When custody battles go public, the financial details tend to follow. Boxer Devin Haney just learned that lesson the hard way—his monthly earnings are now part of the court record, and they’re substantial enough to turn heads.
According to legal documents obtained by TMZ, Devin Haney and Leena Sayed have finalized a custody agreement for their one-year-old daughter, Khrome. The settlement itself reads like a typical co-parenting arrangement with one very telling detail: Devin’s monthly income of $435,699. That figure became the baseline for calculating the $20,000 in monthly child support he’ll pay to Leena.
To put that in perspective, that’s over $5.2 million a year—the kind of number that explains why high-profile athletes and entertainers often fight hard to keep earnings private during family law disputes. The agreement includes joint legal and physical custody, though there’s a catch: Devin must have either a professional nanny or his mother present when he’s caring for Khrome until she turns three. It’s an unusual stipulation that hints at complications beneath the surface of what’s being presented as an amicable settlement.
The custody agreement also required both parties to essentially call a truce on their legal warfare. Devin withdrew his extortion lawsuit against Leena—one in which he claimed she published false and defamatory statements about him. Leena, in turn, dropped her request for a domestic violence restraining order, which stemmed from allegations that he pushed her to the ground in 2024 while she was pregnant. Both sides agreed to a non-disparagement clause, meaning public trash-talking is off limits going forward.
Perhaps the most interesting detail is the social media requirement attached to the deal. Leena is required to post a statement acknowledging that news reports claiming she said she was physically harmed by Devin were inaccurate, and that they’re both focused on co-parenting. It’s a far cry from the public conflict that preceded this settlement. The agreement also blocks either parent from posting photos of Khrome on social media without the other’s permission—a direct response to an earlier dispute over Leena’s OnlyFans presence and her desire to share images of their daughter online.
What emerges from the fine print is a snapshot of modern celebrity custody battles: financial transparency forced by the courts, carefully negotiated silence agreements, and specific conditions designed to protect a child while both parents maintain their public personas. The real story isn’t just the six-figure monthly income—it’s the lengths both parties went to in order to make sure the specifics of their conflict never became tabloid fodder again.

About the Author
Ava Hart
Ava Hart is a contributor to LocalBeat, covering local news and community stories.





