Former Warrant Singer Jani Lane Died Without Having A Will

Former Warrant Singer Jani Lane Died Without Having A Will

December 9, 2011

Former Warrant singer Jani Lane died without divvying up his financial empire — which could be a big problem, considering he was worth about $600,000 at the time of his death reports TMZ.com.

According to court documents filed in connection with Jani’s estate, the singer left behind no will when he died of alcohol poisoning in August — and now, his oldest daughter has asked the court to approve an estate administrator to start figuring things out.

According to the docs, the 47-year-old’s estate is valued at $600,000 — though it’s unclear exactly what it’s made up of.

As for who’s in contention for the goods — Jani is survived by his wife and his two daughters, but the mom of his second daughter could also make out with a share.

Lane was found dead on August 11th in a Woodland Hills area Comfort Inn. Alcohol and prescription drugs were found in his motel room.

With his long blond hair and tight leather outfits, Lane embodied the excess of 1980s “hair metal” rock bands. He joined Warrant in 1984 and wrote such hits as “Heaven,” “Down Boys” and “Cherry Pie.

Several fellow stars from that era paid their respects, including Twisted Sister frontman Dee Snider. “Jani Lane’s is yet another sad story of a boy who attained his dreams of greatness, only to be blindsided by the pressures, temptations and disappointments of those same dreams,” Snider said. “We all watched over the years, as he soared, stumbled, fell, then got up again and again. Tragically, he will get up no more. [Rest in peace], Jani.”

Lane had an on-and-off relationship with the band, leaving it in 1992 before returning and quitting again several times. In recent years, he appeared in the reality TV show “Celebrity Fit Club” and made news for a drunken driving arrest.

Lane wrote “Heaven” when he was with Warrant, and it was one of the band’s biggest hits. Warrant’s other hits included “Sometimes She Cries” and the rock anthem “Down Boys.” Along with other ’80s Los Angeles bands such as Poison, Warrant was a part of the heavy metal subgenre known as “glam” or “hair” metal for their ability to combine flamboyant hair, antics and outfits with a heavy rock musical style filled with power chords.

“We never thought that when the song ‘Heaven’ was written we would be playing it someday in the memory of Jani’s untimely death,” guitarist Erik Turner said after learning of Lane’s passing.

Courtesy of www.sleazeroxx.com