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Tag: child custody

  • Grimes Says Elon Musk Evaded Being Served With Child Custody Papers At Least 12 Times

    Grimes Says Elon Musk Evaded Being Served With Child Custody Papers At Least 12 Times

    Serving child custody papers to Elon Musk appears to be a full-time job.

    The tech billionaire reportedly evaded numerous process servers in at least a dozen locations after Grimes sued Musk in late September for physical custody of their three children, according to court documents obtained Friday by Insider.

    Proof-of-service papers filed last week showed Grimes hired four people who, between Oct. 13 and Oct. 20, tried serving Musk at the X headquarters in San Francisco, the SpaceX launch site in Boca Chica, Texas, and his Tesla gigafactory in Austin.

    They also tried several addresses tied to Musk — including a local horse farm.

    The obtained filing alleged one process server encountered a woman at the farm who, when asked if Musk was present at the time, curtly replied: “Nope, not here.” Another process server even tracked Musk’s private jets in an unsuccessful attempt to find him.

    Grimes, whose real name is Claire Boucher, reportedly filed a “petition to establish parental relationship” on Sept. 29. These are often required when two parents are unmarried, as is the case here, and one is seeking child support or custody.

    Musk reportedly started the legal battle with a similar lawsuit on Sept. 7. In October, the singer claimed in a Texas court that Musk had custody of their three-year-old son X Æ A-Xii over her “objection.”

    Two of the process servers hired in October reportedly tried to track Musk down at the home of Shivon Zilis, a director at his Neuralink startup and the mother of two of his kids. Someone who purported not to know Musk met them at the door.

    Musk and Grimes publicly debuted their relationship at the Met Gala in 2018.

    ANGELA WEISS/AFP/Getty Images

    Process servers were told to vacate the Tesla factory and X offices by security guards and a police officer. However, Grimes argued in her filing that Musk was served as her complaint was left with security guards.

    Musk’s attorneys claimed Grimes should have continued trying to properly serve him, while her lawyers argued he was indeed served on Oct. 20 via substitute service — through Musk’s employees — and even mailed him the papers on that date.

    The controversial industrialist has 11 children with three different mothers.

    Musk and Grimes started dating in 2018 and share, in addition to their three-year-old, a nearly two-year-old daughter named Exa Dark Sideræl and a 2-month-old son named Techno Mechanicus. The couple broke up in 2021.

    Biographer Walter Isaacson notably posted about his book on Musk in September on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter (which Musk acquired for $44 billion in 2022), only for Grimes to reply: “Tell Elon to let me see my son or plz respond to my lawyer.”

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  • Blac Chyna Says Tyga Refused To Settle Custody Battle Out Of Court

    Blac Chyna Says Tyga Refused To Settle Custody Battle Out Of Court

    Amid her custody battle with Tyga, Blac Chyna (aka Angela White) is dishing on the ongoing situation between the exes as they navigate co-parenting their 11-year-old son, King Cairo.

    RELATED: Co-Parenting Clash! Tyga Reportedly Files For Sole Custody Of Son With Blac Chyna

    Blac Chyna Speaks On Their Initial Custody Agreement, “Can’t Wait” For The Battle To Be Over

    Blac Chyna, 35, discussed the situation during a sit-down with The Bachelor star Nick Viall for The Viall Files, which aired on Thursday (Oct. 26).

    At one point during the interview, Viall asked White about her experience co-parenting with Tyga after their breakup. In turn, she explained that, although she initially had King all throughout the week, the schedule changed after she became overwhelmed with other responsibilities.

    “For the first four years of Kingy’s life, I had him Monday through Friday. And then that’s when I had became pregnant with Dream. And it was like, the school and [being] pregnant and [in] a new relationship — it was a lot for me. So then that’s when our schedules had changed.”

    As a result, she shifted to having King on Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays before taking him to school on Mondays.

    “It was like the same amount of days, but we just had to just kind of switch because of the schooling. I was like, ‘I’m just going to be realistic with myself,’ and this was the best schedule for me.”

