LOS ANGELES
Britney Spears will have expanded visits with her sons following a
child-custody hearing that went off without a hitch Tuesday, capping a
three-month period of relative calm and stability for the troubled pop star and
mother of two.
The longer visits are "recognition of the progress that has been made, a
progress in structure and stability," said Mark Vincent Kaplan, lawyer for
Spears' ex-husband Kevin Federline. At a post-hearing press conference, Kaplan
said Federline retains custody of 2-year-old Sean Preston and 1-year-old Jayden
James, but that Spears would be allowed to see them for longer periods.
Surrounded by lawyers and her parents, Spears smiled slightly, looked
straight ahead and did not respond to questions as she left the hearing, which
was closed to reporters. Federline left a few minutes later, smiled at everyone,
but also did not comment.
"We are so pleased with Britney's progress and we are very appreciative of
the court's recognition of this progress," Spears' parents, Jamie and Lynne
Spears, said in a statement read by court spokesman Allan Parachini.
Federline spokesman Elliot Mintz said his client is "extremely pleased with
the way things went today."
Kaplan said one of the major changes is that "there are not daily events" to
undermine the situation, and that he expected to see further progress from
Spears. He said "the children are doing great," adding that Federline hopes they
will one day have a more constant relationship with their mother.
"Consistently, we've said that Kevin's goal and hope is that his children
will have the benefit sometime in the future of having two parents actively
participating in their lives," he said.
A hearing was set for July 15 to get a progress report on the new
arrangement.
It was clear from the beginning that Tuesday's hearing would be different
from past courthouse spectacles, which included screaming fans with banners,
frenzied paparazzi and Spears dressed in cocktail-party attire. The collection
of photographers, reporters, sheriff's deputies and prospective jurors who
witnessed Spears' arrival in the front of a white Land Rover didn't compare to
the circus at a January hearing, when she showed up in a black minidress and
gold platform shoes, then bolted before entering the courtroom.
On Tuesday, a somber Spears entered court wearing a brown polka-dot dress and
white sweater. Federline arrived about 15 minutes later in a beige pinstriped
suit. Moments after Superior Court Commissioner Scott Gordon swore them in,
Spears attorney Stacy Phillips asked that the hearing be closed, and Gordon
ordered reporters out.
It's been three months since Spears left a psychiatric ward a week ahead of
schedule and stirred up a paparazzi car chase, a scene that looked like the
beginning of even more erratic behavior. But in the weeks that followed, she lay
low and largely avoided the cameras, spent time with family members and even
found success in a cameo appearance on CBS' "How I Met Your Mother."
During that time, the 26-year-old pop star has been under the conservatorship
of her father. The court-ordered arrangement put James Spears in control of his
daughter's personal and financial affairs.
Federline has had full custody of his two sons by Spears since January, when
police were called to Spears' home and taken by ambulance to UCLA Medical Center
after she refused to relinquish one of the boys to a Federline bodyguard. Her
visitation rights were suspended at the time, but have been gradually restored
in recent months.
Spears was a constant media presence before the conservatorship took effect.
Photographers captured her every visit to Starbucks and gas stations around Los
Angeles, and documented a bout of bizarre behavior that included appearing in
public without underwear, shaving her own head and beating a car with an
umbrella.
Since James Spears took over her affairs, the pop star has been relatively
invisible to photographers, only occasionally snapped shopping or having dinner
with her mother, Lynne. A traffic accident last month turned out to be a minor
bump in which no one was injured, and for which no one was cited.
Spears' public face has been limited to the "How I Met Your Mother" cameo,
which was received well enough that she reprised it during a taping last week.
The episode is set to air May 12.
"We're thrilled to have Britney joining us once again," series executive
producer and co-creator Craig Thomas said in a statement last month. The show's
audience increased by a million viewers the week Spears appeared.
The pop star also made news last month when she took on full-time exercise
and nutrition coaches from Bally Total Fitness. Once known for her flawless
figure, Spears was widely ridiculed for her flabby form in September during a
universally panned performance on the MTV Video Music Awards that was meant to
herald her comeback.
AP writer Sandy Cohen contributed to this story.
Copyright 2008 Associated Press