Did judge deny Cher conservatorship of Elijah Blue?
Cher’s conservatorship bid for Elijah Blue Allman denied
Cher’s request to place her son Elijah Blue Allman under a temporary conservatorship of his estate was denied by a judge. The coverage states that the ruling was based on insufficient urgency to grant the request at that time.
Elijah Blue Allman appeared in court via video call from a psychiatric hospital, where he was described as being in custody in an effort to restore competency. The denial means Cher’s attempt to secure estate-control measures did not succeed in the immediate term.
Importantly, the decision was made “without prejudice.” In legal terms, that means Cher can file again in the future, but the current request did not meet the threshold the court required.
This matters because conservatorships and estate conservatorships are major legal interventions—often pursued when family members believe someone can’t manage financial matters due to mental health or capacity concerns. A denial can change the immediate protection available for assets and could affect timing for any new legal filings.
The provided material does not specify the judge’s additional findings beyond urgency, nor does it detail what estate-management restrictions Cher asked for in the temporary order. It also doesn’t report whether the court suggested conditions that could support a renewed request.
What is established is that, despite Elijah’s hospital appearance and Cher’s legal filing, the court declined to impose temporary conservatorship at that stage, while leaving open the possibility of a renewed bid later.