    While Blac Chyna noted that everything was “good until recently this year,” she noticed that Tyga began “keeping King longer right after [she] did the case with the Kardashians.”

    As a result, she confirmed, “We’re in a custody battle right now. Can’t wait ’til it’s over with.”

    Additionally, she alleged that Tyga refused to handle the matter outside of court.

    “You have obviously more money than me. Why can’t we just settle this stuff outside of court, like [by] talking to you? He didn’t wanna do that, so now I have to go to court.”

    She added, “We just both don’t need this. … The whole world’s watching, and it’s like, ‘We could’ve just had a conversation, man.’”

    More On Her Ongoing Situation With Tyga

    Blac Chyna’s statements come on the heels of her and Tyga’s lil’ co-parenting clash coming to public attention.

    From filing to establish paternity, custody, and child support to selling some of her belongings to finance the battle, Blac Chyna and Tyga have steadily been makin’ headlines lately!

    The latest development in the matter involves Tyga allegedly filing for full custody of King, as The Shade Room reported.

    It’s worth noting that, shortly before word of the custody situation publicly broke, she spoke positively of her co-parenting situations with Tyga and Rob Kardashian.

    What are your thoughts on the overall situation, Roomies?

    RELATED: Tokyo Toni Praises Blac Chyna’s New Beau, Derrick Milano, As The Couple Celebrates Toni’s Birthday: ‘This Man Is Everything’

    Nick Fenley

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  • OurFamilyWizard Unveils New Branding for Its Premium Co-Parenting Tools

    OurFamilyWizard Unveils New Branding for Its Premium Co-Parenting Tools

    The leader in co-parenting technology has modernized its look to better align with its mission of helping families living separately thrive.

    Press Release


    Mar 15, 2023 08:00 CDT

    OurFamilyWizard, the world’s leading provider of co-parenting technology, announced today that it is launching a brand refresh. The company is changing its external look and feel to align better with its internal mission: to help families living separately thrive.  

    With a modern logo, a peaceful color palette, a friendly voice and tone, and sleek fonts, OurFamilyWizard is updating its marketing appearance to reflect its commitment to continual modernization. The brand regularly updates its app with enhancements and new features, and now its public appearance is heralding even bigger things to come via an updated brand look and feel. 

    “We’re investing heavily in the app,” says Nick VanWagner, CEO, “because we’re dedicated to supporting co-parents and family law professionals, even as their lives change and their needs evolve.” The more modern brand elements reflect the organization’s forward movement, just as the new logo’s arrow points upward to symbolize that co-parenting families can move forward pragmatically and positively.  

    Since 2001, more than one million co-parents and family law practitioners have trusted OurFamilyWizard’s co-parenting platform to reduce their stress by making co-parenting easier. In 2020, Spectrum Equity invested in OurFamilyWizard, allowing the company to expand its workforce significantly so that it could reach and serve even more families. OurFamilyWizard’s acquisition of Cozi in 2022 created yet another avenue through which the brand can support families as they organize and coordinate family life. 
     

    About OurFamilyWizard 

    OurFamilyWizard is the world’s leading co-parenting communication platform, offering tools for families to support more seamless and successful parenting across separate homes. Since 2001, more than one million parents and family law practitioners have trusted OurFamilyWizard’s co-parenting platform to help divorced or separated families effectively manage shared calendars, expenses, messaging, files, and other critical family information. These tools can reduce the risk of parents going back to court. 

    Source: OurFamilyWizard

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  • FBI: Polygamous leader had 20 wives, many of them minors

    FBI: Polygamous leader had 20 wives, many of them minors

    FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. — The leader of small polygamous group near the Arizona-Utah border had taken at least 20 wives, most of them minors, and punished followers who did not treat him as a prophet, newly filed federal court documents show.

    Samuel Bateman was a former member of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, or FLDS, until he left to start his own small offshoot group. He was supported financially by male followers who also gave up their own wives and children to be Bateman’s wives, according to an FBI affidavit.

