Post Malone Wants Primary Physical Custody of 3-Year-Old Daughter: Wants Case Moved From California to Utah Where Child Support Obligations Are Lower—Offers Mom Visitation

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Post Malone pictured holding his daughter, DDP, whose custody and legal residence are now at the center of a heated legal battle between the music star and her mother, Jamie Park. Malone is seeking to relocate the case to Utah, where he resides and where potential child support obligations would be significantly lower.

Legal Highlights

  • Sudden Custody Power Grab? Malone previously agreed to daughter’s move to California, but now seeks physical custody in Utah after custody and child support was filed in L.A.
  • Financial Motive Alleged: California child support orders for high-income earners like Malone are significantly higher than Utah’s.
  • Mother Offered “Visitation Rights”: Despite being the child’s primary caretaker since birth, the mother is now being sidelined.

By Samuel Lopez – USA Herald

LOS ANGELES (USA Herald) – Post Malone, the chart-topping music icon whose legal name is Austin Richard Post, is now making headlines not for his music but for an intense custody battle playing out across state lines. The dispute centers on his nearly three-year-old daughter, referred to in court filings as “DDP,” and whether her legal residence should be in Utah, where Post lives, or remain in California, where her mother and the child now reside. At the heart of the matter is a looming child support petition filed in Los Angeles County—one that Post appears eager to avoid by shifting the case to Utah, where potential payments could be dramatically lower.

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Malone filed a motion on May 19, 2025, seeking to dismiss the California custody and support petition initiated by his ex-girlfriend, Hee Sung “Jamie” Park. According to Post, the child has lived primarily in Utah since birth and should remain there.

However, Park had no legal restrictions preventing her move to California in November and it appears that she made the decision in good faith—with Post’s full knowledge and consent.

In his own filing, Malone admits that he and Park were cohabiting in Utah until November 2024, when the couple ended their relationship and Park moved to Los Angeles with their daughter. At the time, he agreed to a shared custody plan, under which the child would rotate between the two states every two weeks. But when Park filed for primary physical custody and child support in L.A., Malone abruptly reversed his position, asking the court to invalidate her petition and asserting that the proper venue for their custody dispute is Utah.

Legal observers note that Malone did not file his own paternity action in Utah until April 14, 2025—several months after Park had already moved. And crucially, that petition was never formally served to Park. In contrast, Park served Malone with her own petition during a surprise appearance at Coachella in April.

According to California law, child support is calculated using a complex formula that factors in parental income, custody time, and cost of living. With Post’s multimillion-dollar income from tours, merchandise, and endorsements, California courts would almost certainly label him a “high-income earner” and award child support in the tens of thousands per month. Utah’s support formula is more conservative and generally yields lower amounts—especially when custody is more evenly split.

Legal analysts point out that Post’s motion to transfer jurisdiction reads like a textbook case of “forum shopping”—where a litigant seeks a more favorable court venue to avoid financial liability. “This isn’t about what’s best for the child. It’s about minimizing support obligations,” said one Los Angeles-based family law attorney familiar with the case.

Moreover, the filing reveals a strategy many view as deeply concerning: Post is seeking primary physical custody of DDP and proposes that Park be granted visitation rights. Given Park’s role as the child’s primary caretaker since birth, critics argue that this amounts to a financial power move disguised as parental concern.

In his declaration, Malone writes, “I do intend to work cooperatively with Jamie to ensure that DDP has frequent and equal custodial time with her mother.” On the surface, the statement may seem conciliatory. But legal professionals trained to read between the lines say otherwise.

“There’s no such thing as a perfectly equal 50/50 custody plan—especially not with a child this young,” said a veteran family court mediator. “The way Malone phrases his intent reveals a push for control. He’s not offering to share custody—he’s offering visitation. That’s a power shift.”

Court records confirm that Park has enrolled the child in music classes, swimming, and daycare in Los Angeles. Malone, meanwhile, argues that DDP’s long-time nanny, pediatrician, and routine are all based in Utah. But Park’s supporters insist that these arguments are performative and ignore the more pressing concern: Why did Malone wait until after the child support filing to suddenly declare a residency crisis?

Malone’s delay in filing legal paperwork—and his failure to serve Park with the Utah petition—could become critical in court. Judges tend to look unfavorably on litigants who appear to act in bad faith or use procedural maneuvers to shift legal advantage.

“Judges are trained to recognize litigation as a tool of manipulation,” noted a retired Los Angeles County family court judge. “If the facts show that Malone was okay with the move to California until the topic of money came up, he could face sanctions or be ordered to pay Park’s legal fees.”

Indeed, under California Family Code §4321.5, courts can award substantial pendente lite attorney’s fees to ensure that one party is not financially disadvantaged in legal proceedings. Given Malone’s wealth, Park is widely expected to prevail in her request for legal fee reimbursement—potentially in the six-figure range.

With Malone’s tour continuing nationwide, and his legal team ramping up its efforts to pull jurisdiction away from California, the custody fight is drawing comparisons to other high-profile co-parenting conflicts involving celebrities. But critics argue that Malone’s approach—relying on his fame and fortune to control legal outcomes—is exactly what family courts were designed to prevent.

Notably, Malone has not alleged that Park is an unfit parent. His only arguments rest on geography and support formulas. In many family law circles, that’s not enough. “A parent seeking to alter a child’s primary custodial status must show something compelling,” said one attorney. “That’s not present here.”

The singer’s public image is also being scrutinized. While he often posts videos declaring his love for fatherhood, skeptics say these social media gestures are a poor substitute for meaningful co-parenting. “What you say on Instagram doesn’t override the actual facts presented in court,” one legal analyst noted.

Upcoming Court Battle

The Los Angeles Superior Court is set to hear Malone’s motion to dismiss in late July. If the motion is denied, the case will continue in California—likely resulting in a sizable child support obligation and potentially a legal rebuke for Malone’s delay tactics.

For now, the custody battle continues to heat up, with Park fighting to retain legal jurisdiction in California and protect her daughter’s stability, while Malone aims to reroute the case to Utah and minimize his financial exposure.

As this case develops, it raises broader questions about wealth, parental rights, and the use of legal systems by high-profile individuals to tilt the playing field.

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This information is for general knowledge and informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.