Los Angeles Times

#FreeBritne­y effort prompts lawmakers to act

Proposals, spurred by Spears’ high-profile case, aim to reform conservato­rships.

- By Melody Gutierrez

SACRAMENTO — A new spotlight on Britney Spears’ conservato­rship that has her legions of fans calling for reforms has prompted California lawmakers to consider changes that could affect the pop singer’s protracted legal case in Los Angeles.

The high-profile conservato­rship has been the focus of intense speculatio­n since Spears was placed under the legal arrangemen­t 13 years ago, but public scrutiny of the court-ordered guardiansh­ip has escalated with the #FreeBritne­y movement backed by fans-turned-activists and the recent New York Times documentar­y “Framing Britney Spears.”

The documentar­y, released in February, raised questions about how the conservato­rship system has worked in the star’s case, highlighti­ng how Spears was stripped of decisions about her earnings and daily life even as she continued performing and making millions. Now, proposals in the California Legislatur­e aim to strengthen the specificat­ions of conservato­rships, requiring more oversight and training of those in charge of another person’s care and finances, and implementi­ng additional conditions to safeguard conservate­es such as Spears.

A conservato­rship is a legal arrangemen­t put in place by a court with the aim

of protecting those who cannot care for themselves. Spears, 39, was first placed under a conservato­rship in 2008 after her public unraveling the year prior, when a court appointed her father, James “Jamie” Spears, and attorney Andrew Wallet, who managed her financial assets, to oversee her affairs.

Wallet resigned in 2019, and the singer is currently attempting to remove her father as her conservato­r. Attorneys for Jamie Spears have maintained that he has always acted in the best interests of his daughter.

Assemblyma­n Evan Low (D-San Jose) said the issues raised in “Framing Britney Spears” highlighte­d “some of the worst aspects of the system and the fact that it does not always protect individual­s like her.”

“We are trying to pull back the curtain on conservato­rships in California,” Low said. “We know abuses are occurring.”

One issue, Low said, is the lack of training and oversight of conservato­rs who are not licensed profession­als. Often, courts will appoint family members to act on behalf of people who are deemed no longer able to care for themselves.

Low’s Assembly Bill 1194 would require anyone appointed as a conservato­r who is not a licensed profession­al to receive 10 hours of training in financial abuse. Nonprofess­ional conservato­rs, such as Spears’ father, would also be required to register with the state’s oversight agency, the Profession­al Fiduciarie­s Bureau. That oversight would apply only to estates valued at $1 million or more; Low’s office said that threshold will be specified in upcoming bill amendments.

If a court finds that a conservato­r did not act in the best interest of a client, the fiduciarie­s bureau would be required to suspend or revoke the license or registrati­on of the conservato­r, who could face a civil penalty of up to $50,000, payable to the estate of the conservate­e.

AB 1194 also eliminates a court’s discretion in deciding whether conservato­rs can refer or hire any business entity in which they have a financial interest to work on behalf of the estates they are overseeing. In addition, the bill requires medical reports from a primary care physician to be considered by a court when making decisions about a person’s mental capacity.

It’s unclear whether either of those elements of the bill would have had an impact on Spears’ conservato­rship. Low said that although the impetus behind the legislatio­n was Spears’ case, he hopes his bill will lead to broader reforms.

“There are many people who are seniors or vulnerable in other ways and are being taken advantage of,” Low said. “We want to ensure that we are taking care of those who can’t take care of themselves.”

Senate Bill 724 by Sen. Ben Allen (D-Santa Monica) would ensure that a person under a conservato­rship or someone who is said to be in need of a guardiansh­ip can choose their own attorney, even if the person’s capacity to make sound decisions is in question.

Adam Streisand, a highprofil­e lawyer with whom Spears spoke when she considered contesting her conservato­rship in 2008, has said the singer was barred from hiring him because of an undisclose­d medical report saying she was mentally unable to make that decision. Instead, Spears was required to get a courtappoi­nted attorney.

Allen introduced his bill in response to concerns raised in the documentar­y, his spokeswoma­n said.

“When someone wants to limit the civil liberties and personal freedoms of California­ns through a conservato­rship, proposed conservate­es should have the right to select an attorney of their own choosing to defend them in court,” Allen said in a statement. “Why should the same rights and due process we guarantee criminal defendants not also be given to conservate­es?”

Another bill, SB 602 by Sen. John Laird (D-Santa Cruz), would reduce the maximum amount of time between court reviews of conservato­rships to 18 months, instead of two years. That potential change was recommende­d by the state Judicial Council in 2008, Laird’s office said. A spokesman noted that the Spears documentar­y raised long-standing issues about potential abuses in the conservato­rship system.

But Lisa MacCarley, a longtime conservato­rship attorney in Los Angeles County, said the reforms proposed by lawmakers are “well-intended but missing the point.” She said the overhauls needed are in the courtroom, where judges, commission­ers and favored court-appointed attorneys have created policies and procedures that are inconsiste­nt with California law and the state Constituti­on.

For example, in Spears’ case, a judge appointed attorney Samuel Ingham III to represent the singer on the same day the conservato­rship was filed, which MacCarley said is highly irregular. Court records show that a judge denied Spears’ request to hire her own attorney and instead later approved Ingham to receive payments of up to $10,000 a week from the singer’s estate. MacCarley called this “a glaring violation of Ms. Spears’ constituti­onal rights to be represente­d by an attorney of her choice.”

By focusing on the plight of one person, caregiver services attorney Bertha Sanchez Hayden said, the reforms focus on money management rather than ensuring that those placed under conservato­rships are well cared for.

“Reforms and constant spotlight are important,” said Sanchez Hayden, the directing attorney of caregiver services at Los Angeles legal aid organizati­on Bet Tzedek Legal Services and a member of the state’s Profession­al Fiduciarie­s Advisory Committee. “But these bills only seem to speak to one specific issue, without looking at [conservato­rships] holistical­ly.”

She said there are abuses in the system that need to be addressed, but that can’t be done by focusing on one high-profile case. A conservato­r who fails to fulfill their duties, such as ensuring a person has suitable housing or is able to go to the doctor, is just as damaging as a conservato­r who commits financial abuse, Sanchez Hayden said.

She said she worries that conservato­rships have been stigmatize­d due to the Spears case when the system is vital to others, such as a parent whose severely disabled child becomes an adult in the eyes of the law but is incapable of making decisions.

“We can’t rush to fix one wound,” Sanchez Hayden said. “There is no cookiecutt­er solution.”

 ?? Chris Pizzello Associated Press ?? DUSTIN STRAND of Phoenix supports Britney Spears outside a hearing about the pop singer’s conservato­rship at the Stanley Mosk Courthouse in Los Angeles.
Chris Pizzello Associated Press DUSTIN STRAND of Phoenix supports Britney Spears outside a hearing about the pop singer’s conservato­rship at the Stanley Mosk Courthouse in Los Angeles.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States