    The document filed Friday provides new insight about what investigators have found in a case that first became public in August. It accompanied charges of kidnapping and impeding a foreseeable prosecution against three of Bateman’s wives — Naomi Bistline, Donnae Barlow and Moretta Rose Johnson.

    Bistline and Barlow are scheduled to appear in federal magistrate court in Flagstaff on Wednesday. Johnson is awaiting extradition from Washington state.

    The women are accused of fleeing with eight of Bateman’s children, who were placed in Arizona state custody earlier this year. The children were found last week hundreds of miles (kilometers) away in Spokane, Washington.

    Bateman was arrested in August when someone spotted small fingers in the gap of a trailer he was hauling through Flagstaff. He posted bond but was arrested again and charged with obstructing justice in a federal investigation into whether children were being transported across state lines for sexual activity.

    Court records allege that Bateman, 46, engaged in child sex trafficking and polygamy, but none of his current charges relate to those allegations. Polygamy is illegal in Arizona but was decriminalized in Utah in 2020.

    Arizona Department of Child Services spokesman Darren DaRonco and FBI spokesman Kevin Smith declined to comment on the case Tuesday. Bistline’s attorney didn’t respond to a request for comment, and Barlow’s attorney declined to comment. Johnson didn’t have a publicly listed attorney.

    The FBI affidavit filed in the women’s case largely centers on Bateman, who proclaimed himself a prophet in 2019. Bateman says he was told by former FLDS leader Warren Jeffs to invoke the “Spirit of God on these people.” The affidavit details explicit sexual acts that Bateman and his followers engaged in to fulfill “Godly duties.”

    Jeffs is serving a life sentence in a Texas prison for child sex abuse related to underage marriages.

    Criminal defense attorney Michael Piccarreta, who represented Jeffs on Arizona charges that were dismissed, said the state has a history of trying to take a stand against polygamy by charging relatively minor offenses to build bigger cases.

    “Whether this is the same tactic that has been used in the past or whether there’s more to the story, only time will tell,” he said.

    The office of Bateman’s attorney in the federal case, Adam Zickerman, declined to comment Tuesday.

    Bateman lived in Colorado City among a patchwork of devout members of the polygamous FLDS, ex-church members and those who don’t practice the beliefs. Polygamy is a legacy of the early teachings of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, but the mainstream church abandoned the practice in 1890 and now strictly prohibits it.

    Bateman often traveled to Nebraska where some of his other followers lived and internationally to Canada and Mexico for conferences.

    When Bateman was arrested earlier this year, he instructed his followers to obtain passports and to delete messages sent through an encrypted system, authorities said.

    He demanded that his followers confess publicly for any indiscretions, and shared those confessions widely, according to the FBI affidavit. He claimed the punishments, which ranged from a time out to public shaming and sexual activity, came from the Lord, the affidavit states.

    The children identified by their initials in court documents have said little to authorities. The three children found in the trailer Bateman was hauling through Flagstaff — which had a makeshift toilet, a couch, camping chairs and no ventilation — told authorities they didn’t have any health or medical needs, a police report stated.

    None of the girls placed in state custody in Arizona disclosed sexual abuse by Bateman during forensic interviews, though one said she was present during sexual activity, according to the FBI affidavit. But the girls often wrote in journals that were seized by the FBI. In them, several of the girls referenced intimate interactions with Bateman. Authorities believe the older girls influenced the younger ones not to talk about Bateman, the FBI said.

    ———

    Associated Press writer Sam Metz in Salt Lake City contributed to this story.

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  • FBI: Polygamous leader had 20 wives, many of them minors

    FBI: Polygamous leader had 20 wives, many of them minors

    FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. — The leader of small polygamous group near the Arizona-Utah border had taken at least 20 wives, most of them minors, and punished followers who did not treat him as a prophet, newly filed federal court documents show.

    Samuel Bateman was a former member of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, or FLDS, until he left to start his own small offshoot group. He was supported financially by male followers who also gave up their own wives and children to be Bateman’s wives, according to an FBI affidavit.

