Carrie Fisher's Daughter, Billie Lourd, Named Beneficiary of Estate As Final Assets Are Revealed

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Some of Fisher's memorabilia will be auctioned in September.

Billie Lourd has been named beneficiary of her mother Carrie Fisher's estate.

Fisher's assets include several bank accounts, a 2016 Tesla S, full ownership of several LLCs and a life insurance policy, according to court documents obtained by People. The Star Wars actress' jewelry, artwork and collectables will also go to Lourd, her only child. 


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The Scream Queens star will also inherit the rights to her mother's public image and likeness, as well as her intellectual property rights -- including ongoing earnings from Fisher's books, specials, trademarks and copyrights.

Fisher's brother, Todd Fisher, and Profiles in History have organized a September auction of some of Fisher's memorabilia, including Fisher's life-sized Princess Leia statue in its original phone booth, her personalized director's chair from Star Wars: Return of the Jedi and her personal writing desk. A portion of the proceeds will go to Fisher's mother Debbie Reynolds' charity, The Thalians and The Jed Foundation, a charity chosen by Lourd. 

Fisher and Reynolds' family compound is also on the market for $18 million, the proceeds of which will likely be incorporated into the trust.

Fisher died on Dec. 27, 2016, after going into cardiac arrest during a flight from London to Los Angeles a week earlier. She was 60. 


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