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##FreeBritney explained: What’s going on with Britney Spears’ conservatorship?

##FreeBritney explained: What’s going on with Britney Spears’ conservatorship?

Is Britney Spears imprisoned?

The 38-year-old pop star’s lawyers, her father and most recently a “care manager,” have had legal and professional control over Britney for the last 12 years as part of a complex conservatorship.

But in recent months, concern over the arrangement has grown among skeptical fans who are calling to #FreeBritney.

The devotees have rallied around petitions and chat rooms after what they perceived to be eyebrow-raising social-media posts from the pop star in quarantine — some linking the troublesome messages to her conservatorship.

“I burnt my gym down,” deadpanned a shaky Britney before showing her followers her at-home workout routine in April. “I had two candles and yeah, one thing led to another.” Fans piped up: “Britney are you okay?? We’re all really worried about you,” wrote one commenter. Another: “This reeks of gaslighting.”

The story of Britney’s mental health is unfortunately nothing new. She’s had a few bouts in rehabs and mental-health facilities, most recently in 2019 for some “me time” according to the singer. But fans fear that her facilities are in tact and that her management and family are keeping her on a tight leash, and with a firm grasp on the purse strings of her nearly $60 million fortune.

Reps for Britney have not responded to The Post’s request for comment on the status of her conservatorship or fans’ theories surrounding it.

Here’s everything we know about the Britney saga.

What’s the latest?

Britney’s mom, Lynne, is making a play to be more involved in the star’s legal affairs going forward since petitioning the court earlier this month. On Aug. 22, the issue will go to court. The case is being heard by Judge Brenda Penny, who has previously ordered an expert investigation into Britney’s competence.

Just one of the online petitions in support of Britney, specifically for her to be able to “hire her own lawyer,” instead of the court-appointed one she has, has 241,515 signatures to date. According to the court, Jodi Montgomery, who Spears has worked with for about a year, can’t block Spears from meeting with her court-appointed attorney but can take out restraining orders on her behalf, hire and fire security guards, and has full access to her medical records.

The “Womanizer” singer’s social feeds are still being updated with selfies, snaps of her beau Sam Asghari, homemade fashion shows, and most recently, a bizarre video of Britney demonstrating how to use a rose-shaped soap.

On July 28, the star posted another Instagram of herself, covered in henna, writing, “I guess I’m demanding attention.” Wrote one #FreeBritney diehard, “You have our attention Britney! We see you! We hear you!”

Meanwhile, dad Jamie Spears requested that Britney be given a “care manager” — Montgomery, a professional fiduciary — in his place to rep her and her estate. Neither Montgomery nor a rep for Jamie have responded to The Post’s request for comment.

How did we get here?

The “Toxic” star dominated the tabloids in the early aughts for her relationship with Justin Timberlake, a 55-hour marriage to Jason Alexander and, of course, her head-shaving breakdown after her marriage to Kevin Federline fell apart.

Spears in 2007
Spears in 2007Bauer Griffin/MEGA

In 2007, she voluntarily checked out of Eric Clapton’s Crossroads rehab center in Antigua and famously shaved her head in a Los Angeles salon. After, she went to a tattoo parlor to get an inking of a woman’s lips on her wrist. The tattoo artist claimed that Britney told her, “I don’t want anyone touching my hair. I’m sick of people touching my hair,” when asked about her new look.

In 2008, Britney was placed on an involuntary psychiatric hold after not sleeping for five days. It was her second stint in a hospital that year, the first came after refusing to return her sons, Sean Preston and Jayden James, then 2 and 1 respectively, to their father, Federline.

In October 2008, Jamie and her then-attorney Andrew Wallet obtained “temporary” control of Britney’s finances and estate after those well-publicized incidents.

But Jamie still has control over his daughter’s medical records and which contracts she signs through the conservatorship.

What is a conservatorship?

According to California law, a conservatorship is when “a judge appoints a responsible person (a conservator) to care for another adult who cannot care for herself or her finances.” The legal guardianship is usually used to protect the very old or those who are mentally or physically disabled to make sure they’re not being taken advantage of.

Eagle-eyed fans on Reddit dredged up paperwork from 2008, filed by Jamie, claiming she had dementia, which would give him even more power over the pop star under California code, including “[the ability] to make most medical decisions without the court’s permission.”

All of the pop princess’ expenses, including trips to Starbucks and iTunes purchases, according to the New York Times, are turned over to the court.

Why does this have fans worried?

Britney Spears on stage during the 2016 Billboard Music Awards.
Britney Spears onstage during the 2016 Billboard Music Awards.WireImage

In December 2008, Britney released the “Circus” album, which debuted at No. 1 in the US and became one of the fastest-selling records of the year. It also kicked off her comeback. More albums, world tours, awards and a stint as a judge on “X Factor” followed. In 2016, she announced her four-year residency at Planet Hollywood Resort & Casino in Las Vegas called “Britney: Piece of Me.”