    The document filed Friday provides new insight about what investigators have found in a case that first became public in August. It accompanied charges of kidnapping and impeding a foreseeable prosecution against three of Bateman’s wives — Naomi Bistline, Donnae Barlow and Moretta Rose Johnson.

    Bistline and Barlow are scheduled to appear in federal magistrate court in Flagstaff on Wednesday. Johnson is awaiting extradition from Washington state.

    The women are accused of fleeing with eight of Bateman’s children, who were placed in Arizona state custody earlier this year. The children were found last week hundreds of miles (kilometers) away in Spokane, Washington.

    Bateman was arrested in August when someone spotted small fingers in the gap of a trailer he was hauling through Flagstaff. He posted bond but was arrested again and charged with obstructing justice in a federal investigation into whether children were being transported across state lines for sexual activity.

    Court records allege that Bateman, 46, engaged in child sex trafficking and polygamy, but none of his current charges relate to those allegations. Polygamy is illegal in Arizona but was decriminalized in Utah in 2020.

    Arizona Department of Child Services spokesman Darren DaRonco and FBI spokesman Kevin Smith declined to comment on the case Tuesday. Bistline’s attorney didn’t respond to a request for comment, and Barlow’s attorney declined to comment. Johnson didn’t have a publicly listed attorney.

    The FBI affidavit filed in the women’s case largely centers on Bateman, who proclaimed himself a prophet in 2019. Bateman says he was told by former FLDS leader Warren Jeffs to invoke the “Spirit of God on these people.” The affidavit details explicit sexual acts that Bateman and his followers engaged in to fulfill “Godly duties.”

    Jeffs is serving a life sentence in a Texas prison for child sex abuse related to underage marriages.

    Criminal defense attorney Michael Piccarreta, who represented Jeffs on Arizona charges that were dismissed, said the state has a history of trying to take a stand against polygamy by charging relatively minor offenses to build bigger cases.

    “Whether this is the same tactic that has been used in the past or whether there’s more to the story, only time will tell,” he said.

    The office of Bateman’s attorney in the federal case, Adam Zickerman, declined to comment Tuesday.

    Bateman lived in Colorado City among a patchwork of devout members of the polygamous FLDS, ex-church members and those who don’t practice the beliefs. Polygamy is a legacy of the early teachings of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, but the mainstream church abandoned the practice in 1890 and now strictly prohibits it.

    Bateman often traveled to Nebraska where some of his other followers lived and internationally to Canada and Mexico for conferences.

    When Bateman was arrested earlier this year, he instructed his followers to obtain passports and to delete messages sent through an encrypted system, authorities said.

    He demanded that his followers confess publicly for any indiscretions, and shared those confessions widely, according to the FBI affidavit. He claimed the punishments, which ranged from a time out to public shaming and sexual activity, came from the Lord, the affidavit states.

    The children identified by their initials in court documents have said little to authorities. The three children found in the trailer Bateman was hauling through Flagstaff — which had a makeshift toilet, a couch, camping chairs and no ventilation — told authorities they didn’t have any health or medical needs, a police report stated.

    None of the girls placed in state custody in Arizona disclosed sexual abuse by Bateman during forensic interviews, though one said she was present during sexual activity, according to the FBI affidavit. But the girls often wrote in journals that were seized by the FBI. In them, several of the girls referenced intimate interactions with Bateman. Authorities believe the older girls influenced the younger ones not to talk about Bateman, the FBI said.

    ———

    Associated Press writer Sam Metz in Salt Lake City contributed to this story.

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  • OurFamilyWizard Rolls Out a New Mobile Experience With Market-Leading Parenting Time Tools

    OurFamilyWizard Rolls Out a New Mobile Experience With Market-Leading Parenting Time Tools

    Ready-to-use templates and other new enhancements dramatically simplify the task of setting up co-parenting calendars on the OurFamilyWizard mobile app

    Press Release



    updated: Apr 6, 2021

    OurFamilyWizard announced today that it has released a new mobile experience for building and tracking parenting time schedules, giving divorced or separated parents a decisively effective solution for coordinating calendars from separate homes.

