| Bernice King speaks during a news conference at historic Ebenezer Baptist Church where her father Martin Luther King Jr. preached, Thursday, Feb. 6, 2014, in Atlanta. King is in a legal battle with her brothers over her father's Bible and Nobel Peace Prize medal. | 
ATLANTA     (AP) 
-- A generation after the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s death, his 
children are fighting among themselves again, this time over two of 
their father's most cherished possessions: his 1964 Nobel Peace Prize 
medal and the Bible he carried.
 
The civil 
rights leader's daughter Bernice King has both items, and her brothers, 
Dexter King and Martin Luther King III, asked a judge last week to order
 her to turn them over. She said her brothers want to sell them.
 
In
 a blistering statement this week, Bernice said their father "MUST be 
turning in his grave" over the idea. She said that while she loves her 
brothers dearly, she was "appalled and utterly ashamed" of the plan, and
 added: "It reveals a desperation beyond comprehension."
 
Then
 on Thursday, at a news conference from the pulpit of the historic 
Ebenezer Baptist Church where her father and grandfather preached, she 
portrayed herself as the true protector of King's legacy.
 
"When the record books are written, let it be said that there was at least one heir who tried to further the legacy," she said.
 
In
 response to repeated emails and calls, a lawyer for the King estate, 
which is controlled by Dexter and Martin III, sent a copy of a 1995 
agreement among the siblings in which they signed over the rights to 
many items to the Estate of Martin Luther King Jr. Inc. The lawyer 
offered no comment.
 
It is the latest in a 
string of disputes over the years that some historians have come to see 
as a sad and unseemly footnote to history that could damage King's name.
 
David
 J. Garrow, whose book "Bearing the Cross: Martin Luther King Jr. and 
the Southern Christian Leadership Conference" won the 1987 Pulitzer 
Prize, said he wasn't "surprised in the slightest" to hear about the 
latest fight among the King heirs.
 
"The agenda has always been greed," Garrow said. "It's been about maximizing the dollar value of Dr. King's legacy."
 
Bernice
 has repeatedly acknowledged the validity of the 1995 agreement but is 
now refusing to hand over the Bible and medal, the brothers said in 
court papers.
 
Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated in 1968. His widow, Coretta Scott King, died in 2006.
 
The
 King children have profited from their father's legacy. In 2006, 
Sotheby's auctioned off 10,000 documents from their collection for $32 
million, with the siblings receiving equal shares of the proceeds.
 
They also haven't shied from legal battles that push their family disputes into the public eye.
 
Garrow said King's Bible should go to a museum or somewhere it can be seen by everyone.
 
"The
 fundamental bottom line here is that the King children have no clue 
what their father's legacy really means," the historian said. "Martin 
Luther King Jr. was the most unselfish, ungreedy person who ever lived."
 
While
 their mother was alive, the King children had periods of not speaking 
to each other, but they mostly kept their disagreements to themselves. 
After their mother died, it was the oldest daughter, Yolanda, who held 
the siblings together. When Yolanda died in 2007, that glue was gone.
 
Just
 over a year after Yolanda's death, the long-simmering dispute among the
 three remaining children boiled over, with three lawsuits filed between
 the siblings in as many months.
 
In one case, 
Bernice and Martin III sued Dexter to force him to open the books of 
their father's estate, accusing him of shutting them out of decisions. 
The siblings reached a settlement in 2009.
 
The
 King estate is also embroiled in a legal battle with the Martin Luther 
King Center for Nonviolent Social Change, where Bernice is CEO. The 
estate wants to stop the King Center from using King's image and 
memorabilia, saying the materials were not being properly cared for.
 
Bernice
 said Thursday that she is aware that many people may roll their eyes 
and say, "Here the King children go again." But this time is different, 
she said. These two items are sacred and reflect the very essence of 
their father: a man of God and a champion of peaceful protest.
 
Bernice
 said she and her brothers do not take legal action against each other 
lightly and use it only as a last resort. She said she hopes they will 
be able to reconcile, and she offered an apology to her parents, adding,
 "I believe that one day we will set the example you hoped we would 
provide."
 
The Rev. Joseph Lowery, one of the 
Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s lieutenants and a family friend, has 
backed Bernice in the latest disagreement.
 
"I'm
 deeply disturbed by the thought of selling Martin's Bible and Peace 
Prize. I sincerely hope that they, his children, will find a way to 
resolve their differences and address their problems without the thought
 of putting Martin's Bible or Peace Prize for sale," he said in a 
statement read by Bernice.
 
Another civil 
rights veteran, the Rev. C.T. Vivian, was at the news conference to 
support Bernice. He said he doesn't believe the children's actions 
diminish the great deeds of their father.
 
"It 
doesn't affect the legacy of their father. It affects the legacy of 
them," he said. "That's what I think the public has to see. This is not 
Martin. This is not about Martin King. This is about them."