Paul Pierce built a Hall of Fame career on being called The Truth. Right now, a California court is demanding exactly that. The Boston Celtics legend is facing an escalating paternity lawsuit that has just entered a far more expensive phase — and his silence on the matter is becoming as loud as the legal demands themselves.
Princess Santiago, a Los Angeles-based event planner, has returned to a California court with a formal request for nearly $30,000 a month in child support — and that single figure is just the start of what she is asking a judge to order.
What Santiago Is Asking the Court to Order
The total financial demand attached to the case includes three separate requests. The first is a monthly child support payment of $29,811. The second is a $100,000 contribution toward her legal expenses. The third is half of what she has described as reasonable pregnancy, childbirth, and recovery costs, which she estimates total $18,846. That brings the immediate legal tab to roughly $149,000 — and that does not include ongoing monthly obligations if the court rules in her favor.
Santiago is also seeking sole legal and physical custody of her newborn son, whom she has named King, and is asking the court to order genetic testing to confirm Pierce’s paternity.
Pierce’s Own Words Being Used Against Him
What makes this case particularly striking is the foundation of Santiago’s financial argument. Her attorneys structured the requests around Pierce’s financial history as a professional athlete, noting that he played in the NBA from 1998 to 2017 and earned an estimated career salary of between $195 million and $203 million over that span.
But it goes deeper than his playing salary. Santiago’s legal team cited Pierce’s own public admissions — specifically remarks in which he claimed he made enough money from endorsements that he never needed to touch his NBA salary to pay his personal expenses, family costs, or spending on romantic partners. Those statements, made during a widely circulated interview, are now forming the core of her argument that the support figure she is requesting is well within his means.
Pierce retired in 2017 and was fired by ESPN in 2021. Fox Sports canceled his debate show in 2025. He currently appears on a couple of podcasts, but that is the extent of his media presence. Santiago’s team argues that regardless of his current income stream, his accumulated wealth makes the demands entirely reasonable.
A Timeline of Legal Trouble
This lawsuit did not arrive without warning. Santiago filed the initial paternity lawsuit in January, claiming at the time that she had attempted to resolve the matter privately on multiple occasions before turning to the courts. She framed the case from the beginning as being about her child’s welfare rather than a personal dispute with Pierce.
He was also arrested in Los Angeles in October 2025 on suspicion of driving while under the influence, after the California Highway Patrol found him asleep behind the wheel of his car on the freeway. The back-to-back legal issues paint a turbulent picture for the 48-year-old in the years since his playing career ended.
Pierce also went through a divorce from his wife Julie Landrum in 2023. He has three children — Prianna, Adrian, and Prince — from that marriage.
Pierce Has Not Said a Word
Perhaps the most telling detail in all of this is what Pierce has not done. He has not spoken about the paternity lawsuit publicly — not to the media, and not to Santiago. His silence is especially striking given that his own public admissions form the basis of her legal filing.
His legal team had not offered any comment to media outlets as of the time the updated court documents became available. For a man who built his brand on speaking openly and boldly, the quiet is hard to miss.
The case is still developing, and no court ruling has been issued. But with the financial stakes now firmly in six-figure territory — and a judge set to weigh in on child support, custody, and legal fees — Paul Pierce‘s most consequential battle may have nothing to do with basketball.

