The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Warnock’s ex takes legal action over child custody

Former spouse aims to move out of Georgia for Harvard program.

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock’s ex-wife is seeking changes to their child custody arrangemen­t in court documents that claim he’s in “willful contempt” of the agreement as she attempts to move outside of Georgia.

The 11-page filing by Ouluye Ndoye wants a judge to grant her additional custody of their two young children so she can complete a Harvard University program, citing an agreement she struck with Warnock while he was campaignin­g for the U.S. Senate in early 2020.

It also asks for Warnock’s child support payments to be recalculat­ed because of his “substantia­l” increase in income after his victory. He has continued to serve as the lead pastor of Atlanta’s Ebenezer Baptist Church after taking office.

The complaint, filed in February, comes as Warnock runs for a full six-year term. He won a special election runoff in January 2021 that was part of a Democratic sweep that flipped control of the Senate. His reelection campaign in November could once again determine control of the chamber.

Warnock spokeswoma­n Meredith Brasher called him “a devoted father who is proud to continue to co-parent his two children as he works for the people of Georgia.”

She didn’t comment further, and Warnock hasn’t yet responded to the claims in court.

Ndoye and her attorney didn’t return messages seeking comment, nor did she provide the documents to The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on.

A March 2020 incident between Warnock and Ndoye while their divorce filing was pending became the subject of scrutiny during his last election campaign.

Ndoye told Atlanta police officers that he ran over her foot with his car during a heated argument outside her townhouse, and she described him as a “great actor” after he denied her claims.

Warnock wasn’t charged with a crime, and medical officials didn’t find visible signs of injury to the foot. Warnock told the AJC in March 2020 that Ndoye’s allegation­s “didn’t happen.”

The most recent filing involves a child custody arrangemen­t finalized in April 2020, as he was waging a campaign for the U.S. Senate. Though the details are private, often these agreements stipulate that one spouse cannot move children out of state.

In the court documents, she asked a judge to revisit the child support considerat­ions because she plans to be a full-time student at Harvard University for two years.

She claimed a “substantia­l change of circumstan­ces regarding the welfare of the children” after Warnock’s victory, and she alleged in the filing that her ex-husband hasn’t reimbursed her for some child care costs that she incurred during time he’s scheduled to be with the kids.

The filing singled out certain weekdays when Warnock was set to have responsibi­lity for the children under the agreement but now cannot because of his Senate duties.

“The fact that (Warnock) has failed to reimburse (Ndoye) has left (Ndoye) financiall­y strapped, leaving the children in her care when she should be concentrat­ing on work-related and school-related responsibi­lities,” the filing states.

Ndoye also claimed that when Warnock has reimbursed her, “it has often been accompanie­d with an extended questionin­g regarding the value of and need for the services provided.”

Several Republican­s are competing in the May 24 primary to face Warnock in November. The best-known GOP candidate is Herschel Walker, a former football player with a history of violence against women and erratic behavior that has dogged his campaign.

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Raphael Warnock

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