Angelina Jolie is, allegedly, hurting amid claims that her eldest son, Maddox can be taken away from her.
According to Globe, there is an ongoing investigation regarding how Angelina Jolie adopted Maddox when he was still a baby.
After all, there are accusations that several children were stolen from their Cambodian parents because they couldn’t give them a good life.
Angelina Jolie worried Maddox can be taken from her?
Even though Jolie’s agent denied any wrongdoing when she allowed the actress to adopt Maddox, the tabloid still said that Jolie must be struggling right now.
“It must be so hurtful for Angelina for these questions to be raised every few years. Maddox has been with her since he was a baby and she is and always has been his mother. I doubt either of them views it any other way,” the source said.
However, the source said that Jolie can still face some problems along the way because she is dealing with an incredibly poor third-world country.
“It serves as a very sobering lesson in what can actually happen behind the scenes with foreign adoptions,” the source said.
Angelina Jolie allowed son Maddox to reach out to Billy Bob Thornton
Meanwhile, Maddox also made headlines this week amid claims that he has reunited with Jolie’s ex-husband, Billy Bob Thornton.
Thornton and Jolie were still together when the latter adopted Maddox.
As such, New Idea claimed that Maddox reached out to Thornton for advice because he needs a father figure in his life.
Maddox and Brad Pitt are still estranged today.
A source alleged that Maddox also turned to Thornton for advice on the first house that he wants to purchase. And luckily for him, Thornton has always, allegedly, left his door open for Maddox.
Rumors debunked
However, one should take the tabloids’ claims with a grain of salt.
No one knows for sure how Jolie is feeling amid the ongoing investigations over Maddox and other Cambodian children’s adoptions.
And there is also no proof that Maddox is seeking the advice and support of Angelina Jolie’s ex-husband.
Images used courtesy of Gage Skidmore, CC BY-SA 3.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0>, via Wikimedia Commons and Foreign and Commonwealth Office, CC BY 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons