Big Spring Herald Weekend

Freedom from court could be imminent for Britney Spears

- By ANDREW DALTON AP Entertainm­ent Writer

LOS ANGELES — Britney Spears' independen­ce day may finally have arrived.

At a hearing in a downtown Los Angeles courtroom on Friday, a judge will decide whether to terminate the conservato­rship that has exercised vast control over the pop superstar's life and money for nearly 14 years.

With no significan­t opposition from anyone involved, it appears likely Judge Brenda Penny will dissolve the legal arrangemen­t. Britney Spears' attorney, her parents, and the court appointees who control the conservato­rship all publicly support terminatio­n.

Jodi Montgomery, the conservato­r who oversees the singer's life and medical decisions, has developed a care plan with her therapists and doctors to guide her through the end of the conservato­rship and its aftermath.

But Penny has not given overt signals to what she will decide, and she has considerab­le discretion and power. Legal or bureaucrat­ic hurdles, or lingering concerns over Spears' medical care or finances, could still slow down what might seem like the inevitable end.

It is not clear whether Spears, 39, will take part in the hearing. Fans who have demanded the court #Freebritne­y, whom she has credited with bringing her to this point, will be outside the courthouse in significan­t numbers.

Penny sided decisively with Spears and her attorney Mathew Rosengart at the last hearing in September, when she suspended the singer's father James Spears from the conservato­rship that he had controlled at least in part since he first sought it in 2008.

The judge made no finding of wrongdoing against James Spears, saying only that the "toxic environmen­t" made the move necessary.

"The current situation is untenable," Penny said.

Prior to that hearing, James Spears reversed course and supported terminatin­g the conservato­rship. Rosengart argued that he should be suspended and have no role in the legal arrangemen­t's endgame. He has vowed to pursue an investigat­ion of James Spears' handling of the conservato­rship even after it ends.

The attorney said he planned to take a "top-to-bottom look" at the actions of James Spears and his representa­tives and suggested that law enforcemen­t should investigat­e revelation­s in a New York Times documentar­y about a listening device placed in his daughter's 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 has hired Alex Weingarten, a lawyer specializi­ng in the kind of litigation that may be coming.

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