Cannon has an unlisted
telephone number and another trustee, Buddy
Dallas, did not immediately return a message
seeking comment.A
follow-up hearing has been scheduled for
Sept. 24 as various people wrangle over the
late soul singer's estate.
It's not clear how much
money is left in the estate, said Louis
Levenson, an Atlanta attorney representing
several of the singer's children. Before he
died
Christmas Day at age 73, Brown had
been on an allowance of $100,000 a month.
Levenson said his firm is
trying to find out where the singer's money
went.
Brown's former pastor has
filed a motion to intervene on behalf of
needy children who are supposed to benefit
from the James Brown "I Feel Good" Trust.
That is one of two trusts Brown had set up:
One to pay for poor children in
South Carolina and Georgia to attend
school; the other would pay for Brown's
grandchildren to go to school.
The Rev. Larry Fryer said
he's worried the money meant for poor
children is being squandered by the court
battles. "If we're paying all of the money
to all of the legal sources," Fryer said,
"what's left for the children?"
One of Brown's
grandchildren, Forlando Brown, accused his
aunts and uncles of trying to break the
trusts to get their father's money.
"People are greedy," the
West Georgia University student told The
Augusta Chronicle.
Forlando Brown said he,
his brother and his father, Terry Brown,
have been ostracized by the rest of the
family for siding with the trustees.