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Page 3 - ஓக்லாண்ட் கவுண்டி ப்ரோபேட் நீதிமன்றம் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Aretha Franklin estate reaches IRS deal to pay off claimed tax debt

When Aretha Franklin died in 2018, a powerful creditor came calling: the Internal Revenue Service. The IRS claimed the singer’s estate owed more than $7.8 million in unpaid income taxes, interest and penalties, piled up from 2010 to 2017. Even while other thorny dramas in the Queen of Soul’s ongoing probate battle played out, sometimes pitting family against family, the IRS remained the mightiest hammer hanging overhead. Now, in a major breakthrough, Franklin’s four sons and the IRS have reached an agreement that would speed up payment of the remaining tax burden while giving the sons an injection of money from their late mother’s fortune.

Aretha Franklin s son puts upcoming Genius series on blast, says family does not support

Aretha Franklin s son puts upcoming Genius series on blast, says family does not support
gazettextra.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from gazettextra.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Police looking for endangered Southfield man with mental health problems who fled ambulance

Police looking for endangered Southfield man with mental health problems who fled ambulance By Jack Nissen Dijimon, 22, of Southfield, fled the ambulance he was being transported in Thursday night.  (Oakland County Sheriff s Office) Dijimon Kelly, a 22-year-old man was being transported to Pontiac General Thursday when he escaped his restraints and fled the vehicle he was being transported in.  Kelly was under clinical petition by the Oakland County Probate Court for mental health issues and is considered endangered.  Kelly first escaped the ambulance around 7:50 p.m. last night as it was being taken from Ascension Hospital in Southfield. While traveling southbound on Seminole Street, Kelly freed himself.

Court: Guardianship requests may rise with vaccine rollout - Grand Rapids Business Journal

Grand Rapids Business Journal Michigan’s court administrator’s office told chief probate judges that they may see an increase in petitions seeking temporary guardians for some people in long-term care facilities as vaccinations for the COVID-19 virus pick up. A memo from Court Administrator Thomas Boyd and Court Administrator Emeritus Milton Mack dated Dec. 22 suggests that judges work with local health departments on plans to deal with the issue. The state announced Monday that residents and staff in skilled nursing homes would start receiving vaccines for the virus that has infected more than 483,000 in Michigan and led to the deaths of about 12,300.

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