Matt Lauer's ex-wife Annette Roque was pictured in the Hamptons on Thursday after addressing the new rape allegations against him by distancing herself and saying her 'only' concern is for their children.

Roque was pictured driving around Sag Harbor, where the pair live, on Thursday morning, a day after her serially philandering husband was accused of anal rape by one of the women he had an affair with while they were married.

She was later seen stocking up on groceries.

Her lawyers issued a statement on her behalf earlier to address the claims made by Brooke Nevils, an NBC producer who says Lauer anally raped her in 2014 in Sochi.

'Now that the parties are officially divorced, her priority and only concern is for their wonderful children,' Roque's lawyers told People.

She divorced Lauer when he was fired by NBC a day after Nevils reported the alleged rape to them.

The divorce was finalized earlier this year but how they split up their enormous wealth remains unclear.

Annette Roque is pictured on Thursday shopping in Sag Harbor a day after her ex-husband was accused of raping one of his ex-mistresses

Annette Roque is pictured in Sag Harbor on Thursday, a day after her ex-husband was accused of anally raping one of the mistresses he cheated on her with when they were married

Legal experts have speculated that Lauer may have finalized the divorce before any more details of his alleged misconduct came out.

It's unclear if he anticipated exactly what Nevils planned to reveal in Ronan Farrow's new book, but it has been widely reported that Lauer hired lawyers in advance of it in preparation to fight against what was said about him.

'If Matt Lauer knew in advance that this rape story was coming out, he'd likely be incentivized to resolve the divorce quickly and not have it on his plate, once the rape allegations were made public,' celebrity divorce lawyer Robert Wallack told Radar Online.

Lauer and Roque owned multiple properties together including a $44million beach estate on Peconic Bay in the Hamptons, another home in Sag Harbor and an apartment in Manhattan's Upper East Side.

They sold the city apartment for $8million in February.

Roque issued a statement on Wednesday night to distance herself from her ex-husband and emphasis that they are now 'officially divorced'

She appeared to be talking to someone as she drove though it is unclear if they were in the car or on the phone

Roque filed for divorce after Lauer was ousted by the Today show in 2017. They are pictured in 2013

Lauer is still trying to sell his waterfront estate - which is known as Stoneheart Manor - for a whopping $44.8million.

Brooke Nevils has accused Lauer of rape

He had been trying to sell his Sag Harbor home for several years but it is no longer on the market. It's unclear if that is where he is now living.

He has been accused of sexual impropriety by three other women.

Lauer has always admitted cheating on his wife but says all of his affairs were consensual.

He vehemently denied Nevils' allegations in a 1,400-word letter on Thursday which has since been described as the epitome of 'victim blaming'.

In it, he shared graphic details of what he said they did the night Nevils said he raped her.

'I had an extramarital affair with Brooke Nevils in 2014. It began when she came to my hotel room very late one night in Sochi, Russia. We engaged in a variety of sexual acts.

'We performed oral sex on each other, we had vaginal sex, and we had anal sex,' he wrote in his letter.

The couple are still trying to sell their $44.8million home on Peconic Bay in the Hamptons

They also own a six-bedroom home in Sag Harbor which was on the market before the scandal broke but is no longer listed

Nevils originally shared the allegations in Ronan Farrow's new book, Catch and Kill, which will be published on October 15.

She has since tweeted and issued a statement, admonishing his denial and emphasizing her credibility.

'There's a Matt Lauer that millions of Americans watched on TV every morning for two decades. And there is the Matt Lauer who this morning attempted to bully a former colleague into silence,' the statement reads.

'His open letter was a case study in victim blaming.

'I am not afraid of him now regardless of his threats, bullying, and the shaming and predatory tactics I knew he would and now has tried to use against me.'

She added that she provided 'dates, times, evidence of communications and corroborating accounts' which 'both NBC and Farrow found credible'.

'I continued to engage with him, as many victims of acquaintance rape do, particularly in the work place.

'The shame in this story belongs to him,' she said.