
The former governor of New Jersey, who resigned over a gay affair, and his estranged wife settled custody issues for their only child on Thursday as they moved closer to dissolving their marriage, their lawyers said.
The deal regarding the 6-year-old daughter of James E. McGreevey and Dina Matos McGreevey came on the third day of negotiations, which included some closed-door testimony before the judge who is attempting to avoid a divorce trial.
''She'll get a large amount of time to spend with her parents,'' McGreevey said of his daughter as he left the courthouse escorted by two uniformed sheriff's officers.
Moments later, lawyers for both McGreevey and his wife stood together before television cameras and reporters, saying they could not disclose terms of the custody agreement because it was confidential.
''It was an amicable settlement,'' said John N. Post, who represents Matos McGreevey.
Stephen P. Haller, the former governor's lawyer, said his client was ''delighted'' with the custody agreement. ''But the issues that remain are markedly different with different consequences,'' he said.
The couple and their lawyers are scheduled to return to court Monday to begin settlement talks on remaining issues, including alimony and child support. If those talks succeed, the remaining issue would be Matos McGreevey's claim of marriage fraud.
The former governor and his wife split in 2004 after he resigned in disgrace over an alleged extramarital affair with a male staffer. They had been married for four years.
James McGreevey stepped down during his first term in office after a nationally televised speech in which he acknowledged being ''a gay American'' and admitted to the affair. The staffer has denied the affair and claims he was sexually harassed by McGreevey.
In the 3½ years since the breakup, James McGreevey took up residence at the home of his boyfriend and began studying for the Episcopal priesthood while Matos McGreevey became a sometime analyst on cable television shows. Both wrote tell-all books and promoted them on Oprah Winfrey's television show. (Jeffrey Gold, AP)
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