Tyga and Blac Chyna reach amicable joint custody agreement over 11-year-old son King Cairo
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA: Tyga and Blac Chyna, have put an end to their long-standing custody battle over their 11-year-old son, King Cairo, just in time for the holidays.
The former couple has agreed on a settlement that brings joint legal and physical custody for the co-parents.
Win-win situation: Joint custody without child support
Tyga born Michael Stevenson, and Blac Chyna, whose legal name is Angela White, have opted for an amicable resolution.
Contrary to previous claims, Tyga, 34, will not be required to pay child support to White, who had asserted financial strain in her court filings.
The settlement grants both parents equal standing in making decisions about King Cairo's general welfare, education, and health.
Sources connected to the situation, as reported by TMZ, reveal that the joint custody arrangement establishes a schedule where Blac Chyna, 35, will care for King from Fridays through Mondays, while Tyga will have custody on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays. The court has mandated that neither parent speaks negatively about the other in the presence of their son.
Co-parenting program and legal restrictions
RadarOnline.com reported that White filed a Petition to Determine Parental Relationship in Los Angeles Superior Court on July 24, requesting joint custody for King and child support. She only had him 24 hours a week at the time.
As part of the settlement, Tyga and Blac Chyna are required to enroll in a program designed to monitor their communications regarding co-parenting, aiming to maintain a positive environment for their child. The legal order emphasizes the importance of respectful and constructive dialogue between the exes.
The court documents highlighted the differences in their financial standings, with White disclosing her monthly earnings from multiple business entities and Tyga's diverse sources of income.
According to White, she is earning "combined $71,223.63 per month from her seven business entities (Blac Chyna Inc., Blac Chyna Closet, LLC, Precise Music Group, LLC, Lashed Cosmetics, LLC, Lashed LLC, 88 Fin, and Hearts Pure LLC) — but noted her "income has significantly reduced over the years as her business sales have dramatically declined."
RadarOnline.com also revealed that White had been selling her "clothing, purses and shoes" via the online consignment store TheRealReal to make extra cash. In October, she claimed to have earned a profit of $178,000 but told the court, "It is only a temporary solution as I will eventually run out of items that I can sell."