RHOC’s Gina Kirschenheiter’s Boyfriend Travis Mullen Awarded Primary Custody of Kids as Ex-Wife Meghan Gets Visitation

by Lindsay Cronin
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RHOC Star Gina Kirschenheiter's Boyfriend Travis Mullen Granted Full Custody of 3 Kids as Ex Meghan is Awarded Visitation and Ordered to Submit Drug and Alcohol Tests

Credit: Instagram

Gina Kirschenheiter’s boyfriend, Travis Mullen, has been awarded primary physical and legal custody of the three kids he shares with his ex-wife, Meghan Mullen.

Months after Travis, 40, asked for custody of the kids following a series of missed drug tests from Meghan, and after it was revealed that one of the children had missed a ton of school, which Meghan denied, the Real Housewives of Orange County star, who began dating Gina, 42, in 2019, was granted his request.

According to court documents obtained by TMZ on May 20, an Orange County judge made Travis’ custody win official in an order signed on May 13, noting that Meghan would have visitation with their two daughters, Presley, 14, and Bennett, 12, and supervised visits with their son, Joey, 9, and adding that she was required to submit to drug and alcohol tests.

Additionally, the exes, who have been battling it out in court since their 2016 split, were told to keep their communication “civil, courteous, and polite,” and it was previously decided that Meghan wouldn’t be allowed to attend their children’s sporting events without a monitor.

As RHOC fans may have seen, Gina, who shares three kids with her own former spouse, Matthew Kirschenheiter, got engaged to Travis on New Year’s Eve in Big Bear, California, amid a family ski vacation.

Months prior, Gina spoke to Us Weekly about Travis and Meghan’s custody drama, describing it as “horrible” and “unnecessary” as she admitted she hadn’t seen the children in a couple of weeks.

“It’s awful,” she shared. “It does affect us so greatly and it is hurting the kids and I’m just at this place where I’m like, ‘It’s not fair,’ and I don’t feel like it’s completely wild or out of bounds to sit here and say, ‘What’s happening to me and my family is unfair.’”

“It will never make sense to me, but we operate around it as best we can,” Gina added.