ELIZABETH, N.J.(AP)
Former Gov. Jim McGreevey didn't plan to torment his wife
while they were married, a judge in their divorce case ruled
Thursday, while allowing her to continue with a claim of marriage
fraud.
The judge dismissed Dina Matos McGreevey's claim of
emotional distress against her estranged gay husband.
"Mr. McGreevey was not out to destroy her
emotionally," said Superior Court Judge Karen Cassidy.
Cassidy, a Union County Superior Court judge, said she would
permit the fraud claim to continue for now, but warned, "That
does not guarantee the defendant will be successful in trying her
claim."
Matos McGreevey claims she was duped into marrying a gay man who
sought the cover of a wife to hide his homosexuality and further
his political ambitions. He claims he provided companionship and a
child, thus fulfilling his part of the marriage contract.
Thursday's pretrial hearing came less than a week after
McGreevey, 50, said claims that he and his wife engaged in
threesomes with a male aide were true; Matos McGreevey, 41, denied
they happened.
Arriving with her attorney Thursday, Matos McGreevey said only
"no comment" as she entered the courthouse. McGreevey
also attended the hearing and said nothing on his way into or out
of the courthouse.
His lawyer, Stephen Haller, said the judge's rulings
encouraged his legal team. "Read between the lines," he
said of the judge's words of caution in allowing the fraud
claim to proceed.
Cassidy told the former first couple that their divorce trial,
scheduled to start May 6, would get ugly.
"We all know what happened this week," she said.
"What evidence will likely be heard in this case, this week
was just the tip of the iceberg."
In interviews with The Star-Ledger of Newark and the New York
Post, former McGreevey driver Teddy Pedersen said he had consensual
sex with the couple for about two years before McGreevey became
governor. He said he had contact only with Dina Matos McGreevey
during the trysts and wasn't sure whether McGreevey was
gay.
Pedersen, 29, said he came forward to support McGreevey's
contention that his wife had to have known he was gay when they
married. She says she had no clue.
Cassidy also agreed during Thursday's three-hour court
proceeding to allow testimony from a financial expert hired by
Matos McGreevey. McGreevey sought to bar CPA Kalman Barson's
report, which claims she is entitled to much more money than what
the ex-governor says he can afford to pay.
She is seeking $600,000 in compensation for the time she would
have spent at the governor's mansion had he not resigned.
That estimate includes keeping with the "Drumthwacket
lifestyle," which included use of state police helicopters, a
personal assistant, household staff and use of the state's
beach house. Drumthwacket is the governor's mansion.
Before McGreevey became governor, he made $52,000 a year as
mayor of Woodbridge, and the couple lived in a condominium.
McGreevey left office in 2004 after acknowledging an affair with
a male staffer who he said was trying to blackmail him. The
ex-staffer denies being gay or having an affair, and said he was
sexually harassed by the Democratic governor.
Cassidy also heard arguments on the custody of their 6-year-old
daughter but barred the media from that portion of the hearing. The
judge this week sealed court records relating to the girl.
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