Court To Control Martin Luther King Jr.'s Bible And Nobel Peace Prize As King Children Continue Legal Dispute

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. displays his 1964 Nobel Peace Prize medal, Oslo, Norway, on texture, partial graphic | ASSOCIATED PRESS
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. displays his 1964 Nobel Peace Prize medal, Oslo, Norway, on texture, partial graphic | ASSOCIATED PRESS

ATLANTA (AP) — A judge on Wednesday said Martin Luther King Jr.’s bible and Nobel Peace Prize should be placed in a safe deposit box controlled by the court pending the outcome of a legal dispute over who owns the items.
The civil rights icon’s estate is controlled by his two sons, Martin Luther King III and Dexter King. Lawyers for the estate on Jan. 31 filed a complaint asking a judge to order that their sister, Bernice King, turn over the two prized items.
After about two and half hours of arguments from lawyers for both sides, Fulton County Superior Court Judge Robert McBurney said he believes it is likely that the estate will prevail in the case. He said he would issue an order that both items be kept together in a safe deposit box in the name of the estate but that the keys would remain with the court until the ownership dispute before him is settled.
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