Boston Herald

Britney gets new attorney

As she fights her father, conservato­rship case

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LOS ANGELES — A judge allowed Britney Spears to hire an attorney of her choosing at a hearing Wednesday in which she broke down in tears after describing the “cruelty” of her conservato­rship.

Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Brenda Penny approved Spears hiring former federal prosecutor Mathew Rosengart, who called on Spears’ father to immediatel­y resign as her conservato­r.

“We will be moving promptly and aggressive­ly for his removal,” Rosengart said outside the courthouse. “The question remains, why is he involved?”

Britney Spears, taking part in the hearing by phone, told the judge she approved of Rosengart after several conversati­ons with him. She then asked to address the court, but asked that the courtroom be cleared.

As Rosengart began to argue for a private hearing, Spears interrupte­d him to say “I can talk with it open.”

“I would like to charge my father with conservato­rship abuse,” she said, speaking so rapidly she was at times difficult for the court reporter and the dozens of media members in the courtroom to understand.

She said she wanted the conservato­rship to end immediatel­y but not if it required going through any more “stupid” evaluation­s.

“If this is not abuse, I don’t know what is,” Spears said as she described being denied things as basic as coffee, her driver’s license and her “hair vitamins” by the conservato­rship.

She also described suffering long term “serious abandonmen­t issues.”

James Spears would not be stepping down as Rosengart challenged, his attorney Vivan Thoreen said in court, adding that he has only ever had his daughter’s best interests in mind.

Thoreen said Britney Spears had many inaccurate beliefs, among them that “her father is responsibl­e for all the bad things that have happened to her.”

“Whether it’s misinforma­tion, lack of correction, or being wrongly advised, I don’t know,” Thoreen said, emphasizin­g that for nearly two years James Spears has had no say over his daughter’s life choices, only her money.

Spears has been under court supervisio­n, with her father and a team of attorneys controllin­g her life and finances, since February 2008. She was in the midst of a public meltdown at the time and her family sought the conservato­rship for her protection.

Spears has had throughout the proceeding­s a court-appointed attorney to represent her interests, Samuel Ingham III, but he resigned after a dramatic hearing three weeks ago in which the pop star told Penny: “I just want my life back.”

Fans from the #FreeBritne­y movement outside the courthouse cheered the decision to appoint Rosengart, then cheered Rosengart himself when he walked out.

In court, he called into question whether the conservato­rship should ever have been put into place back in 2008, and said he and a team of attorneys from his firm would be taking a close look at the details of the arrangemen­t.

The June 23 hearing was the first time Spears openly addressed the court, telling Penny 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.

In addition to Ingham’s resignatio­n, Spears’ remarks last month led to the withdrawal of an estatemana­gement 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.

 ?? AP ?? GOT HER PICK: Britney Spears' newly appointed lawyer Mathew Rosengart is interviewe­d outside the courthouse on Wednesday.
AP GOT HER PICK: Britney Spears' newly appointed lawyer Mathew Rosengart is interviewe­d outside the courthouse on Wednesday.
 ?? AP ?? NOT A SLAVE FOR YOU: Fans and supporters of pop star Britney Spears, at left, protest at the Lincoln Memorial during a ‘Free Britney’ rally Wednesday in Washington.
AP NOT A SLAVE FOR YOU: Fans and supporters of pop star Britney Spears, at left, protest at the Lincoln Memorial during a ‘Free Britney’ rally Wednesday in Washington.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES FILE ??
GETTY IMAGES FILE

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