Wednesday, July 27, 2016
THE HOTLIST - WEDNESDAY, JULY 27th
KESHIA KNIGHT PULLIAM: Husband Files for Divorce
Looks like Keshia Knight Pulliam is going to be a single mom.
Her husband, Ed Hartwell, has filed for divorce -- one week after she announced her pregnancy. Ed has doubts the kid is his and is demanding a paternity test. A source tells People the former NFL star "doesn't have any evidence of her cheating" but wants a paternity test because he's concerned about the timing of the pregnancy. The insider adds, "It's just that he had told her he wanted to wait before having a baby and things got really bad between them and then she pops up pregnant."
Keshia, who played Rudy Huxtable on The Cosby Show, announced that she's having a girl in an Instagram post earlier this month. It's the 37-year-old's first child.
Ed and Keshia wed in January, only four months after they started dating.
LINDSAY LOHAN: Ripped Off Filmmaker
Lindsay Lohan not only has a fiance problem, she also has a finance problem.
A filmmaker claims he paid Lindsay $10,000 to promote his movie on her Instagram page and she didn't do squat. Matt Martin made a movie called Little Mermaid (not the Disney film) and made a deal with one of Lindsay's associates to pay her $10,000 for her to promote the film three times to her five-million Instagram followers. She would also get an executive producer credit on the film. But a few months went by and she never made a single mention of it. Martin says he's reached out to Lindsay and her associate but hasn't heard back. He is now threatening to sue to recover his money.
JOHN HINCKLEY JR: Reagan Shooter to Be Released
In what is surely a first in U.S. history, a would-be Presidential assassin is being released. John Hinckley Junior, who shot President Ronald Reagan in 1981, will be released into his mother's care next month.
Hinckley has spent the last 35 years in psychiatric care after being found not guilty by reason of insanity. But a new court order says that he no longer poses a threat to himself or anyone else. He'll be required to live at his mother's Williamsburg, Virginia home, and his release comes with a few other conditions:
He'll have to undergo outpatient treatment at a Washington, D.C. hospital at least once a month.
He'll have to find a job or take a volunteer position approved by his doctors.
He has to let his doctors know before going to any other private residence.
If he successfully completes what doctors are calling "convalescent leave," he could be entirely free from court control within a year.
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