Britney Spears' conservatorship is terminated
Britney is free. A Los Angeles judge has ended the
conservatorship that controlled Britney Spears’ life and money for nearly 14
years.
The decision capped a stunning five-month odyssey that saw
Spears publicly demand the end of the conservatorship, hire her own attorney,
have her father removed from power and finally win the freedom to make her own
medical, financial and personal decisions for the first time since 2008.
The move by Superior Court Judge Brenda Penny was expected,
with little support left for prolonging the legal arrangement. But Penny
offered no clear signals about what she would decide. As recently as last
spring, it appeared that the conservatorship could continue for years. Then it
unravelled with surprising speed.
Key to the unravelling was a speech Spears made at a hearing
in June when she passionately described the restrictions and scrutiny of her
life as “abusive”. She demanded that the conservatorship end without any prying
evaluation of her mental state.
Legal experts at the time said that was unlikely to happen,
and would represent a departure from common court practice.
But a judge allowed her to hire an attorney of her choice,
Mathew Rosengart, at a July hearing in which she again complained about the
grief the conservatorship caused and demanded that it end.Britney Spears.
Rosengart made it his goal first to have James Spears
removed from his role as conservator of his daughter’s finances before working
to end the conservatorship altogether. The judge suspended James Spears at a
September hearing, citing the “toxic environment” his presence created.
But more courtroom battles could lie ahead.
Rosengart has further vowed to pursue an investigation of
James Spears’ role in the conservatorship. He said he and his team have found
mismanagement of Britney Spears’ finances, suggesting she could pursue further
legal action. Court records put her net worth at about US$60 million.
He also said that law enforcement should investigate
revelations in a New York Times documentary about a listening device placed in
her bedroom.
James Spears’ attorneys said Rosengart’s allegations ranged
from unsubstantiated to impossible, and that he only ever acted in his
daughter’s best interest.
The post-conservatorship fight has in some ways already begun. James Spears has parted ways with the attorneys who helped him operate it, and he has hired Alex Weingarten, a lawyer specialising in the kind of litigation that may be coming.
In court filings last week, Britney Spears’ former business
managers, Tri Star Sports and Entertainment Group, pushed back against
Rosengart’s demands for documents about the firm’s involvement in the
conservatorship from 2008 to 2018. The group also denied any role in or
knowledge of any surveillance of the singer.
Jodi Montgomery, the court-appointed conservator who oversaw
the singer’s life and medical decisions starting in 2019, developed a care plan
with her therapists and doctors to guide Spears through the end of the
conservatorship and its aftermath.
Britney Spears was a 26-year-old new mother at the height of
her career when her father established the conservatorship, at first on a
temporary basis, in February 2008 after a series of public mental health
struggles.
It ends a few weeks before her 40th birthday, with her sons
in their mid-teens and her career on indefinite hold, as she is engaged to be
married a second time.
A turning point came early in 2019, when she cancelled a
planned concert residency in Las Vegas.
Convinced she was put in a mental hospital against her will,
fans began coalescing and demanding that the court #FreeBritney. At first, they
were dismissed as conspiracy theorists, but the singer herself gave them
validation in 2020 in a series of court filings that said they were correct to
demand greater transparency and scrutiny of her legal situation.
Those filings proved to be the first indication from Spears,
who had remained silent on the conservatorship for years, that she would seek
major changes.
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