Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt reach divorce settlement after 8 years
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[January 02, 2025]
By ANDREW DALTON
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt have reached a divorce
settlement, ending one of the longest and most contentious divorces in
Hollywood history but not every legal issue between the two.
Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Scott J. Nord approved the agreement
Tuesday, a day after Jolie and Pitt signed off on it.
“More than eight years ago, Angelina filed for divorce from Mr. Pitt,”
Jolie's attorney, James Simon, said in a statement. “She and the
children left all of the properties they had shared with Mr. Pitt, and
since that time she has focused on finding peace and healing for their
family. This is just one part of a long ongoing process that started
eight years ago. Frankly, Angelina is exhausted, but she is relieved
this one part is over.”
The filing says they give up the right to any future spousal financial
support, but gives no other details. An email to Pitt's attorney seeking
comment was not immediately answered.
Jolie, 49, and Pitt, 61, were among Hollywood’s most prominent pairings
for 12 years, two of them as a married couple. The Oscar winners have
six children together.
Jolie filed for divorce in 2016, after a private jet flight from Europe
during which she said Pitt physically abused her and their children. The
FBI and child services officials investigated Pitt's actions on the
flight. Two months later the FBI released a statement saying it would
not investigate further, and the U.S. attorney did not bring charges.
A heavily redacted FBI report obtained by The Associated Press in 2022
said that an agent provided a probable cause statement to prosecutors on
Pitt, but that after discussing the merits, “it was agreed by all
parties that criminal charges would not be pursued.”
The document said Jolie was “personally conflicted" about supporting
charges, and in a later court filing she said she opted not to push for
them for the sake of the family.
A source familiar with the child services inquiry told the AP in 2016
that the child services investigation was closed without a finding of
abuse.
A judge in 2019 declared Jolie and Pitt divorced and single, but the
splitting of assets and child custody needed to be settled separately.
Both have been free to marry again since that declaration, but neither
has. The marriage was the third for Jolie, who was previously married to
Jonny Lee Miller and Billy Bob Thornton, and the second for Pitt, who
was previously wed to Jennifer Aniston.
Soon after, a private judge that the two had hired to handle the case
reached a decision that included equal custody of their children, but
Jolie filed to have him removed from the case over an unreported
conflict of interest. An appeals court agreed, removing the judge and
vacating his decision. The couple had to start the process over.
During the long divorce fight, four of their children became adults,
negating the need for a custody agreement for them. The only minors that
remain are 16-year-old twins Knox and Vivienne. The court will maintain
jurisdiction over the child custody even with the finalized agreement,
as it does in all California cases. In June, one of their daughters,
then known as Shiloh Nouvel Jolie-Pitt, successfully petitioned to
remove Pitt's name from hers.
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Angelina Jolie Pitt and Brad Pitt pose for a photo at the WSJ
Magazine Innovator Awards 2015 at The Museum of Modern Art in New
York, on Nov. 4, 2015. (Photo by Charles Sykes/Invision/AP, File)
The couple's use of private judges —
an increasingly common move among splitting celebrities in recent
years — kept the details of the divorce largely under wraps. There
had been no official court actions in the case in nearly a year, and
no indication that the two were near agreement.
Some elements of their disputes, however, have been
revealed through a separate lawsuit filed by Pitt over Jolie's sale
of her half of a French winery they owned. Pitt had wanted to buy
her half of the winery, Chateau Miraval, and said she abandoned
their negotiations and sold her part to the Tenute del Mondo wine
group. Pitt said it was a “vindictive” and “unlawful” move that
should not have been made without his consent and ruined a private
space that had been a second home.
Jolie and her attorneys said that Pitt had demanded she sign a
wide-ranging non-disclosure agreement about him as part of the
proposed deal that was an attempt to cover up his abuse of her and
the children.
The divorce agreement does not affect the winery lawsuit, where the
legal battle between the two stars could continue.
Publicly, both Pitt and Jolie have been extremely tight-lipped on
everything surrounding their split, despite robust promotional tours
for various projects.
Pitt said in a 2017 interview with GQ that he had had a drinking
problem at the time of the plane incident and the split, but had
since become sober and was going to therapy. He has not defended his
behavior on the family flight.
Both were among the most elite stars in film when they began dating
in 2004, after co-starring as hitman-and-hitwoman spouses in “Mr.
and Mrs. Smith,” and remained atop the Hollywood A-list throughout
their coupling. The star of “Maleficent” and “Lara Croft: Tomb
Raider,” Jolie won an Oscar for her performance in 1999’s “Girl,
Interrupted.”
Pitt, the star of “Fight Club” and “Inglourious Basterds,” thrived
as both actor and producer after the split. He won his own Academy
Award for 2019’s “Once Upon a Time... in Hollywood,” the crowning
achievement in an awards season that some in media framed as a
redemption and brought major public affection for him.
Jolie kept a less visible profile in the years since the divorce,
though she directed several films and appeared in several more while
trying to focus on raising the children. She has very much returned
to the Oscar conversation this year for her portrayal of the
legendary soprano Maria Callas in “Maria.”
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