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Earlier Tuesday, an estate planning attorney testified that she spent months drafting a new version of the agreement per the couple's request to make the Dodgers community property. Leah Bishop recalled McCourt directing her to fix the document.
Bishop said that despite a series of e-mails and letters exchanged with the couple and their advisers between August 2008 and early 2009, McCourt never expressed concern about sharing the team with Jamie McCourt until May 2009 when he sent an e-mail to Bishop.
Two months later, Bishop said she met with McCourt for more than three hours where he opened up to her about his marriage.
McCourt said his wife wanted to be part of his businesses after they moved to California from Massachusetts, Bishop testified. Once she was elevated to be the Dodgers' chief executive officer, he told Bishop that she was creating "stress" in the front office.
She added McCourt said he wanted to focus on his companies and thought it best if his wife wasn't involved with the Dodgers.
"He wanted her to do something else that occupies her time, and it wasn't the Los Angeles Dodgers," Bishop said.
[Associated Press;
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