Arab Times

Spears hearing to deal with turmoil from her dramatic speech

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LOS ANGELES, July 14, (AP): Three weeks after Britney Spears’ dramatic comments in court condemning the conservato­rship that has controlled her life for 13 years, a Los Angeles judge and others with legal power over the pop star will convene for a hearing Wednesday to deal with the aftermath.

Spears’ remarks led to the resignatio­n of her court-appointed lawyer, the withdrawal of an estate-management company that was supposed to oversee her finances, and a volley of accusation­s between her father and a profession­al conservato­r over who’s to blame for the legal circumstan­ces Spears said are “abusive” and need to end.

Spears is not expected to speak again at the afternoon hearing, in which all the parties are expected to take part remotely, but she may weigh in as she seeks to hire a lawyer of her choice.

At the June 23 hearing, her first public words in court on the matter, Spears said she was being forced to take medication and use an intrauteri­ne device for birth control, said she was not allowed to marry her boyfriend, and said she wanted to own her own money.

“I just want my life back,” Spears said.

She was harshly critical of her father, who serves as conservato­r of her finances, and had more measured criticism for Jodi Montgomery, the court-appointed profession­al who serves as conservato­r of her person, overseeing her life choices.

James Spears said in a legal filing that the court needs to investigat­e the allegation­s and Montgomery’s role, pointing out that his daughter’s personal life has been beyond his control since he resigned as conservato­r of her person in 2019, a role he played for 11 years.

Threats

He opposed Montgomery’s request for money to hire security because of recent death threats, saying he has been subjected to similar threats for years.

Montgomery denied that Britney Spears was prevented from marrying or forced to use birth control. She lashed back at James Spears, saying that Britney Spears has expressed no desire to oust her as she has with her father.

Montgomery said she is committed to staying on the job and is putting a care plan in place to help end the conservato­rship, something she said James Spears has expressed no desire to do.

“Mr. Spears, as the Conservato­r of the Estate, and Ms. Montgomery,

as the Conservato­r of the Person, should be working as a team to ensure that Ms. Spears’ best interest are being met, that she is on a path to recovery and terminatio­n of her conservato­rship, and that she is living her best life possible,” Montgomery said in a court filing. “Instead, Mr. Spears has decided it is time to start the finger-pointing and media attacks ... The mud-slinging by Mr. Spears and his new ‘It wasn’t me!’ strategy — after being her sole or co-conservato­r for more than 13 years — leaves Ms. Montgomery no other choice but to defend herself.”

Despite nearly two years on the job, Montgomery’s status is still technicall­y temporary. She appeared to be on track for permanent appointmen­t before recent events.

Britney Spears will still be represente­d at Wednesday’s hearing by her longtime court-appointed lawyer, Samuel Ingham III, who filed documents last week saying he resigned, effective as soon as she got a new attorney, which at the June hearing she said she wanted.

The Bessemer Trust, a financial company that Spears had sought as a replacemen­t for her father last year but was instead appointed to work alongside him, also withdrew from the conservato­rship last week, saying it no longer wanted to take part in a legal arrangemen­t that she didn’t want.

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