Wendy Williams‘s ex-husband and ex-manager, Kevin Hunter, 57, is determined to get more of her fortune.
According to court documents obtained by The U.S. Sun, Kevin is petitioning the court to “vacate and set aside” their final divorce judgment “based on fraud, misrepresentation, and misconduct.”
The TV personality, 60, tied the knot with Hunter in 1999 until their divorce was finalized in January 2020.
Kevin’s request to the court comes after Wendy’s guardian, Sabrina Morrissey, asked that Hunter pay back $112K in overpaid alimony earlier this year in April.
As The Sun reports, a Wells Fargo portfolio report from May 2019, showed Wendy’s “total holdings” to have $7,319,032.15.
However, the former daytime TV host’s best friend, Regina Schell, submitted an affidavit into the divorce proceedings alleging that Wendy had a total of $55 million in her accounts as of 2022.
“Fraudulently concealing” funds
Due to the affidavit, Kevin now claims that Wendy “fraudulently concealed” the additional $48 million in their divorce.
However, in response to Hunter’s demand that the divorce be overturned Sabrina Morrissey claimed that Kevin had been aware of all of the star’s accounts.
“I cannot address what [Regina] thinks she saw or heard, what a third person thinks she heard, or what that third person may or may not have reported to [Regina],” Morrissey stated, per The U.S. Sun.
“In his papers, [Kevin] affirmatively states that [Wendy] showed [Regina] her financial statements.”
Sabrina continued, “[Kevin] was not there and has no personal knowledge of whether or not this interaction occurred.”
She also claimed that at the time of the former couple’s divorce proceedings, Hunter was “fully satisfied and understood the process and had consulted with professionals to be fully aware of the assets and his rights with regard to such assets.” Morrissey added Kevin “has absolutely no case to reopen the divorce proceeding.”
Kevin previously questioned whether Morrissey has “legal standing” to represent his ex in the litigation due to her becoming Wendy’s guardian two years after the divorce was finalized.
“Ms. Morrissey is an attorney in New York, not New Jersey and though she claims to have been appointed as a Guardian in New York her Guardianship does not extend to this court as there is no Guardianship established in New Jersey,” read documents filed by Hunter in July.
In September a judge gave Morrissey 21 days to prove she had the authority to represent Williams in the case.