Britney Spears wants out. What happens next in her conservatorship?
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[June 24, 2021]
By Jill Serjeant
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Britney Spears has
made clear how frustrated she is with the legal arrangement that has
controlled her life for 13 years, but the singer will need patience
before finding freedom.
Legal experts say that wanting out of a court-appointed conservatorship
is easier said than done. Spears, now 39, will have to convice the judge
that she is capable of managing her personal affairs and assets worth
around $60 million, according to court documents.
"Once a person is under a conservatorship it's difficult to get out of
it because the court does not want to remove those protections only to
have the conservatee taken advantage of," said Los Angeles-based family
lawyer Christopher Melcher.
"They would have to demonstrate that it's no longer necessary," Melcher
added.
In emotional and angry remarks to the judge overseeing her case, Spears
on Wednesday described the conservatorship as abusive, stupid,
embarrassing and demoralizing.
The "Piece of Me" singer begged for the arrangement to be ended without
having to undergo more psychological testing.
"I don't want to be evaluated, to be sat in a room with people four
hours a day like they did to me before," she said. "If I can work and
provide money and work for myself and pay other people - it makes no
sense."
The conservatorship began in 2008 when Spears suffered a mental health
breakdown. The nature of her mental illness has never been disclosed. A
year later she made a comeback, released new albums and performed live
for 10 years until late 2018.
Judge Brenda Penny praised Spears for her courage in speaking out but
said on Wednesday that Spears needs to submit a petition to the court
requesting the termination of the conservatorship before any next steps
could be taken. No new dates were set.
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People protesting in support of pop star Britney Spears listen to
the court feed on the day of a conservatorship case hearing at
Stanley Mosk Courthouse in Los Angeles, California, U.S. June 23,
2021. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni
Under the terms of conservatorships in Calfornia, the
judge would usually send a court-appointed investgor to speak with
Spears and other interested parties, including the singer's parents
Jamie and Lynne Spears, her care manager and the financial
institituion that manages her business affairs. The judge would make
the final decision.
"Everybody thinks that you simply walk into court with your case and
the judge is going to hear me and the judge is going to understand
that what I want is what is right, and they're going to give that to
me. And it simply doesn't work that way," said Scott Rahn, an
attorney with expertise in trusts and conservatorships.
"It has to be warranted," Rahn added.
Spears may have more luck winning a loosening of some of the
restrictions she now faces. She mentioned wanting to choose her own
attorney, marry and have another baby, have her nails and hair done,
and have a therapist come to her rather than vice versa.
Lisa MacCarley, a probate and conservativship lawyer who supports
the #FreeBritney movement, said Spears had been "treated shabbily"
under the conservatorship.
“Britney Spears needs to get into an office of a competent and
independent legal adviser and weigh her options,” MacCarley said.
(Reporting by Jill Serjeant, Lisa Richwine and Rollo Ross; editing
by Jane Wardell)
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