Sophie Turner’s legal team is asking a judge to “reactivate” her divorce proceedings from estranged husband Joe Jonas.
In court documents obtained by PEOPLE on Monday, Turner, 28, and her attorneys filed documents in Miami-Dade County, Florida, stating “that the reduction has been terminated and this case will be reactivated.”
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A representative for Jonas, 34, had no comment.
The former couple, who married in May 2019, had a temporary custody agreement.
Joe Jonas and Sophie Turner, 2023 Vanity Fair Oscar Party.
Kevin Mazur/VF23/WireImage
Jonas, 34, filed for divorce from Turner in Miami in September 2023 after four years of marriage, claiming “the marriage between the parties has irretrievably broken down.”
They have two daughters: Willa, born in 2020 and Delphine, born in 2022.
Joe Jonas hits back at Sophie Turner’s claim she’s withholding daughter’s passports, says it’s ‘misleading’
The parents previously had a temporary consent order that was made in October 2023 and was to remain in place until January 2024.
This was to include mediation and allow the children to travel to England and throughout the United States.
“After a productive and successful mediation, we have agreed that the children will spend time equally in loving homes in both the US and the UK. We look forward to being great co-parents,” the former couple said in a joint statement in October.
A “status report letter” also had to be submitted before December 23 before the next steps of their agreement could be finalized.
Joe Jonas and Sophie Turner, October 2022.
Swan Gallet/WWD/Penske Media via Getty
Immediately after news of their divorce broke in September, Turner accused Jonas of withholding their children’s passports, preventing them from traveling to Turner’s native England. Because of this, she sued him for illegal detention.
Court documents claim the former couple agreed to designate England as their “forever home” and were in the process of buying a home in the English countryside in April after selling a residential property in Miami.
It’s in January Game of Thrones actress dropped her “wrongful retention” claims against her estranged husband after a US judge granted the filing to be dismissed after both stars signed a consent plan recently approved by a UK judge.
The couple agreed to have the application dismissed “without prejudice and without attorneys’ fees, costs, expenses and/or disbursements awarded to either party” after their UK parenting agreement was approved on January 11.
Categories: Trends
Source: HIS Education