Banks' estranged wife says he had dementia when signing will
John Sommers II / REUTERS
CHICAGO - A court filing by the estranged wife of Chicago Cubs great Ernie Banks contends the Hall of Famer was diagnosed with dementia days before he signed a will benefiting his caretaker.
Banks was in a protracted divorce proceeding with fourth wife Elizabeth Banks when he died in January at 83. She is challenging a will that gives Banks' assets to caretaker Regina Rice.
In March, Cook County Judge James Riley confirmed the will after two law clerks testified they observed it being signed.
The Chicago Tribune reports the petition, made public Monday, says Ernie Banks' health had turned for the worse in October when he was injured in a fall. The filing says that after he was treated, Rice took him to live with her at her Plainfield home.
HEADLINES
- Yankees' Schmidt: 'Sign the dotted line with however much' Soto wants
- Astros' Verlander allows 2 runs over 6 innings in season debut
- Rockies' Freeland out 4-6 weeks with elbow injury, says pitch clock could be factor
- Phils' Turnbull flirts with no-no, Bohm hits 2 HRs in win over White Sox
- Strider says bone fragment led to season-ending elbow surgery
Advertisement