Missouri woman who tried to fraudulently sell Elvis Presley’s former home gets 4 years jail. How the scheme unfolded

It might be one of the most famous estates in America, but its notoriety didn’t dissuade a Missouri woman from trying to fraudulently sell Memphis landmark Graceland, the former home of Elvis Presley.
The scheme was designed to wrest millions of dollars away from Presley’s family, according to a report by The New York Times that cites court documents (1) detailing how Jeanine Findley, 54, attempted to foreclose on Graceland.
Findley was sentenced to four years and nine months in prison after pleading guilty to one count of mail fraud in a plea agreement that saw a count of aggravated identity theft dismissed.
The scheme began about six months after Lisa Marie Presley, daughter of Elvis Presley, died in 2023, the Times reported.
A fabricated company called Naussany Investments & Private Lending LLC claimed that Lisa Marie Presley had taken out a $3.8 million loan, using Graceland as collateral, and had not repaid it before she died.
According to the Times, the affidavit filed for her arrest said Findley used various aliases, email addresses and fake documents as part of a plan to threaten to foreclose on the property. The scheme included a package containing a “creditor’s claim,” along with false affidavits sent to the Shelby County Register’s Office. A fraudulent “Notice of Foreclosure Sale” was also published in a Memphis newspaper.
It sounds impossible — how could a fraudster sell your home out from under you? But fraudulent home sales can happen.
In 2023, it was reported in Canada that private investigators working for a title insurance company found at least 30 homes in the Greater Toronto Area had been sold or mortgaged without the owners’ knowledge. According to the CBC, the investigators say in four of the cases identity theft and title transfer fraud were used to steal ownership of the homes. (2)
Read more: US car insurance costs have surged 50% from 2020 to 2024 — this simple 2-minute check could put hundreds back in your pocket
But not all real estate scams are so elaborate. Here are some that can impact buyers and sellers:
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