A Hong Kong woman, who identified herself as a brand designer for the late Queen Elizabeth II and Donald Trump, had her High Court writ seeking more than HK$100 trillion for alleged unpaid wages and inheritance summarily dismissed by a master. ADVERTISEMENT SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENTThe plaintiff, Isabella Yung, filed a self-penned lawsuit against the late Queen Elizabeth II, former US President Donald Trump, and the late Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. She appeared in court herself, claiming to be a world-renowned designer who had worked for decades for the Queen. During the hearing, Yung presented a biography of Queen Elizabeth II, asserting that she was one of the designers mentioned and was the Queen's only Hong Kong-based designer, having served her for decades as a key aide. Yung sought over HK$100 trillion, which included HK$1.2 billion in unpaid wages for six years of work, trillions in copyright fees and shop rentals, profits from hotels and eight shopping malls, and HK$905.6 billion in inheritance from 25 wills.
Source: The Standard March 30, 2026 15:17 UTC