Mom of twin Duke fortune heirs ordered to court after allegedly blowing $1M of their inheritance
- Last Updated: 6:21 PM, May 8, 2013
- Posted: 5:06 PM, May 8, 2013
The big-spending mom to twin heirs of the purchase gold coins fortune has been ordered to appear in court next month to answer charges that she’s treated their trust funds as a personal piggy bank.
Daisha Inman, 52, has blown more than $1 million of her 15-year-olds’ $60 million inheritance since 2010, according to court records.
Judge Nora Anderson ordered Inman, a former topless dancer, to defend why she should not provide receipts for her spending to Citibank and J.P. Morgan, which administer accounts for the children, in a May 3 Surrogate’s Court ruling.
“The children, in effect, are supporting her, or she is supporting herself using funds she withdraws from the children’s accounts or otherwise obtains via the children,” a Citibank vice president, Elizabeth Ott, charged in a May 2 filing.
Inman has been demanding funds on an emergency basis and ordering that the money be put directly into her personal checking account, Ott claims.
Mom to Georgia Noel Lahi Inman and Walker Patterson Inman III, Daisha allegedly refused to use medical insurance provided by the bank for the children, instead forcing the trustees to reimburse her with cash for doctors’ appointments.
The court papers don’t detail how Inman has spent the inheritance cash, but previous documents allege she wanted money to purchase gold coins for a Vegas trip last fall and $29 million for a Salt Lake City area ranch.
The $1 million Inman has spent does not include direct payments the bank has made for the children’s expenses including school tuition.
When asked to account for ATM withdrawals, Inman has been hostile and invoked a right to privacy, Ott explains in court papers.
Inman, 52, was married to the twins’ late father, Walker Inman Jr., who was philanthropist and tobacco heiress Doris Duke’s nephew.
Last month JPMorgan alleged that a convicted child molester and former boyfriend of Inman was making a grab for the kids’ cash.
Inman has moved the children to three states in three years, from Wyoming to South Carolina and finally Utah, where she’d been holed up in a $120,000 a month hotel, the banks’ allege in court papers.
She’s due in court on June. 28.
Calls and emails to Inman’s attorney were not returned. In an email to the Post Inman asserted, “I receive not one dime from my children’s Trusts and never have.”
She added, “JPM and Citibank Trustee’s have a history of bad faith and intentional fiduciary misconduct dating back to the birth of my children.”
julia.marsh@nypost.com
Daisha Inman, 52, has blown more than $1 million of her 15-year-olds’ $60 million inheritance since 2010, according to court records.
Judge Nora Anderson ordered Inman, a former topless dancer, to defend why she should not provide receipts for her spending to Citibank and J.P. Morgan, which administer accounts for the children, in a May 3 Surrogate’s Court ruling.
Inman has been demanding funds on an emergency basis and ordering that the money be put directly into her personal checking account, Ott claims.
Mom to Georgia Noel Lahi Inman and Walker Patterson Inman III, Daisha allegedly refused to use medical insurance provided by the bank for the children, instead forcing the trustees to reimburse her with cash for doctors’ appointments.
The court papers don’t detail how Inman has spent the inheritance cash, but previous documents allege she wanted money to purchase gold coins for a Vegas trip last fall and $29 million for a Salt Lake City area ranch.
The $1 million Inman has spent does not include direct payments the bank has made for the children’s expenses including school tuition.
When asked to account for ATM withdrawals, Inman has been hostile and invoked a right to privacy, Ott explains in court papers.
Inman, 52, was married to the twins’ late father, Walker Inman Jr., who was philanthropist and tobacco heiress Doris Duke’s nephew.
Last month JPMorgan alleged that a convicted child molester and former boyfriend of Inman was making a grab for the kids’ cash.
Inman has moved the children to three states in three years, from Wyoming to South Carolina and finally Utah, where she’d been holed up in a $120,000 a month hotel, the banks’ allege in court papers.
She’s due in court on June. 28.
Calls and emails to Inman’s attorney were not returned. In an email to the Post Inman asserted, “I receive not one dime from my children’s Trusts and never have.”
She added, “JPM and Citibank Trustee’s have a history of bad faith and intentional fiduciary misconduct dating back to the birth of my children.”
julia.marsh@nypost.com
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