Feb 15, 2008 7:58 am US/Pacific
McCartney-Mills Divorce Case To Go On
Hearing Had Been Due To End Friday
LONDON (CBS News) ―
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The hearing had been due to end Friday, but officials at London's Royal Courts of Justice said the case before Justice Hugh Bennett would continue Monday.
(Photo by Gabriel Bouys/AFP/Getty Images)
Gabriel Bouys/AFP/Getty Images
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Musician Paul McCartney performs an exclusive gig at the Electric Ballroom on June 7, 2007, in London.
Dave Hogan/Getty Images
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Sir Paul McCartney performs on stage as part of the iTunes Festival at the Institute of Contemporary Arts on July 5, 2007 in London.
Getty Images
The divorce hearing between Paul McCartney and Heather Mills is
stretching into a second week, after a judge allotted extra time for
the couple's court case.
The hearing had been due to end Friday, but officials at London's
Royal Courts of Justice said the case before Justice Hugh Bennett would
continue Monday.
Mills and McCartney separated in 2006 after four years of marriage
and have since traded blows in the media while trying, and failing, to
agree on divorce terms.
The hearing was called to decide on Mills' share of the former
Beatle's fortune, estimated at as much as $1.6 billion.
Media reports
suggest that McCartney has offered his estranged wife around $50
million and that she is seeking at least double that amount.
The couple has squared off every day this week in Court 34 of the
grand, gothic courthouse, but few details have emerged. Unlike most
British court cases, divorce proceedings are heard in private, and the
courtroom is completely closed to journalists and the public.
Mills, 40, and McCartney, 65, have made no comment to the reporters and photographers who have gathered outside court each day.
However, Sir Paul has been spotted going into the court in apparent high spirits, observes CBS News correspondent Elizabeth Palmer.
The secrecy surrounding the hearing is so complete that even the
crates of documents going into court have been covered with blankets,
Palmer says. But reporters did spot one of Mills' boxes, marked ''Fan
Mail."
McCartney has hired lawyer Fiona Shackleton, who represented Prince
Charles in his 1996 divorce from Princess Diana. Mills, who fired her
legal team late last year, is representing herself.
And the strain, says Palmer, may be showing: it was reported
Thursday that Mills spent 20 minutes sitting alone, looking tense in
her car outside the court.
After the hearing ends, Bennett is expected to take several weeks
to consider his settlement. The terms will not become public unless it
is challenged in the Court of Appeal, or either of the parties chooses
to reveal details.
Mills is a former model whose left leg was amputated below the knee
after a motorcycle accident in 1993. She became active in campaigning
against land mines and in favor of animal welfare.
The couple married in June 2002 -- four years after the death of
McCartney's first wife, Linda -- and their daughter Beatrice was born in
October the following year. They announced their separation in 2006,
and McCartney filed for divorce alleging "unreasonable behavior" by his
wife.
It's believed, Palmer reported, that Mills has been arguing that
she's owed compensation because her own, thriving career as an
inspirational speaker and campaigner for amputees has been ruined by
her acrimonious split from the ex-Beatle. It's also reported that she
is asking for money to pay for 24 hour security for both herself and
her daughter.
The British tabloids are saying Friday that McCartney sent Mills a
bouquet on the eve of the hearing with a note saying, "Please remember
-- you and I are both human and we have one very special person in
common."
"I think the big issue in this case, frankly, is not Beatrice," family lawyer Alan Kaufman told CBS News.
"She will be looked after, and things will be OK for her. The massive
issue is how much of Paul's wealth is Heather going to get?
"They both really are big, big public personas," Kaufman continued.
"There's been the most massive publicity ever, frankly. This is the
highest-profile divorce case ever in the world."
(© 2009 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)
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