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Britney Spears’ new attorney says he’s ‘moving aggressively’ to boot Jamie Spears

A man in a suit is surrounded by people with microphones and cameras
Britney Spears’ new lawyer, Mathew Rosengart, leaves the Stanley Mosk Courthouse in L.A. on Wednesday after a hearing about the pop star’s conservatorship case.
(Chris Pizzello / Associated Press)
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Britney Spears’ new attorney is getting down to business — the business of having Jamie Spears removed from his position of authority over his pop star daughter.

“My firm and I are moving aggressively and expeditiously to file a petition to remove Jamie Spears unless he resigns first,” Mathew Rosengart said Monday afternoon outside L.A.’s Stanley Mosk Courthouse, as seen in video posted on social media.

Note the slight difference between what he said and what Spears has asked for in recent weeks: The dissolution of her conservatorship entirely, without a review of her mental health.

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Spears has said she’s afraid of her father, who has been paid to handle her money since 2008. Up until 2019, he was also in charge of his daughter’s personal decisions.

‘My so-called support system hurt me deeply,’ Britney Spears wrote on Instagram after criticizing sister Jamie Lynn Spears’ move to perform her songs.

July 19, 2021

Rosengart was approved as Spears’ personal attorney in a hearing Wednesday. He and his firm, Greenberg Traurig LLP, replaced court-appointed attorney Samuel Ingham III and the firm Loeb & Loeb, both of whom had recently tendered their resignations pending assignment of new representation.

Ingham had represented the singer since the start of her conservatorship in 2008; Spears complained June 23 that she never knew she could petition to end the conservatorship at any time.

Last week, the 39-year-old mother of two got more specific about her wishes, saying in court, “I would like to charge my father with conservatorship abuse.”

Addressing the court for the first time in two years, pop star Britney Spears was candid and emotional at her conservatorship hearing Wednesday.

June 23, 2021

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

In turn, Vivian Thoreen, attorney for Jamie Spears, told the court that Britney Spears had many inaccurate beliefs, among them that “her father is responsible for all the bad things that have happened to her.”

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“Whether it’s misinformation, lack of correction, or being wrongly advised, I don’t know,” Thoreen said, noting that since 2019 Jamie had been in charge only of his daughter’s estate, not her person.

Continuing a conservatorship-reform push he began in March, embattled U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) spoke at a #FreeBritney protest in downtown L.A.

July 14, 2021

Monday’s hearing was set, ostensibly, to hash out details about who would or would not pay for a 24/7 security detail for Jodi Montgomery, currently the conservator of Spears’ person. Montgomery said in a July 8 court filing that she had to hire security starting June 30 after receiving an increased number of threats in posts online and directed at her via phone calls, text messages and emails.

Spears’ estate had been paying for Montgomery’s $50,000-a-month security detail on a conditional basis; Jamie Spears’ team was arguing that the estate could not afford to pay security costs for every person involved in the conservatorship who fielded threats.

Britney Spears has been under a conservatorship since 2008. Before her virtual appearance at a court hearing today, here’s a deep dive into her case.

June 23, 2021

Outside court Monday, Rosengart thanked the pop star for her “courage and her strength” and gave a nod to Judge Brenda Penny for her courtesy as he and his firm joined the case.

“I also want to thank Britney Spears’ fans and supporters,” he added. “The outreach and support for my firm, myself, and most importantly, Britney, has truly been overwhelming.”

The next hearing in the case is scheduled for Monday.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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