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McCartney, wife face off in court over divorce
Paul Majendie
LONDON—Paul McCartney and Heather Mills faced off in one of the biggest
and most bitter divorce battles in showbusines history on Monday — with
a slice of his massive Beatles fortune at stake.
Mills, the 40-year-old former model whose marriage to the pop icon
lasted less than four years, is representing herself in court after
sacking her lawyers.
The case, expected to last five days, is being heard behind closed doors
in the family division of London’s High Court.
McCartney, one of the founders of the world’s most famous pop group, is
worth an estimated 825 million pounds ($1.6 billion).
Legal experts believe Mills is asking for up to 50 million pounds from
McCartney, 65, and that he may be prepared to offer only half that sum.
The case could set an important precedent in measuring just how much a
spouse can pitch for when short marriages fail — McCartney’s lawyers
argue he made the bulk of his millions before he met Mills.
Mills, dressed in a grey suit and pink blouse, arrived first at the
London court. McCartney offered a cheery “Good Morning” to waiting
reporters but remained tight-lipped when asked if there had been an
out-of-court settlement.
Large “No Admittance” signs were fixed to the court doors and its
windows were covered to ensure no one could look in. The divorce, the
most high-profile showbusiness split since Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman
broke up, has turned into a battle for sympathy fought out under a media
spotlight.
Mills’ public relations adviser quit when Mills gave a string of tearful
television interviews in which she said remorseless media coverage had
driven her to the brink of suicide. McCartney married Mills in 2002 four
years after his first wife Linda died of cancer. Their daughter,
Beatrice, is 4.
Their fate will be decided in an oak-paneled courtroom at the ornate
Royal Courts of Justice, but the judge will hear the case in private and
may reserve judgment until a later date. Any settlement may also be
subject to a gagging order to keep secret the details of the agreement. |