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Lawyers may have ‘potentially relevant’ info on Prince heirs

CHASKA, Minn. (AP) – A judge says a Minnesota law firm may have “potentially relevant” information for determining who should inherit Prince’s estate. Carver County Judge Kevin Eide on Wednesday gave permission for the Minneapolis law firm Henson & Efron, which formerly represented Prince, to privately share that information with Bremer Trust, the special administrator overseeing Prince’s estate. The order says the firm “might possess confidential information potentially relevant to the determination of the appropriate beneficiaries” of Prince’s estate. The order doesn’t say what that information might be. The rock superstar died in April of an accidental drug overdose. No will has publicly surfaced, and the court has not ruled on whether his siblings or other claimants are his heirs.

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