If Britney Spears’ mental health or marriage deteriorates, she will not be placed back into conservatorship automatically.

For Britney Spears to go back into conservatorship, “extraordinary circumstances” would have to exist

A TV judge and law school graduate has said that despite concerns about Britney Spears, the singer would not be returning to her conservatorship.

Cristina Perez, a TV judge and law school graduate, has said that it would take “extraordinary” circumstances for a Los Angeles court to give the celebrity back to her parents, husband, or friend.

There have been numerous reports of the Toxic artist’s questionable behavior and way of living in the past few months.

Perez addressed fans’ anxieties that Britney’s mental health issues and rumored marital problems with husband Sam Asghari could force her to lose control of her life again.

She claimed that authorities and a judge in Los Angeles would have to show “actual evidence” that she was unable to care for herself or posed a danger to herself or others before they could take away her independence.

However, Perez, who has presided over cases on La Corte del Pueblo and La Corte de Familia, concedes that the allegations will not prevent Britney from continuing to make her own decisions in life.

At the LA Center for Law and Justice’s Survivors Gala, Perez remarked, “If it’s something that the parents are going to try to accomplish.

“I think it’ll be very hard to put her back in that situation because she’s been let out of it; unless some extraordinary circumstance happens where she becomes incapacitated in some way, not physically, but there’s enough proof that she’s not making the right decisions for herself.

“But until we see evidence of that, I think it’s really hard to gauge where it’s going to go. We need signs that something is wrong.“

“Well then yes, then we have to protect her. And the law would protect that.

(Source: Instagram/Britney Spears)

There were rumors that Britney was “struggling with her mental health and substance abuse” back in February.

Perez maintains that it would take more than speculation to prove the singer poses a threat to herself or others.

She continued, “I think people around her are going to have to ask, is she crying out for help?”

“Is she putting herself or family in danger? Those are the things. Is she not making the right decisions?

“There’s so much that you have to really look into it because we’re taking control away from her. So you don’t want that to happen to you.”

Therefore, there must be substantial, convincing evidence, not just words but people.

“You’re not going to take somebody’s ability to make decisions for themselves unless there’s actual evidence that they can’t do that anyway.”

According to Perez, the “objective” Superior Court judge Brenda Penny made the proper call 18 months ago when she decided to end the conservatorship.

Jamie and Lynne are parents, but it’s difficult for them to regain that status.