    Managing schedules for children is a challenge for any family. When you add a shared custody or parenting time arrangement to the mix, it becomes infinitely more complicated. Most online calendar options are not built to accommodate the complexities of parenting time arrangements alongside day-to-day events. OurFamilyWizard’s calendaring tools are uniquely designed to make managing parenting time and schedules easier for co-parents. 

    With OurFamilyWizard’s most recent mobile update, parents can now easily create and customize color-coded parenting time schedules directly from the OurFamilyWizard mobile app. To simplify the process even further, OurFamilyWizard provides ready-to-use templates reflecting common parenting time rotations (i.e., 2-2-5-5, alternating weekends, etc.). Using the template as a starting point, parents can customize the schedules as needed. For example, parents can add precise transition times to note exactly when children are supposed to go from one home to the other. Additionally, leveraging a shared calendar via the mobile app allows parents to more easily request, manage, and document schedule changes and swaps.

    “The team is very excited to bring these new tools to our users,” said Nick VanWagner, CEO of OurFamilyWizard. “Seamless transitions between homes play a major factor in the overall success of co-parenting arrangements and the well-being of kids, yet we know that many co-parents find it challenging to manage this effectively. Given OurFamilyWizard’s commitment to helping families living separately thrive, we wanted to adequately address this pain point by simplifying the process of both creating and managing parenting time schedules from our app for co-parents.”  

    Since launching the first-ever online co-parenting application in 2001, OurFamilyWizard has continued to invest in its technology to ensure it continues to meet the ever-growing needs of its users. After receiving an equity investment in 2020, the company has also significantly increased headcount across the organization as it prepares for future growth. Most recently, it announced several executive hires, including the company’s first-ever Chief Marketing Officer, Bridgette Haymaker.

    About OurFamilyWizard

    OurFamilyWizard helps families living separately thrive. Its products provide both families and the family law professionals who serve them with the tools necessary for more seamless and successful co-parenting. Since its inception in 2001, over one million parents and professionals have leveraged OurFamilyWizard to share calendars, messages, journals, files, expenses, and important information such as health and school records. The platform has been recommended by courts in all 50 U.S. states, Canada, the United Kingdom, New Zealand, and Australia.

    Press Contact
    Sara Klemp
    sklemp@ourfamilywizard.com 
    612-294-0431

    Source: OurFamilyWizard

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  • Kirk Stange Teaching CLE for Missouri Association of Trial Attorneys’ 59th Annual Convention

    Kirk Stange Teaching CLE for Missouri Association of Trial Attorneys’ 59th Annual Convention

    Press Release



    updated: May 18, 2017

    On Saturday, June 24th, Kirk Stange, St. Louis, Missouri Divorce Lawyer and Founding Partner of Stange Law Firm, PC, will be speaking at the Lodge of Four Seasons (Lake of the Ozarks) for the Missouri Association of Trial Attorneys’ 59th Annual Convention. This three-day event will cover various CLE topics, including:

    • Pursuing Claims without Introducing Medical Bills
    • Recognizing Bad Faith
    • Using Technology in Depositions and Client Interviews
    • Update on the Law
    • Preparing for Critical Depositions That Will Win Your Case
    • The Importance of Dredd Scott Ethics
    • Investigating Claims in a Digital Age
    • Update on Worker’s Compensation Law
    • Keep the Process Moving – Service Issues & Motion Practice
    • Administrative Law Judge Panel
    • Judicial Roundtable
    • Preparing Your Client for the Case
    • What Would You Do? Ethics
    • When Good Clients Go Bad

    Kirk Stange will be teaching on the topic of Investigating Claims in a Digital Age. This topic will point out the newer ways to obtain information digitally in litigation. In litigation, there are conventional ways to obtain material, which are Interrogatories, Requests for Production, and Depositions. Kirk will be teaching about the broader arrays to find discovery, which are home and work computers; cell phones and tablets; flash drives and external hard drives; cloud storage/vendor’s servers; social media; and much more.

