Showing posts with label MLK Day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MLK Day. Show all posts

Thursday, February 20, 2014

MLK Bible and Medal ordered Under Court Control While Litigation Is Pending

A Georgia state trial court has issued a preliminary ruling in the lawsuit between the children of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. over control of his Nobel Peace Prize and his famous "traveling" Bible.  Bernice King is seeking to prevent her two brothers (who control the King estate) from selling the two items over her dissenting vote.  The estate has sued to force Bernice (who currently controls the items) to turn them over. (See prior posting.) According to Reuters, yesterday the judge, saying there is a likelihood the estate will win its lawsuit, ordered the items moved to a single bank safe-deposit box with the judge controlling the keys to it.

Wednesday, February 05, 2014

Lawsuit By MLK's Estate Seeks His Famous Bible and Nobel Medal From King's Daughter

The Atlanta Journal Constitution reports that a lawsuit was filed in state court in Georgia last Friday by the estate of Martin Luther King, Jr. (controlled by two of King's children, Martin III and Dexter) against King's daughter Bernice seeking to force Bernice to turn over to the King estate Dr. King's "traveling" Bible and his Nobel Prize medal. The Bible is the one President Barack Obama used for his ceremonial swearing-in on MLK Day in 2013. King's heirs agreed in 1995 to sign over rights to various items they inherited to the King estate.  In a statement, Bernice King says she is refusing to turn the items over because her brothers want to sell them to a private buyer. She explained:
As a minister of the Gospel, the thought of selling my daddy’s Bible troubles my mind, vexes my spirit and weighs on my soul.  The thought of profiting from the sale of the Peace Prize Medal, which my father accepted 50 years ago this year on behalf of the greatest demonstration of peace this nation has ever seen, is spiritually violent, unconscionable, historically negligent, and outright morally reprehensible.
The three siblings have been involved in various lawsuits against one another since 2008.

Monday, January 20, 2014

Today Is Martin Luther King Jr. Day

Today is Martin Luther King Jr. Day.  Last week President Obama issued a Presidential Proclamation (full text) formally declaring January 20, 2014, as the Martin Luther King, Jr., Federal Holiday. The Proclamation reads in part:
During his lifelong struggle for justice and equality, the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., gave mighty voice to the quiet hopes of millions, offered a redemptive path for oppressed and oppressors alike, and led a Nation to the mountaintop. Behind the bars of a Birmingham jail cell, he reminded us that "injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere." On a hot summer day, under the shadow of the Great Emancipator, he challenged America to make good on its founding promise, and he called on every lover of freedom to walk alongside their brothers and sisters.
Meanwhile MLK biographer Stewart Burns has published a new book, Cosmic Companionship, a narrative anthology of Dr. King’s spiritual teaching. (Press release.)

Looming in the background of Dr. King's memory are at least two lawsuits involving family and friends tussling over rights to his papers and words. In a suit filed in August 2013, described by Mother Jones, the King estate (controlled by King's sons Martin III and Dexter) sued the King Center (controlled by King's daughter Bernice). The suit complains about the Center's storage and care of King's property and threatens to terminate the Center's license to use King's intellectual property. In a second lawsuit filed in October (as reported by the New York Times) 86-year old Harry Belafonte sued all three of King's surviving children over three documents of Dr. King's that Belafonte says were given to him by King, King's widow and a close aide. However when Belafonte attempted to auction off the documents for charity through Sotheby's, the King estate wrote Sotheby's challenging Belafonte's ownership of the documents. So Belafonte has sued in a New York federal district court asking for the court to declare him the owner of the documents.