A Los Angeles judge ruled Friday that conservatorship that has overseen Britney Spears’s life and finances for more than 13 years should be terminated immediately.
The ruling by Judge Brenda Penny of Los Angeles Superior Court ended an arrangement that Ms. Spears had complained of bitterly, and which her fans had rallied against.
In June, Ms. Spears, 39, told the court that the arrangement, which stripped her of control in nearly every aspect of her life, had traumatized and exploited her, and asked for it to end without her having to undergo additional mental evaluations.
On Friday, Judge Penny agreed.
“The conservatorship of the person and estate of Britney Jean Spears is no longer required,” she said.
Judge Penny found that there was “no need for a capacity declaration” of Ms. Spears, noting that it had been a voluntary conservatorship.
The judge said Ms. Spears’s current estate conservator would continue working to settle ongoing financial concerns related to the case. John Zabel, the certified public accountant who took over the estate in September, would retain power to execute estate planning and transfer outside assets into an existing trust for Ms. Spears, she said.
The conservatorship has dominated the singer’s life for more than 14 years. It began in 2008, when James P. Spears, Ms. Spears’s father, who is known as Jamie, first petitioned the court for authority over his adult daughter’s life and finances, citing her very public mental health struggles and possible substance abuse. The temporary guardianship was made permanent by the end of the year.
Since then, the conservatorship has entered into professional contracts on behalf of the pop star, dictated her travel and logged her every purchase down to a drink from Starbucks. It also drew questions from Ms. Spears’s increasingly invested fans and outside observers, who asked why an active global celebrity and musician was in an arrangement typically reserved for people who cannot feed, clothe or shelter themselves.
In June, when Ms. Spears made her first extended public comments on the conservatorship in court, she said its authority went too far, claiming that those in charge forced her to take medication, work against her will and use a birth control device. She called for them to be investigated and jailed, pointing to Mr. Spears, 69, as “the one who approved all of it.”
Behind the scenes, Ms. Spears had routinely bristled at the strictures of the arrangement, according to reporting and confidential documents obtained by The New York Times. In 2019, she had begun seeking substantial changes to the conservatorship, when she announced “an indefinite work hiatus.”
In her comments at the June hearing, Ms. Spears said she did not know that she could file to end the arrangement altogether; her lawyer, Samuel D. Ingham III, soon resigned, and Judge Penny allowed Ms. Spears to select her new lawyer, Mathew S. Rosengart, the next month.
Ms. Spears’s father subsequently called for the conservatorship to be ended. His lawyer wrote in a recent status report that “Jamie believes that the Conservatorship should end, immediately.” The court suspended Mr. Spears as conservator of Ms. Spears’s nearly $60 million estate on Sept. 29.
Mr. Rosengart has said he will push for Mr. Spears and the estate’s former business manager, Tri Star Sports & Entertainment Group, to be investigated for financial mismanagement.
Julia Jacobs reported from Los Angeles.
The ruling Friday that Britney Spears’s conservatorship would end immediately was announced from a stage in front of the Stanley Mosk courthouse and the crowd of more than 200 people erupted in cheers as confetti flew and the pop star’s music blared.
Some fans hugged. Some cried in joy.
Natalie Angiula, a musician from Los Angeles, said Ms. Spears had inspired her since she was a child and that she was thrilled for the singer.
“I hope her life now can become what she dreams it to be,” Ms. Angiula said. “It’s unbelievable to see what the internet has been able to do to help her case, and the community that has been built around this movement.”
There was a limited number of seats for fans and other members of the public in the brief hearing. Judge Brenda Penny read her ruling in an even tone, and there was no vocal reaction from the audience, which had been warned not to make any noise at the start of the proceedings.
The mood outside the courtroom was not as restrained.
After the ruling was announced, Angelique Fawcette, an activist who has helped organize rallies for the #FreeBritney movement, danced onstage and hugged people surrounding her as the fans outside learned of the decision.
“I’m elated,” Ms. Fawcette said. “Britney has been freed, and her freedom sets a precedent for all other conservatorships across the nation. Her conservatorship and court case will be forced to be looked at by every judge and entity reviewing conservatorships. I’m happy for Britney, but I’m more happy for our nation.”
When Britney Spears addressed the court in June, she said she had been drugged, forced to work and prevented from removing her birth control device in recent years while under the conservatorship. She called for those overseeing it to be investigated and jailed, pointing to her father, James P. Spears, as “the one who approved all of it.”