    “It is an honor to present for the Missouri Association of Trial Attorneys on a topic as important as investigating claims in the digital age.”

    Kirk C. Stange, Esq., Founding Partner

    MATA was founded in 1951 as the Missouri Association of Claimants Attorneys (MACA) by a small group of attorneys from across the state who recognized the value of banding together to gain more equitable rights for their clients. Injured people in the state of Missouri have no better advocate in the legislative process than MATA. MATA’s legislative committee, leadership, staff and lobbying team review more than 1,500 pieces of legislation each year and lobby Missouri legislators in the Capitol in Jefferson City to protect consumers’ rights.

    Stange Law Firm, PC is based out of Clayton, Missouri, with offices across Missouri, Illinois and Kansas. Kirk and Paola Stange founded Stange Law Firm, PC in 2007, and from there it has become one of the fastest-growing family law firms in the country. If you are in need of legal assistance for matters such as a Divorce in Missouri, Illinois and Kansas, child custody disputes, child support litigation, adoption, or any other family law matter, please contact our attorneys.

    Note: The choice of a lawyer is an important decision and should not be based solely upon advertisements. Kirk C. Stange is responsible for this content. Principal place of business 120 South Central Avenue, Suite 450, St. Louis (Clayton), MO 63105.

    Source: Stange Law Firm, PC

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  • Stange Law Firm, PC to Open New Office in Overland Park, Kansas

    Stange Law Firm, PC to Open New Office in Overland Park, Kansas

    Stange Law Firm, PC is opening their 15th firm location. The Overland Park, KS family law attorneys in Johnson County will be opening February 2017. The newest office location will be located at 7300 West 110th Street, Suite 560 in Overland Park, KS 66211.

    Press Release



    updated: Jan 7, 2022

    Stange Law Firm, PC understands that your divorce matter may be one of the most difficult experiences of your life, and having an empathetic Overland Park, Kansas divorce lawyer may just make the process a little bit easier. The divorce and family law attorneys at Stange Law Firm, PC devote themselves to their clients and their case. To better serve the Kansas City, Kansas metro area, the firm has a divorce and family law firm location in Overland Park, Kansas. The Overland Park, KS Paternity Attorneys can be reached locally by calling 913-221-0332 or toll-free 855-805-0595.

    The Overland Park, Kansas office will be the firm’s first office located in the state of Kansas. The other surrounding firm locations are in the Kansas City metro area, in downtown Kansas City, MO (by appointment only) and in Lee’s Summit, MO. The firm offers the resources and legal staff to better assist clients in Johnson County with their Overland Park, KS child support matters, child custody, divorce, paternity, prenuptial agreements, guardianship, high asset divorce, mediation, collaborative family law, and other domestic matters.

    We opened on the Missouri side of Kansas City last year with our first office in Lee’s Summit. We are excited about having the opportunity to serve the residents of Kansas City, Kansas with our newest office in Overland Park in Johnson County.

    Kirk C. Stange, Esq., Founding Partner

    Stange Law Firm, PC’s Overland Park, Kansas office is conveniently located at the Commerce Plaza. The firm is also honored to serve clients in the surrounding areas, including downtown Kansas City, Kansas. Stange Law Firm, PC’s Overland Park, Kansas modification attorneys are ready to assist starting February 2017.

    To schedule a consultation, call 913-221-0332. Our Overland Park, KS child support lawyers and other related domestic matters are able to schedule you a consultation and can meet with one of our attorneys to discuss your family law matter.

    Additionally, Stange Law Firm, PC offers a Kansas Child Support Calculator. Click the link to learn more.

    Note: The choice of a lawyer is an important decision and should not be based solely upon advertisement. Kirk Stange is responsible for the content. Principal office is 120 South Central Ave, Suite 450, St. Louis (Clayton), MO 63105.

    Source: Stange Law Firm, PC

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