After citing "questions of abuse" that required him to clear the courtroom of reporters Tuesday, the judge in Charlie Sheen's child custody case elected not to change the current arrangement, TMZ reported.
Sheen and his soon-to-be-ex-wife, Brooke Mueller, announced last month that they had reached a custody arrangement, but did not disclose the terms.
Also read: Sheen Divorce Almost Complete
TMZ reported that Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Hank Goldberg did not provide details or say who was involved in the "questions of abuse." But he said reporters needed to leave the courtroom.
Both Sheen and Mueller had sought custody of their 2-year-old twins, Bob and Max. Sheen pleaded guilty in August to a misdemeanor third-degree assault on Mueller, but it was unclear if that was the abuse under discussion.
Meanwhile, in another Sheen case, a different judge allowed a pool camera to record the actor's dispute with Warner Bros. TV and "Two and a Half Men" creator Chuck Lorre.
Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Allan J. Goodman, said he would not rule Tuesday on whether Sheen's $100 million suit against Warner Bros. and Lorre would go to trial or be resolved in arbitration. Sheen is seeking a public trial.
Goodman also said the issues discussed in his courtroom Tuesday would be "technical" and "boring" — but he granted a motion from news media to allow cameras in the courtroom. He further joked that it would be possible to re-forest the San Gabriel Mountains with all the paperwork in the case.