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PRINCE ESTATE SCAM FOILED!
National Enquirer
|October 20, 2025
We pull plug on scheme to crack $156M piggy bank
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The musician died in 2016 at his Paisley Park home and production complex in Minnesota
SINISTER scammers are making a play for late music legend Prince's $156 million estate — and tried to con The National ENQUIRER into backing their wild story — but our reporters saw through the scheme and have reported it to law enforcement!
The ruse centers on a bogus claim that the Purple Rain rocker, born Prince Rogers Nelson, fathered an illegitimate daughter named “Alli Cazaam Nelson” on Oct. 31, 2009 — about seven years before his 2016 fentanyl overdose death at 57 at his Paisley Park mansion in Minnesota.
An ENQUIRER search has revealed that no one with that name was born on that date. According to an email sent to The ENQUIRER on Sept. 21, the girl, who would now be 15, shunned the probate “circus” immediately following Prince's death because her attorneys felt a 7-year-old couldn't handle the drama. The tipsters also suspiciously insisted official records proving her parentage were “legally shielded from probate proceedings” in Brooklyn, N.Y. The email also claimed “Alli” insists she has proof of “a secret revocable trust,” as well as a “charitable funding account,” set up by Prince, who also supposedly provided the girl with two handpicked bodyguards.
このストーリーは、National Enquirer の October 20, 2025 版からのものです。
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