Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt are still working on a custody agreement in regard to their children. One tabloid claims that her ex-husband Pitt could get custody of their firstborn, Shiloh, due to the actress' financial woes.
According to Woman’s Day, Jolie’s financial problems may put an end to the ongoing custody battle with Pitt, reported Gossip Cop.
“Brad’s feeling quietly confident that he’ll see more of the younger children in the future, and his greatest hope is that Shiloh…may even speak up to say she wants to move in with her dear old dad," an unnamed source said.
A source said that Pitt is doing "really well… and the longer she drags out the custody battle, the more chances he has to show the judge how much he’s changed for the better.”
Jolie, on the other hand, recently sold a Winston Churchill painting that had been given as a gift by Pitt, which a source said that it proves “she needs the money. She’s living off royalties and well outside her means right now because she’s not working.”
According to Gossip Cop, the decision to sell the painting was "not financially motivated, as Jolie is not strapped for a cash."
A source shared that the "Maleficent: Mistress of Evil" actress isn’t going broke.
Meanwhile, the Hollywood star recently filed court documents regarding incidents of alleged domestic violence involving Pitt.
The documents indicates that she and her children -- Maddox, 19, Pax, 17, Zahara, 16, Shiloh, 14, Knox and Vivienne, 12, are willing to offer “proof and authority in support” of their claims against "Once Upon a Time…In Hollywood" star.
According to the documents, Jolie has agreed to provide testimony herself, along with the “testimony of minor children."
“If Angelina has more documentation to prove domestic violence towards her or the children, she can submit it as a supplemental offer to prove in trial,” family law expert and Ideal Legal Group, Inc. founder Evie P. Jeang told Us.
“She can say these are the documentation in addition to what she already presented. This could mean it’s a more recent instance [of domestic violence], or further documentation related to what was presented before.”
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