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Britney Spears avoids hit-and-run trial
Linda Deutsch
LOS ANGELES—Hit and run ... then pay as you go. Britney Spears is no
longer facing hit-and-run charges since she paid off the other car’s
driver in the fender-bender, but she still has to deal with one count of
driving without a license, a judge ruled Thursday.
Spears was not required to attend the hearing on the misdemeanour
charges stemming from an Aug. 6 parking lot mishap. Superior Court Judge
Susan Speer dismissed the hit-and-run charge after a lawyer for the pop
star said his client had paid an undisclosed amount to a woman whose car
was hit in a Studio City parking lot.
A charge of driving without a license was not dismissed and a pre-trial
hearing was scheduled for Nov. 26. Speer accepted a not guilty plea
entered on Spears’ behalf by lawyer Michael Flanagan to that charge.
Outside court, Flanagan said Assistant City Attorney Michael Amerian had
offered Spears a plea deal involving the license charge that would have
resulted in her being placed on probation for a year.
Flanagan said he believed a plea was unnecessary because Spears had
rectified the situation by recently getting a California driver’s
license. “She got a license, she has insurance, has always had
insurance,” he said. “The question is: Is probation really necessary?”
Flanagan said Spears previously had a license in Louisiana but did not
have one in California because a camera was not available at the
Department of Motor Vehicles when she went to apply for a license well
before the accident.
Flanagan said he had not spoken to Spears in a few days. He said the
owner of the car that was hit was satisfied with the resolution and did
not want to go forward with the hit-and-run charge. Amerian also told
the judge the owner of the other car was satisfied. “I spoke with the
victim,” he said. “She indicated she had been fully compensated for her
damages and is amenable to the civil compromise.”
In the incident, paparazzi photographed Spears steering her car into
another vehicle as she tried to park in a space in a lot. The video
showed her walking away after assessing the damage to her own car. On
Friday, a hearing is set in Spears’ custody fight with ex-husband Kevin
Federline over their two young sons. Her attorney, Anne Kiley, said
earlier this week that Spears had regained temporary visitation rights
of her sons, Preston, 2, and Jayden James, 1. Superior Court
Commissioner Scott Gordon had told Spears just days earlier that she
could not visit the boys without a parenting coach present until she
complies with a court order.
The mandate did not spell out what directives Spears failed to comply
with. Among other things, Gordon ordered her to undergo random weekly
drug testing, citing evidence that Spears engaged in “habitual, frequent
and continuous use of controlled substances and alcohol”. |