Tragic fashion designer L’Wren Scott’s cremated ashes were split between her family and longtime boyfriend, Mick Jagger, her brother told the Daily News on Wednesday.
Just hours after Scott’s will was filed in Manhattan Surrogate’s Court, leaving everything she owned to the Rolling Stones frontman, her brother said he plans to take Scott’s ashes to her childhood home in Utah.
“She was cremated and I have some of her ashes,” said the brother, Randall Bambrough. “Some of those ashes, they will be buried near our parents here in Utah. And there will be a ceremony, date to be determined, in Utah for all family members who will have an opportunity to see their friends and others.”
He said he divvied the ashes with Jagger, but he’s not sure what the singer plans to do with them.
“They’re with the Jagger family. That’s all I can say,” said Bambrough, whom Scott had appointed as director of her faltering fashion business in November.
He said Tuesday’s funeral in Los Angeles was in keeping with Scott’s wishes and that she wanted Jagger to be in charge of the arrangements.
He said he wasn’t privy to details of his 49-year-old sister’s will.
“I haven’t heard anything at all about a will, other than there’s supposedly one out there,” Bambrough said.
Court papers estimate the value of Scott’s personal estate at $9 million. Her will is a final testament of love to her longtime boyfriend.
“I give all my jewelry, clothing, household furniture and furnishings, personal automobiles, and other tangible articles of a personal nature . . . to Michael Philip Jagger,” the filing says.
Her main asset was the Chelsea condo where she hanged herself with a scarf March 17, stunning Jagger, her friends, family and the fashion world.
The 2,364-square-foot duplex condo is worth $8 million, filings say. The will pointedly excludes Scott’s siblings, Bambrough and Jan Shane in Utah.
Bambrough, 58, added that he wants people “to remember L’Wren as a wonderful terrific person who was highly talented and had a very large heart and brought the best out in people.”
Shane, 53, who hadn’t spoken to Scott since their mother’s death six years ago, fought to have her sister laid to rest in their native Utah, sources said.
Scott’s funeral was instead held at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery in Los Angeles on Tuesday. Bambrough spoke at the service, as did Jagger, 70. Shane was not present.
Scott named O magazine creative director Adam Glassman, who attended her funeral, as executor.
The will also said, “I have never been married. I have no children” — but the word “never” had been crossed out in ink.
Scott had been married at least once before — a brief union with a developer named Anthony Brand in the 1990s.
Her lawyer, Donald Perry of Phillips Nizer, declined to elaborate on the court filing.
Financial records from the United Kingdom show one of her companies, LS Fashion Limited, was drowning in red ink. It was almost $6 million in debt at the end of 2012, records show. Her spokesman last week said those numbers were misleading, and her financial situation wasn’t as dire as it seems, but also said that she’d been considering restructuring her business.