Senator, hired a new lawyer who promptly issued a subpoena and deposition notice to Charles Trost, the Nashville, Tenn. attorney whose firm's fees are in dispute.
The new attorney representing Jeri Thompson is John P. Konvalinka, a Chattanooga based attorney, court records show.
The subpoena requires Trost to appear for a deposition on July 21 at the offices of Neal and Harwell, which also has represented Thompson's estate.
Though the issue was put on hold months ago, Jeri Thompson has questioned some $14,000 billed by Trost's firm, Waller Lansden Dortch and Davis for estate work done in the weeks before the late presidential candidate passed away on Nov. 1, 2015.
In one filing she termed the fee request,"inappropriate, improper and not a valid claim."
The effort by the Waller firm to update Thompson's will and estate plans was an apparent failure and his estate was finally opened with a will over a decade old that did not include his children from his second marriage with Jeri.
The legal fees are not the only dispute to surface in the Thompson estate. Two of Thompson's children by his first marriage intervened in the estate charging that estate assets may have been shifted just prior to the senator's death and at a time when he was not competent to approve any changes.
That suspicion was apparently triggered when the fee dispute became public.
After Jeri Thompson complied with a court order to disclose details of the estate assets and any last minute changes, the two sons dropped their claim.
Jeri Thompson stated that the only change executed just before the senator's death was an inconsequential one, involving a secondary beneficiary on a life insurance policy.
Contact: wfrochejr999@gmail.com



Thursday, June 8, 2017

Clemmons Parole Bid Denied


By Walter F. Roche Jr.

A Tennessee board has turned down  parole for a disbarred Nashville attorney who pleaded guilty to stealing more than $1.3 million from wards and estates he had been appointed to oversee and protect.
The state Board of  Probation rejected  parole for John E. Clemmons, 69, who is serving a 25 year sentence after pleading guilty to stealing funds from wards and estates in Davidson and Rutherford Counties.
Clemmons began serving the sentence on Nov. 8, 2013. He is currently an inmate at the Trousdale Turner Correctional Center in Hartsville.
He will not be eligible for another try at parole until May of 2020. Without parole his sentence will not end until 2038.
A spokeswoman for the board said the decision to deny parole was based on the seriousness of the offenses he committed. According to board records Clemmons could have been released next month had the board approved.
Board spokeswoman Melissa McDonald said the first votes cast on Clemmons' case were three concurring votes to deny parole and review again in three years. The vote affirmed a recommendation from a board hearing officer, she said
Clemmons' thefts were first detected by John Bratcher, clerk and master of the Rutherford County Chancery Court.
Bratcher said he had no sympathy for Clemmons and he was pleased with the board's decision.
"John Clemmons stole from the people he had taken an oath to protect. He stole from the weak and incompetent, and he did it over a period of 10 years. He caused almost unspeakable anguish for the families of his victims. He should serve his sentence day for day," Bratcher said.
Clemmons had been named conservator for Russell Church, a retired Rutherford County teacher then living in a nursing home.
In 2013 Bratcher testified that Clemmons stole over $123,910.02 from Church's estate. He said that overall Clemmons took $1.3 million from four victims  Clemmons eventually entered a guilty plea to Rutherford theft charges. Church, court records show, was the only victim to fully recover the stolen funds.
In court documents Bratcher said that Clemmons' began stealing from Church on the very first day of his appointment. On that day, Nov. 22, 2011, Bratcher said, Clemmons took $21,644.46 from three of Church's accounts. He said in a statement to the court that Clemmons apparently used the funds to gamble at a Mississippi casino.
Following the discovery in Rutherford County an investigation of the dozens of cases Clemmons was appointed to oversee in Davidson County turned up three more cases in which Clemmons had stolen thousands of dollars.
He entered guilty pleas in all three Davidson cases.
Tersesa Lyle, whose mother, Nannie Malone, was one of Clemmons' victims, said she only learned of Clemmons' parole bid when contacted by a reporter.
She said the family was only able to recover a small fraction of the amount Clemmons admitted to stealing. The recovery came from a bond Clemmons was required to post when he was appointed as Malone's conservator in 2008.
But Lyle said the bond value was well below the nearly $1 million in assets, including a 68-acre farm, Clemmons took control of. Records show some of Malone's properties were sold off at auction for back taxes Clemmons failed to pay.
Records show within a matter of  days of his appointment as Malone's conservator by Davidson Probate Judge David "Randy" Kennedy, Clemmons began writing checks to  himself.
Malone died on Oct. 25, 2012.
One of the Davidson victims, Donald Griggs, did recover $10,000 under a court settlement with Metro. The February settlement came in a suit filed by Paul Gontarek, who replaced Clemmons as Griggs conservator. He charged that had court officials  done their job in monitoring Clemmons' activities, the $157,850 could never have been stolen.
Contact: wfrochejr999@gmail.com





