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Dallas Mavericks star Dirk Nowitzki's attorney has filed a petition seeking
a paternity test from his ex-girlfriend, Cristal Taylor, and sole custody of
her yet-to-be-born child if tests prove he is the father.
The petition was filed last Friday in the Dallas County courthouse and
obtained by The Dallas Morning News.
And a former housemate of Taylor's told The News that Taylor gave birth to
three children who are now teenagers, none of whom she raised.
Meanwhile, ESPN.com reported that agents from Beaumont's FBI field office
obtained recordings of allegedly threatening phone calls Taylor made from the
Jefferson County Correctional Facility to Robert Hart, Nowitzki's attorney.
Taylor, who turns 38 today and Nowitzki, who turned 31 on Friday, could not
be reached for comment. Their attorneys did not respond to e-mailed requests
seeking comment.
Three children
According to Taylor's former housemate, Gerrick Fallon, this is not Taylor's
first child-custody issue. Fallon told The News that Taylor gave birth to
three children during the early to mid-1990s.
And a friend of Taylor's former husband, James Westerhaus, told The News that
Taylor "abandoned" the youngest child, at age 4, with Westerhaus in 1999.
Westerhaus' friend, who asked to remain anonymous, said that Westerhaus is
not the child's biological father and that he sent the child to live in St.
Louis with Taylor's relatives.
Fallon said all three siblings – an 18-year-old girl, 15-year-old boy and
14-year-old girl – have different biological fathers and have been raised in
the St. Louis area by Taylor's relatives.
"Her mother always took care of the children because Cristal was either
incapable or unwilling to take care of them," Fallon said. "Because she was
always [in trouble] or on the run."
Taylor was arrested May 6 at Nowitzki's Preston Hollow home. Since May 13,
she has been in the Jefferson County Correctional Facility, facing a 2006
theft of services charge in Beaumont. The trial date has been set for July
27. Separately, she faces a 2000 probation violation in suburban St. Louis.
In two phone interviews and one jailhouse interview, Taylor has refused to
address Fallon's claim that she gave birth to three children – other than to
repeat her general assertion that Fallon is "a liar."
Taylor's mother, Shirley, also has declined to address Fallon's claims.
Taylor's sister, Carol Jackson, would say only, "Those are family matters."
Last month, Taylor's Beaumont attorney, Scott Renick, asked The News to
"cease and desist" contacting Taylor and her family, adding that future
questions should be directed through him. When The News asked Renick whether
the family would address Fallon's claims about the children, he responded by
e-mail.
"My only focus is providing effective and thorough legal representation for
Ms. Taylor while she is dealing with legal matters in southeast Texas. We do
not feel it would be appropriate to respond until these legal matters are
resolved in some capacity."
Citing Missouri roots
Fallon said all three children were born in Missouri. Unlike Texas, Missouri
law does not allow public access to birth records. Fallon said that Taylor
was pregnant with the youngest child when they began living together in 1994,
and that the child was born in January 1995.
Fallon said his last name is on the child's birth certificate, but Fallon
says the biological father was a Louisiana police officer. The News has not
been able to locate the man.
Fallon said he lived with Taylor until 1998, when she eloped to Las Vegas to
marry Westerhaus. Westerhaus and Taylor divorced in 2001, and Westerhaus
lives in Lewisville.
When a News reporter knocked on Westerhaus' door May 8, he was reluctant to
speak about his marriage to Taylor. But his current wife told The News that
Taylor was largely responsible for piling up $330,000 in debt, forcing
Westerhaus to file for bankruptcy in 2002.
"What I can tell you is the debt was hers," Westerhaus' current wife said
that night, adding "He was an innocent person, just like Dirk is now."
The Westerhauses have since been besieged by media interview requests and
declined to comment. But late Thursday, a friend of the Westerhauses stepped
forward, under the condition of anonymity.
"When she [Taylor] was with Mr. Westerhaus, she only had that little girl,"
the family friend said. "After she did what she did to Mr. Westerhaus, she
just up and left the child with him."
The family friend decided to step forward after becoming "tired of seeing
Cristal play the victim" in interviews with The News. The friend said
Westerhaus "loved" the now 14-year-old girl as his own, "but he couldn't keep
her because he knew that was going to bring Cristal around."
After Taylor left Westerhaus and the child in 1999, according to the family
friend, six weeks passed before he persuaded Taylor's relatives in St. Louis
to take the girl – after threatening to call Child Protective Services.
Pregnancy confirmed
When The News interviewed Taylor on May 22 in the Beaumont jail, medical
release forms were brought from Parkland Hospital and Dallas County jail,
which she readily signed. The medical report showed that Taylor indeed was
tested after her arrest and was found to be pregnant.
When the test result became public May 26, Hart, Nowitzki's attorney, said he
had previously submitted written requests for an independent pregnancy test
but had yet to receive a response.
Hart remains Nowitzki's lead attorney, but apparently now is working in
conjunction with Katherine Kinser of the firm Kinser and Bates, which
specializes in matrimonial law
The Beaumont Enterprise was the first media outlet to report that Kinser
filed the petition last week in Dallas District Court 330. Although the
petitioner is listed only as "D.N." and "C.T." the respondent, Renick on
Thursday, confirmed to the Enterprise that Taylor was served with the papers.
Renick, who told the Enterprise that Taylor is visibly pregnant, said they
had not determined an "appropriate response."
"We have to determine the best options, legally, to protect her rights and
those rights of her unborn child," he added.
Details of petition
The News obtained a copy of Kinser's "Petition To Adjudicate Parentage,"
which in part states, "Petitioner is a man whose paternity of the child is to
be determined and subsequently adjudicated if he is determined to be the
biological father of the child."
The petition continues, "Respondent has repeatedly made public statements
that Petitioner is the biological father of the child."
Section 7, Purpose of Suit, says the petition seeks "to establish the
parent-child relationship between Petitioner and the child the subject of
this suit in the event that it is determined that Petitioner is the
biological father of the child."
On May 21, Hart released a statement questioning the validity of Taylor's
pregnancy claims. "We have been told that she was not administered a
pregnancy test," he said in the prepared statement, adding that if in the
"remote" chance Taylor is pregnant, Nowitzki would look after the child's
well-being.
The News' previously scheduled face-to-face interview with Taylor occurred
less than 24 hours after Hart's remarks. A visibly angry Taylor said she had
left Hart a voice message demanding an explanation.
"But I don't want to talk to an attorney," she told The News that day. "An
attorney did not help me make this child. Dirk did."
After a late Friday afternoon report by ESPN.com, a source confirmed to The
News that an FBI investigation began last week, focusing on at least one
phone call Taylor made to Hart.
According to the ESPN.com report, FBI agents not only were looking at the
threatening nature of the calls, but the possibility that Taylor demanded
money. The ESPN.com report did not say whether Hart was the allegedly
threatened attorney.
An FBI agent in the Beaumont field office referred The News to the Houston
office and FBI special agent Shauna Dunlap, who handles media questions.
"It's the policy of the FBI and the Department of Justice that we do not
confirm or deny the existence of ongoing investigations or investigations in
general," Dunlap said. She said the FBI will only comment if a matter becomes
public record, meaning enough evidence is found to make a formal charge.
Staff writer Avi Selk contributed to this report.
Dirk的律師申請驗DNA
另外女牛排屋被爆出過去生了三位小孩
全部都不是她帶大的
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