“Controlling Britney Spears,” a documentary on the subject by The New York Times, also revealed that a surveillance apparatus monitored the singer’s communications and secretly captured audio recordings from her bedroom, according to a former employee of the security firm that was hired to protect her.
Ms. Spears’s lawyer, Mathew S. Rosengart, has since added to those accusations the prospect of financial mismanagement by Mr. Spears and the estate’s former business manager, Tri Star Sports & Entertainment Group, issuing subpoenas for sworn depositions and extensive records, including payments and communication between the parties, as well as the security firm behind the monitoring of Ms. Spears.
Mr. Rosengart has argued that Mr. Spears’s sudden desire to end the conservatorship after years of defending its necessity was tied to hopes that he could avoid legal discovery and being deposed under oath.
In the latest filings, Mr. Spears’s lawyers wrote that their client “has nothing to hide regarding his administration of Britney’s estate and will therefore hide nothing.”
They added that Mr. Spears “supports, indeed encourages, a full and transparent examination of the Conservatorship and has every confidence that said review will put to rest the outlandish, scurrilous and irresponsible speculation that has accompanied the media circus surrounding these proceedings.” The filings called Mr. Spears’s desire to immediately end the conservatorship “unconditional,” arguing that the transferring of records and his cooperation with Ms. Spears and her lawyers “will occur regardless.”
Lawyers for Tri Star, in their own filing, denied that the company’s employees had any control over Ms. Spears’s medical treatment or security protocols, including hidden electronic surveillance. They argued that the company’s financial dealings with the estate were approved by the court before the firm’s resignation from the conservatorship last year.
Even though Judge Brenda Penny decided to end the conservatorship on Friday, it is likely that these issues will remain to be addressed at subsequent hearings.
Though Britney Spears’s conservatorship has now been terminated, another looming issue in front of Judge Brenda Penny is the question of the legal bills being presented to the court by the many lawyers who have been involved in the proceedings.
The billing issue became more contentious after Ms. Spears said in court that her father, who has been suspended as her conservator, and others involved in her care “should be in jail” for how they treated her. Ms. Spears’s lawyer, Mathew S. Rosengart — whom she was granted the right to hire in July — has made a formal objection to a request by her father, James P. Spears, for approval of his legal fees, accusing Mr. Spears in court papers of billing his daughter for “outrageous and exorbitant” fees related to “media matters,” among other grievances.
“It is clear this work was not to benefit the Conservatee but rather a shameful attempt to redeem the reputation of outgoing conservator James Spears,” Mr. Rosengart wrote in the court filing.
One bill from a law firm hired by Mr. Spears, Holland and Knight, charged more than $890,000 for about four months of work. (The law firm no longer represents him following his suspension.)
Now Mr. Spears is represented by Alex Weingarten and Eric Bakewell, who wrote in a recent court filing that he continues to support the termination of the conservatorship and has “nothing to hide regarding his administration of Britney’s estate.”
Others seeking payment include Samuel D. Ingham III, Ms. Spears’s former court-appointed lawyer; Loeb & Loeb, a law firm hired last year at Mr. Ingham’s request when Ms. Spears was seeking to reduce her father’s influence over her finances; and Jodi Montgomery, a temporary conservator overseeing Ms. Spears’s personal matters, and her lawyers.
More recently, the singer’s mother, Lynne Spears, asked for court approval for payment of her own legal fees. In a court filing from earlier this month, a lawyer for Lynne Spears wrote that their legal team’s efforts, starting in 2019, to reduce Mr. Spears’s involvement in the conservatorship had laid the groundwork for his eventual suspension. The lawyers from two firms have asked for about $663,000 from Ms. Spears’s estate.
Mr. Rosengart also asked the court last month to approve a plan for paying him and his team, though it did not specify the fee total it envisioned. Judge Penny granted his request.
Judge Penny has scheduled the billing requests to be considered in a hearing on Dec. 8.
When Britney Spears broke her public silence on the conservatorship in June and asked the court to end it, she told the judge that at times she had been drugged, compelled to work against her will and prevented from removing her birth control device.
“It’s embarrassing and demoralizing what I’ve been through, and that’s the main reason I’ve never said it openly,” Ms. Spears said in an emotional 23-minute address to the courtroom by phone. “And mainly, I didn’t want to say it openly, because I honestly don’t think anyone would believe me.”
She later added: “And maybe I’m wrong and that’s why I didn’t want to say any of this to anybody, to the public, because I thought people would make fun of me or laugh at me and say, ‘She’s lying, she’s got everything; she’s Britney Spears.’ I’m not lying. I just want my life back and it’s been 13 years and it’s enough.”
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