Friday, March 31, 2017

Fred Thompson's Widow Regrets Estate Fight

By Walter F. Roche Jr.

The widow of the late actor and politician Fred Thompson says she is glad the late U.S. Senator's two eldest sons by a prior marriage have agreed to drop their claims that improper and last minute changes were made in his estate.
Filings in Davidson Probate Court show Fred Thompson Jr. and Dan Thompson agreed to the dismissal of their claims after Jeri Thompson provided documents showing there were no last minute changes.
"Their claims do not and never did have any legal or factual merit," Jeri Thompson's lawyer William Ramsey said in a prepared statement.
"They misread (intentionally or otherwise) descriptions in legal bills that never should have been filed with the court," Ramsey said, adding "Like any other person who has been falsely accused, Mrs. Thompson is relieved that the justice system prevailed to defend her honor and word."
The dispute arose when another Nashville, Tenn. law firm, Waller Lansden, Dortch and Davis filed a claim against the Thompson estate. The claim included detailed information on an effort to put together a new will including the two children born after the one time presidential candidate married Jeri.
Ramsey said Jeri Thompson signed an affidavit stating that only one inconsequential change was made in the week's before Fred Thompson's death on Nov. 1, 2016. Nonetheless the two elder sons pressed their claim and Probate Judge David "Randy" Kennedy issued an order for Jeri Thompson to provide records regarding her late husband's assets and any changes made in the period leading up to his death.
The only change made was an inconsequential one involving the secondary beneficiary on a life insurance policy. Jeri Thompson was the primary beneficiary and had already redeemed the policy by the time the dispute arose, according to court records.
"Mrs. Thompsom regrets deeply the embarrassment done to her late husband's reputation, and the trauma and distress caused by these unfounded allegations," Ramsey concluded.
 Jeri Thompson has disputed the Waller Lansden claim for $14,450, but the matter has not yet been resolved. A hearing on the dispute was postponed at her request.
Contact: wfrochejr999@gmail.com

Thursday, March 23, 2017

Fight Over Fred Thompson Estate Settled


By Walter F. Roche Jr,

A family feud over the estate of the late actor/politician Fred Thompson has apparently been resolved and a complaint filed by his two oldest sons has been dismissed.
Papers filed this week in Davidson Probate Court in Nashville, Tenn. show that the claim against Thompson's widow Jeri Thompson by Fred Thompson Jr and Daniel D. Thompson was dismissed with the agreement of both parties.
The two eldest Thompson's sons filed the claim charging that Jeri Thompson might have made changes in the late senator's estate at a time when he was no longer competent to approve any such changes. The one time presidential candidate died Nov. 1, 2015.
Jeri Thompson responded by stating that the only change was an inconsequential one, involving a secondary beneficiary on a life insurance police that already had been redeemed by the primary beneficiary, Jeri Thompson.
Nonetheless, earlier this year Davidson Probate Judge David "Randy" Kennedy following a Jan. 23 hearing ordered Jeri Thompson to turn over to the two sons by a previous marriage a series of records including ownership records on a Florida property and the late senator's pension benefits from the Screen Actors Guild.
Jeri Thompson was ordered to provide the records, including any recent changes in ownership of his assets, by a Feb. 22 deadline.
The sons' claims followed disclosure that Jeri Thompson, the administrator of her husband's estate, was disputing a claim against the estate filed by a Nashville law firm for work done on Thompson's estate planning in the months before his death.
The billing statements from Waller Lansden Dortch and Davis showed that there was a last minute effort to marshall Thompson's assets, apparently in a scramble to draw up a new will.
The records indicate a new will was never drawn up and the will finally filed was over a decade old and omitted Thompson's two children born after his marriage to Jeri.
The dispute over the Waller firm's $14,450 bill has apparently not been resolved. A scheduled hearing on the issue was canceled at Jeri Thompson's request.

