Blake Griffin and ex-fiancée Brynn Cameron settled their lawsuit nearly one year after she filed against the NBA star.

A representative for the basketball player did not immediately respond to PEOPLE’s request for comment.

In February 2018, Cameron, 32,sued Griffin for palimony, claiming he abandoned her and their children to pursue a relationship with ex-girlfriendKendall Jenner.

Blake-Griffin-Brynn-Cameron

In the lawsuit filed on Valentine’s Day, Cameron alleged that the Detroit Pistons player “had no problem” trading her, “his former fiancée and mother of his two children, for reality television starKendall Jenner.”

Cameron, a former basketball player at the University of Southern California, alleged Griffin “cared more about the glamour of dating a Hollywood celebrity than the day-to-day responsibilities of being a father and a family man.”

She claimed that she and Griffin had planned to get married on July 28, 2017, but that Griffin blindsided her with a prenuptial agreement a month before the wedding. They postponed the wedding, and Cameron said Griffin “immediately embarked on a high-profile affair with Jenner.”

Griffinresponded to the lawsuitin April, denying the allegations. The documents requested that Cameron’s complaint “be dismissed, with prejudice and in its entirety.”

Gabe Ginsberg/Getty

ad3v7250_2018110972542134.jpg

This past August, the former couplesettled their custody battle.

“The recent reports of the financial details of the child support agreement between Blake Griffin and Brynn Cameron are inaccurate,” Griffin and Cameron said in a joint statement to PEOPLE.

“Both sides have settled amicably and are moving forward with co-parenting their two children,” the statement continued. “Due to the confidential nature of the agreement, no further details will be released.”

The pair agreed to the settlement during private negotiations just hours before they were set to appear in court over the matter, The Blast reported. According to the outlet, the agreement outlines child support payment and custody rights.

source: people.com