- 2021-08-13 00:42:56
- LAST MODIFIED: 2024-11-21 00:14:12
Britney Spears’ dad will exit conservatorship, but not yet
Photo: Collected
International Desk:
Dhaka, Aug-13,
Britney Spears’ father
said in a court filing Thursday that he is planning to step down from the
conservatorship that has controlled her life and money for 13 years, but his
departure is not imminent.
James Spears filed
legal documents saying that while there are no grounds for his removal, he will
step down after several lingering issues are resolved. The document gives no
timetable for his resignation from his role helping oversee his daughter’s
finances.
“Mr. Spears continues
to serve dutifully, and he should not be suspended or removed, and certainly
not based on false allegations,” the filing said. “Mr. Spears is willing to
step down when the time is right, but the transition needs to be orderly and
include a resolution of matters pending before the Court.”
Those matters include
the next judicial review of the pop singer’s finances, which has been delayed
by months of public and legal wrangling over James’ Spears role and the
legitimacy of the conservatorship by Britney Spears and, in recent weeks, her
new attorney.
The documents say that
James Spears has been “the unremitting target of unjustified attacks” but “he
does not believe that a public battle with his daughter over his continuing
service as her conservator would be in her best interests.”
The filing says James
Spears will fight the petition to force him out, but will work with the court
and Britney Spears’ attorney Matthew Rosengart on the next phases.
“We are pleased that
Mr. Spears and his lawyer have today conceded in a filing that he must be
removed,” Rosengart said in a statement. “It is vindication for Britney.”
Spears said he was
working on a plan to give up his role from before his daughter hired Rosengart
last month.
For most of the
existence of the conservatorship, which was established in 2008, James Spears
oversaw his daughter’s personal affairs and money. In 2019, he stepped down as
the so-called conservator of her person, and maintained control of her
finances.
He was nevertheless the
target of much of his daughter’s ire in a pair of speeches before the court in
June and July, in which she called the conservatorship “abusive.” Spears in her
June remarks said she had been required to use an intrauterine device for birth
control, take medications against her will and prevented from getting married,
having another child or even riding in her boyfriend’s car unsupervised.
“This conservatorship
is doing me way more harm than good,” the 39-year-old Spears said at the time.
“I deserve to have a life.”
James Spears, 69, was
fighting to remain in control in court filings as recently as last week. He said
the allegations in his daughter’s testimony are “untested,” need investigation,
and involve issues that have long been out of his control.
He suggested that Jodi
Montgomery, who took over for him as conservator of Britney Spears’ personal
affairs, deserved scrutiny if her allegations were accurate.
Rosengart said that
while he welcomed the new move, he will not take the pressure of James Spears,
who should not wait to step down.
“We look forward to
continuing our vigorous investigation into the conduct of Mr. Spears, and
others, over the past 13 years, while he reaped millions of dollars from his
daughter’s estate, and I look forward to taking Mr. Spears’s sworn deposition
in the near future,” Rosengart’s statement said. “In the interim, rather than
making false accusations and taking cheap shots at his own daughter, Mr. Spears
should remain silent and step aside immediately.”
Even after James
Spears’ departure, the court will maintain the same control over Britney Spears
that is has since the conservatorship was put in place in 2008. But he has been
a lightning rod for the ire of fans in the #FreeBritney movement, whose voice
have become increasingly prominent as they have been embraced by Britney Spears
and Rosengart.
And Rosengart has
marked James Spears’ departure as a necessary first step before ending the
arrangement entirely.
The new filing
adamantly defends the work of James Spears and the conservatorship, and pushes
back especially against allegations made by Britney Spears’ mother Lynne Spears
in a recent declaration.
“When this
Conservatorship was initiated 13 years ago, Britney Jean Spears was in crisis,
desperately in need of help. Not only was she suffering mentally and
emotionally, she was also being manipulated by predators and in financial
distress,” the documents say. “Mr. Spears came to his daughter’s rescue to
protect her, and this Court made the determination that the protection provided
by a conservatorship was necessary and in Ms. Spears’ best interests.”
The documents say that
Lynne Spears was wrong in criticizing the hiring of a psychiatrist that she
said James Spears chose for their daughter, and in saying that medications he
prescribed were inappropriate.
The doctor was actually
chosen by Britney Spears herself, and had the approval of Montgomery, her
medical team, and Britney Spears’ previous attorney, the filing says. This same
group, including the singer herself, approved of the medication the doctor
prescribed, the filing says.
It also criticizes
Lynne Spears assuming a role at all, saying she is someone Britney Spears “has
avoided speaking with for most of her adult life.”
End/Dct/Int/Sma/