The Asian Age

Hawaiian heiress Abigail Kawananako­a faces court test to control $215m trust

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Honolulu: A 93-year-old heiress doesn’t need a guardian to take care of her, but a hearing will be held to determine whether she needs a conservato­r to oversee her $215 million trust, a judge ruled Friday in an ongoing battle over her wealth.

Abigail Kawananako­a’s fortune has been tied up in a court case since her 2017 stroke. Her longtime lawyer, Jim Wright, argued the stroke left her impaired, and he stepped in to assume the role of trustee.

Kawananako­a said she’s fine, fired Wright and married her partner of 20 years, Veronica Gail Worth.

Kawananako­a inherited her wealth as the greatgrand­daughter of James Campbell, an Irish businessma­n who made his fortune as a sugar plantation owner and one of Hawaii’s largest landowners.

Native Hawaiians consider her a princess because she’s a descendant of the family that ruled the islands before the overthrow of the Hawaiian kingdom in 1893.

They have been closely watching the legal wrangling over her trust because they are concerned about the fate of a foundation she set up to benefit Hawaiian causes.

Last year, Judge R. Mark Browning ruled Kawananako­a lacks the mental capacity to manage her trust, appointed First Hawaiian Bank to serve as trustee and removed Wright.

Wright had appointed three prominent Native Hawaiian leaders to serve as board members for the $100 million foundation Kawananako­a created in 2001. The foundation is participat­ing in the court battle because it is a beneficiar­y of her trust.

Board members of her foundation and ex-employees say her wife is manipulati­ng her. Lawyers for the couple dispute that.

Petitions for a guardian and a conservato­r come “from a place of sincere respect and reverence, honoring Ms. Kawananako­a’s lifelong commitment to the Native Hawaiian people,” said David Kauila Kopper, an attorney for the foundation.

She attempted to change her trust last year to ensure her wife receives $40 million and all her personal property, according to court records.

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