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Wednesday, February 22, 2017

Metro Settles Conservatorship Claim


By Walter F. Roche Jr.

Metro Nashville has agreed to pay $10,000 to settle a suit filed in behalf of a ward whose assets were depleted by $157,850 thanks to a court appointed conservator now serving an 18 year jail sentence.
The suit in behalf of Donald E. Griggs charged that if the Metro Probate Clerk's Office had done its job of monitoring Griggs' conservatorship, John E. Clemmons would not have been able to steal the $157,850.
Clemmons had failed to file required annual reports, but the clerk took no action. March 2012 was the date when the first missed annual report was due.
Clemmons, 69, entered guilty pleas to charges that he stole over $1 million from estates and conservatorships in Davidson and Rutherford counties.
Paul Gontarek, who was appointed to replace Clemmons as Griggs conservatorship said that the settlement was the best course based on recent rulings in the case.
"Given the earlier court ruling, it did not make financial sense to pursue the claim against Metro," Gontarek said when asked about the settlement.
In agreeing to the settlement, Metro attorneys wrote that "the payment is not an expression or implied admission of responsibility on the part of Metro government and that the Metro government specifically denies all such claims for damages against it."
 Senior Judge Ben H. Cantrell ruled that the probate clerk could be held liable for failing to monitor Griggs case but he also concluded that Griggs could only recover amounts stolen by Clemmons after March of 2012.
"Any losses that occurred prior to that date cannot be attributed to the fault of the clerk's office," Cantrell wrote. 
Cantrell also ruled against another claim filed by Gontarek in behalf of another ward on different grounds. In the case of William Link, Cantrell concluded that a statute of limitations barred any recovery.
Clemmons admitted to stealing some $500,000 of Link's assets. Clemmons had served as both a conservator and estate administrator for Link and his disabled daughter.
Gontarek is appealing the Link ruling.
Contact: wfrochejr999@gmail.com

Thursday, February 9, 2017

Fred Thompson's Widow Ordered to Provide Records


By Walter F. Roche Jr.

The widow of the late U.S. Sen. Fred Thompson has been ordered to turn over records showing any asset transfers or changes in beneficiaries in the months preceding his death in late 2015.
In a four-page order issued this week, Davidson Probate Judge David "Randy" Kennedy ordered Jeri Thompson to provide the records to the late actor's two oldest children, Fred D Thompson and Daniel Thompson by Feb. 22.
Thompson's two older sons have charged that Jeri Thompson was attempting to change her husband's estate plan at a time when he was no longer legally competent to approve any changes.
The will actually filed in Thompson's estate was dated over a decade before his Nov. 1, 2015 death and did not mention the two children born after his marriage to Jeri.
Kennedy's order followed a Jan. 23 hearing on the issue.
The order requires Jeri Thompson to provide copies of deeds prepared by ta Nashville law firm in October of 2015 regarding property in Florida.
The order also applies to any change in beneficiaries on life insurance policies between July 2015 and October 2015.
The same information must be turned over regarding Thompson's pension from the Screen Actor Guild.
Under the order information on all accounts and assets must also be provided, though the order specifically excludes account numbers.
The dispute arose after a Nashville law firm, Waller Lansden Dortch and Davis submitted a claim against Thompson's estate for $14,450. The filing included detailed information on efforts to the amend the retired actor's estate plans.
The two sons, children of Thompson's first marriage, then filed their claims.
Jeri Thompson responded by stating that the only change was in the contingent beneficiary on a life insurance policy. And, she said, that change proved inconsequential because she was the primary beneficiary and had already collected on the policy.
Contact: wfrochejr999@gmail.com