Billionaire’s wife says she was coerced into signing pre-nup

SHARE Billionaire’s wife says she was coerced into signing pre-nup

It looks like the gloves are off in the divorce of one of Chicago’s wealthiest couples.

In an explosive response to the divorce filing from her husband, billionaire investor Ken Griffin, Anne Dias Griffin filed a petition in Cook County court Tuesday demanding the couple’s premarital agreement be dissolved because it was signed under duress.

Dias Griffin also filed a petition requesting sole custody of the couple’s three children, claiming Ken Griffin has shown “little interest” in them.

◆ Backshot: Ken Griffin is the founder and CEO of Citadel Investment Group, who filed for divorce from his wife of 11 years, Anne Dias Griffin, in late July. According to the filings, the Griffins have been living apart since Feb. 2012.

Dias Griffin requests sole custody of the couple’s children, who are 2, 3, and 6, and plans to file a separate petition to move them to New York. She claims Ken left the family home in 2012 when she was pregnant with their third child, and has never been part of the children’s care.

The prenuptual agreement requires her to waive rights to property and financial help — and Dias Griffin asks the court to dissolve the agreement and give her support for both herself and the children.

In the filing, Dias Griffin said she was given a copy of the prenup just before the wedding, preventing her from reviewing and fairly negotiating it. She first met with a lawyer to review it 11 days before the wedding – and she didn’t get Ken’s financial disclosures until three days before.

CONTINUE READING AT SUNTIMES.COM

The Latest
The bodies of Richard Crane, 62, and an unidentified woman were found shot at the D-Lux Budget Inn in southwest suburban Lemont.
The strike came just days after Tehran’s unprecedented drone-and-missile assault on Israel.
Women might be upset with President Biden over issues like inflation, but Donald Trump’s legal troubles and his role in ending abortion rights are likely to turn women against him when they vote.
The man was found with stab wounds around 4:15 a.m., police said.
Send a message to criminals: Your actions will have consequences — no matter how much time passes. We can’t legislate all our problems away, but these bills now pending in the Illinois Legislature could pave the way for bringing closure to grieving families.