
Pop music icon Britney Spears will serve a much-reduced probation period after her legal team successfully downgraded a recent driving under the influence (DUI) charge, Reuters reports.
In a brief session at Ventura County Superior Court on Monday, lawyers acting for the 44-year-old entered a guilty plea to a lesser count of reckless driving.
Because the charge is classified as a misdemeanour under U.S. law, the singer was not obliged to attend the hearing in person.
The March incident
The legal saga stems from a dramatic traffic stop earlier this spring. In March, California Highway Patrol officers intercepted Spears behind the wheel of a black BMW after receiving tip-offs about a motorist speeding erratically through Ventura County.
Arresting officers reported that the Grammy winner exhibited obvious signs of impairment at the scene. Subsequent court filings revealed she was operating the vehicle under the influence of an unspecified drug mixed with alcohol.
Strict court conditions
By avoiding a full DUI conviction, Britney Spears has sidestepped a mandatory three-year probation term. Instead, she faces a 12-month period of unsupervised probation. The Ventura County District Attorney’s Office noted that offering a reckless driving plea is standard practice for first-time offenders who avoid crashing and show a genuine commitment to rehabilitation.
However, the leniency comes with rigid stipulations laid out by Court Commissioner Matthew Nemerson. To satisfy the terms of her agreement, the entertainer must comply with the following:
- Complete a comprehensive 30-hour alcohol education programme
- Attend weekly individual mental health counselling sessions
- Meet with a psychiatrist twice a month
While Britney Spears retains her right to drive, she is subject to a strict zero-tolerance policy regarding intoxicants. If pulled over by law enforcement, she is legally required to submit to vehicle searches and blood-alcohol testing.
District Attorney Erik Nasarenko issued a stark warning following the hearing, noting that any further offences while on probation could trigger severe consequences. This includes up to a year behind bars and a half-decade of further probation.
A proactive approach to recovery
Britney Spears appears to have taken the incident seriously. In April, her representatives confirmed she had voluntarily admitted herself to a rehabilitation clinic. Recent reports indicate she has now completed the residential portion of her treatment and will continue her therapy remotely from home.
The star’s personal struggles have often eclipsed a monumental showbiz career that began with her 1999 smash hit «…Baby One More Time». In 2021 she was finally freed from a highly controversial 13-year conservatorship, an arrangement her family previously justified by citing her mental health and the need to protect her $60 mln fortune. Fans had long campaigned against the legal bind via the global «Free Britney» movement.
Her driving history has also seen previous legal scrutiny. During a highly publicised personal crisis in 2007, the Mississippi-born singer faced misdemeanour charges for driving without a valid California licence and a hit-and-run incident involving property damage.