The Guardian (USA)

Britney Spears: US House of Representa­tives introduces bill to end conservato­rship abuse

- Laura Snapes

Britney Spears’ fight to end her conservato­rship has inspired a new bipartisan proposal in the US House of Representa­tives.

The Freedom and Right to Emancipate from Exploitati­on (Free) Act would allow a person bound by a conservato­rship to petition to replace their court-appointed private conservato­r with a public conservato­r, family member or private agent without having to prove abuse.

The bill, introduced by Republican Nancy Mace and Democrat Charlie Crist, would offer state funding for case workers to oversee conservato­rships. States accepting the funds would require case workers and public guardians to disclose their finances, as well as to provide annual reports on conservato­rships.

“Abusive conservato­rships can be an unending nightmare, and tragically we don’t know how many people are being held captive against their will under the broken guardiansh­ip system,” said Crist. “Under the Free Act, we would free Britney along with the countless numbers of seniors and persons with disabiliti­es being abused and exploited by the broken system.”

“To see a woman like Britney Spears have her most basic human rights permanentl­y stripped away from her under the guise of ‘protection’ should be illegal,” said Mace.

In June, Spears petitioned a Los Angeles court to end the conservato­rship that has controlled her personal life, career and finances since 2008. In her explosive testimony, she said she had been forced to work against her will, blocked from marrying and removing her IUD to have a baby, and from being driven by her boyfriend in his car.

She accused her father, Jamie Spears – a co-conservato­r – of abuse and said that he and the team behind the conservato­rship “should be in jail”.

In response, Jamie Spears filed documents claiming that he has had no power over his daughter’s personal affairs for nearly two years, and asked the court to investigat­e “serious allegation­s regarding forced labor, forced medical treatment and therapy, improper medical care, and limitation­s on personal rights”. His lawyers also said that his daughter should have the “right to give informed consent for her own medical treatment”.

On 30 June, a judge denied a request to remove Jamie Spears from the star’s conservato­rship. The Bessemer Trust, the wealth management fund that oversees Spears’ finances, resigned on 2 July; her long-term manager Larry Rudolph followed suit four days later. Her court-appointed lawyer Samuel D Ingham asked to resign soon after.

Spears won a small victory last week when the court allowed her to appoint her own representa­tion for the first time in the history of her arrangemen­t. Mathew Rosengart, a former federal prosecutor who has represente­d Steven Spielberg and Sean Penn, rep

laces Ingham.

On 20 July, Rosengart said he is working “aggressive­ly and expeditiou­sly” to remove Jamie Spears as conservato­r “unless he resigns first”.

Since her widely praised court appearance, Spears has continued to share details of her experience­s under the conservato­rship on her social media. She apologised to fans for “pretending to be OK” in her offbeat Instagram posts.

In an Instagram post celebratin­g Rosengart’s appointmen­t, Spears used the hashtag #FreeBritne­y for the first time. She later stated, “I’m not gonna be performing on any stages anytime soon with my dad handling what I wear, say, do, or think”.

In her latest Instagram post, Spears wrote: “I think we all know that I will never be able to let go and fully move on until I’ve said all I needed to say … and I’m not even close !!!! I was told to stay quiet about things for so long and I finally feel like I’m just getting here ⭻⭻⭻ !!!! ”

 ??  ?? ‘Abusive conservato­rships can be an unending nightmare’ ... a #FreeBritne­y supporter. Photograph: Francine Orr/Los Angeles Times/ REX/Shuttersto­ck
‘Abusive conservato­rships can be an unending nightmare’ ... a #FreeBritne­y supporter. Photograph: Francine Orr/Los Angeles Times/ REX/Shuttersto­ck

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