Chattanooga Times Free Press

Spears’ conservato­rship sparks legislativ­e push

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COLUMBIA, S.C. — Prompted by Britney Spears’ conservato­rship fight, a bipartisan legislativ­e effort has emerged to reform the process created to protect the rights of more than 1 million people across the United States under the protective arrangemen­ts.

On Tuesday, Reps. Charlie Crist and Nancy Mace unveiled “The Free Britney Act,” designed to give more options to people placed under conservato­rships. Those include the ability to talk about their situations with caseworker­s — over any objections from their conservato­rs — and petition a court to replace their conservato­rs without having to “prove wrongdoing or malfeasanc­e.”

“This is just a commonsens­e approach to doing what is right, to making sure that rights are balanced,” Crist, a Florida Democrat, said during a virtual news conference on Tuesday.

Both Mace, a Republican from South Carolina, and Crist said it was Spears’ passionate plea last month that a judge end the conservato­rship that controls her life and money that spurred their proposal.

“What she had was an opportunit­y to do is bring to light, to shine a light, on those abuses,” Mace said. “Her situation is a nightmare, and if it can happen to Britney Spears, it can happen to anyone in this country.”

Speaking in open court, Spears condemned her father and others who control the conservato­rship, put in place as Spears underwent a mental health crisis in 2008. Spears’ father and his attorneys have emphasized she and her fortune, which court records put at more than $50 million, remain vulnerable to fraud and manipulati­on. Under current law, the burden is on Spears to prove she is competent before the case could end.

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