Conservatorships are used for people who can’t handle their own affairs — financial or otherwise. They’re used for people with dementia at the end of their lives or for people with long-term cognitive impairment. But in Britney Spears’ case, a conservatorship that was originally put in place as a “temporary” emergency measure in 2008, is now going on its 13th year. Spears wants out. And after searing testimony in court Wednesday, it seems like much of the world has rallied to the star’s side.
After searing testimony in court on Wednesday, it seems like much of the world has rallied to the star’s side.
This surge in support may be rooted in a much deeper frustration — and fear. Indeed, it feels almost impossible to read her statement and not connect it to a larger societal pattern in which concocted mental health claims have been used, including in proceedings that carry the imprimatur of the courts, to sideline inconvenient women.
While under the conservatorship, Spears has worked successfully and earned enormous sums of money, but control of her earnings is in the hands of her father and a co-conservator, Bessemer Trust. They dole out an allowance. Her relationship with her two children is monitored. The conservators must agree to any business deals Spears wants to do and she says she cannot get married without their approval. From this, you might think Spears is closer to the adorable 12-year-old on the Mickey Mouse Club than the 39-year-old mother of two whose work and career are so influential that she has 30.4 million followers on Instagram.
The full details of the situation aren’t public. They’ve been sealed by the court, although apparently not at Spears’ request, as she told the judge she wanted a public forum. Perhaps in those details there is a legal justification for her ongoing conservatorship, but in leaked audio from Wednesday’s hearing, she sounded competent and reasonable as she explained her side of the story. And it was a pretty disturbing story.
The singer told the judge that disagreements over artistic and business decisions led to false claims from those around her that she failed to take medication. She said she was forced to take lithium, a powerful mood stabilizer, which left her incapacitated, feeling drunk. She expressed her belief that her father reveled in the control he had over her, even as she lost all sense of autonomy or privacy. She claims the people controlling her life won’t even let her take out her IUD, despite her desire to have a third child. “It’s demoralizing what I’ve been through,” Spears said, adding she didn’t speak up earlier because she didn’t think anyone would believe her.
Spears was never permitted to pick her own lawyer, which may also explain the reason she didn’t mount an earlier challenge to the conservatorship. Probate law is complicated and it’s easy to see how, without a background in the law, she could have remained unaware she had the right to ask for its termination.
The impossible-to-ignore overtones of this case should concern every woman who has ever refused to go along with someone more powerful.
Spears came off as a regular person as she read her statement to the judge. A megastar, of course — but also a woman who has experienced severe difficulties in the past and wanted to regain control of her own future, just like anyone else would. She even chuckled self-deprecatingly as she noted she still needed “a little therapy.”
No matter what led her father to seek control in the courts 13 years ago, the impossible-to-ignore overtones of this case should concern every woman who has ever refused to go along with someone more powerful.
Spears’ career has left her with an estimated $60 million in assets. She continued to work after the conservatorship was put in place, often in demanding environments that would seem to belie the need for an ongoing conservator. Spears released four albums and did a season as a judge on “X Factor.” From December 2013 to December 2017, her Las Vegas residency grossed $137.6 million on ticket sales of 916,184 over the course of 248 shows.
But, somehow, at least in the eyes of the court, she needed her father, someone who struggled to hold a job during her childhood, to manage the fortune she’d produced. It’s impossible to avoid the question: Would a 39-year-old man in her position be subjected to the same level of control? For instance, no one prevented Michael Jackson — despite the concerns of people around him that his mental condition was deteriorating — from living at Neverland Ranch, where he kept giraffes and a chimp. He was able to raise his children, Prince, Paris and Blanket (who are actually all named Michael).
Examples of inconvenient women unfairly locked away throughout history are easy to find. In 1860, Elizabeth Parsons Ware Packard, a mother of six, was committed to the Illinois state hospital by her pastor husband to protect the children from her “heretical” religious beliefs — she disagreed with his Calvinism. He labeled her failure to agree with him as insanity and got her committed. Packard, a teacher, fought back in court and was ultimately able to win her freedom.