Fans have since wondered if the comeback was really her decision.

But Britney took to Instagram to squash rumors over her agency in April 2019: “My situation is unique, but I promise I’m doing what’s best at this moment,” she wrote in part under a video in which she assured fans, “All is well. My family has been going through a lot of stress and anxiety lately so I just needed time to deal.”

What is #FreeBritney?

Tess Barker and Barbara Gray, hosts of the “Britney’s Gram” podcast where they dive deep into Britney’s social media, are credited with launching the movement in 2017.

But fans took a renowned interest in Britney’s conservatorship last year, when the star announced an “indefinite hiatus” from her music career and residency. She was checked into a mental-health facility in March to cope with the stress of her father nearly dying of a ruptured colon. In the same month, Wallet resigned as co-conservator, asking the court to quickly approve his resignation, saying “substantial detriment, irreparable harm and immediate danger will result to the conservatee” if the resignation was not approved, due to “ongoing business activities requiring immediate attention.” He hasn’t responded to The Post’s request for comment.

A court hearing in May of last year, where Britney made a rare appearance, led to an investigation of the conservatorship, fanning the flames of #FreeBritney. A subsequent restraining order was placed on Jamie Spears by Federline, barring him from seeing Sean and Jayden after a blowout fight between the boys and their grandfather, in which Jamie allegedly knocked down a door.

The campaign gained even more steam when a former photographer for Britney, Andrew Gallery, read a letter that he claimed was given to him by Britney over a decade ago when the conservatorship was set up. Written in the third person, it claimed she was “controlled.”

Followers use the hashtag #FreeBritney to follow the ongoing case and trade rumors and conspiracies surrounding the star. A few of the unproven theories: that she’s not allowed to drive or use the internet — including Instagram — without permission from her father, that her naturally deep voice has been altered to sound higher and more pop-like to sell more records for her entire career, and that she’s being held against her will in an undisclosed location.

Britney’s song choice, wardrobe and captions are all dissected by the movement for subliminal messaging. Even the emojis she uses in her social-media posts or a subtle marking on her hat are examined with a Talmudic level of scrutiny by the #FreeBritney-ers. They showed up in real life, too, protesting outside West Hollywood City Hall to “free” the celeb during one of her many recent court hearings, which are closed to the public.

Does anyone profit from Britney being under conservatorship?

Britney’s leaked financial docs from 2018 reveal that conservator and legal fees set the star back an eye-watering $1.1 million that year, with $128,000 going to her father as his court-approved fee.

Court documents from November 2018 reveal that then-conservator Wallet was requesting a raise to the tune of $426,000 per year for tending to the crooner.

Wallet had claimed that he deserved the bump for helping clean up Britney’s estate which he says was “total chaos with tremendous liabilities,” and for keeping the star performing by making sure she wasn’t being given drugs during her career comeback.

Her exploding bank account from the years of steady work also prompted Federline to petition to triple his monthly child support from Spears back in 2018.

2001 Britney
2001 BritneyWireImage

Has the Spears family weighed in?

Britney’s siblings have entered the #FreeBritney fray in the past week.

Jamie Lynn Spears, the star’s younger sister vaguely called for the public to “respect the situation with privacy for the person, and the family trying to protect their loved ones.” A fan called out the star in an Instagram post writing, “How about your sister’s OBVIOUS mental illness? Why don’t you speak on that?”

“You have no right to assume anything about my sister, and I have NO right to speak about HER health and personal matters,” Jamie Lynn shot back. “She is a strong, badass, unstoppable woman, and that’s the only thing that is OBVIOUS.” She later wrote “I’d rather take all the hate than speak about someone else’s personal matter, that they want to be kept private.”

Britney’s brother, Bryan, said in a podcast interview the next day, “[Britney’s] always wanted to get out of [the conservatorship],” but defended the arrangement saying, “it’s been a great thing for our family, to this point.”

Not so fast.

On March 4, Jayden, now 13, took to Instagram Live and described his grandfather as a “pretty big d - ck” but heaped praise on his dad, Kevin. “I have the best dad,” he said, adding that he was “like Jesus.”

And, in June 2019, Lynne Spears, Britney’s mother, was clocked “liking” various pro-#FreeBritney posts.

A-listers come to her defense

#FreeBritney isn’t just made up of internet obsessives. Other A-list activists have also taken up the singer’s mantle, including Paris Hilton, Rose McGowan, Miley Cyrus, Mario Lopez, Lindsay Lohan and Courtney Love.

”Stay strong @britneyspears We love you,” wrote “Real Housewife” Leah McSweeney on Instagram adding #freebritney. Nicole “Snooki” Polizzi, from “Jersey Shore,” got in on the action, too.

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