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Battle Over Prince's Estate Narrows To 6 Contenders

Battle Over Prince’s Estate Narrows To 6 Contenders
U.S. musician Prince performs at the Hop Farm Festival near Paddock Wood, southern England July 3, 2011. The administrator of Prince's estate has dismissed claims form three would-be heirs who asserted that their father was also the true biological dad of the late pop star through an alleged affair with his mother. REUTERS/Olivia Harris/File Photo
Olivia Harris / Reuters
U.S. musician Prince performs at the Hop Farm Festival near Paddock Wood, southern England July 3, 2011. The administrator of Prince's estate has dismissed claims form three would-be heirs who asserted that their father was also the true biological dad of the late pop star through an alleged affair with his mother. REUTERS/Olivia Harris/File Photo
Olivia Harris / Reuters

(Reuters) - A Minnesota judge dismissed claims from 29 would-be heirs to the estate of the late pop star Prince, strengthening the inheritance claims of the performer’s surviving siblings, court records released on Friday showed.

Carver County Judge Kevin Eide made the ruling on Thursday, adding that six people determined to be Prince’s siblings, half-siblings or other relatives would have to undergo genetic testing.

The denials of other would-be heirs came in response to a flood of individuals seeking a piece of the estate, estimated to be worth more than $500 million, left by Prince when he died unexpectedly in April at the age of 57, apparently without a will.

Among the claims dismissed by Eide’s 19-page ruling was one by Georgia resident Claire Boyd, who said she had been married to Prince but that her marriage records were kept secret by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency.

Also denied were four people who claimed to be the singer’s children, as well as people claiming to be Prince’s father or other relatives.

The musician, who born as Prince Rogers Nelson, has long been identified in public records as the only son from Mattie Shaw’s marriage to John L. Nelson, who also fathered Prince’s younger sister, Tyka Nelson. Prince’s parents are both dead now.

John Nelson, Norrine Nelson and Sharon Nelson are among five people who have been identified as surviving half-siblings of Prince. Eide said there were no known disputes with their relationship to the singer but ordered the three and Tyka to undergo genetic testing.

The order did not address the remaining two half-siblings.

Eide ruled that two women who claim to be a niece and grand-niece of Prince made a strong enough case to being potential heirs that they would undergo genetic testing as well.

(Reporting by Curtis Skinner in San Francisco; Editing by Frances Kerry and Bill Trott)

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