Britney: 'She wanted to kill me, I suffered'
Britney will sue manager. A Los Angeles judge terminated Britney's custody in November 2021 after she accused her father and managers of abuse during a court hearing that summer.
Britney Spears, 40, has announced a lawsuit against her former business management company, saying she felt so helpless in the hands of the company’s founders that she feared for her life. Spears claims her estranged father, Jamie Spears, 69, adored the ‘Three Star Sports & Entertainment Group’ and its founder Lou Taylor, 56, and her collaborator, Robin Greenhill.
'I'll sue the Three Star!' wrote the pop star in a deleted post on Instagram.
Her father hired ‘Three Star’ as the business manager of Britney’s estate shortly after he put her under conservationism in 2008. The company worked with the singer for more than a decade before resigning in the fall of 2020. Britney stated that her father would do anything they asked of him. She thought they were trying to kill her. She has that opinion even today.
A Los Angeles judge terminated Britney’s custody in November 2021 after she accused her father and managers of abuse during a court hearing that summer.
'No one else would live through what they did to me! I have been through it all and I remember it all!' it was written further in the announcement. Taylor's lawyer said in a press statement that Britney's claims on Instagram were completely false as well as very offensive, harmful, and unacceptable while her father's lawyer did not comment on her accusations.
All eyes have been on ‘Three Star’ since the New York Times published the documentary ‘Controlling Britney Spears’ in September 2021, which claims that Jamie, Taylor, Greenhill and ‘Black Box Security’ President Edan Yemini oversaw her phone and tapped her bedroom and all that while she was under conservation.
Recall, Britney decided to publish her memoirs and reveal hitherto unknown details from her career, her ‘toxic’ life, and family. Several record labels competed for the contract, and the singer reportedly eventually signed a $ 15 million contract with Simon & Schuster. If that’s true, that deal could be one of the greatest of all time, right behind Obama’s. The rights to Barack and Michelle Obama’s books were sold in 2017, and the amount reportedly exceeded $ 60 million, the largest amount ever known for non-fiction books. Bill Clinton has signed a $ 15 million contract for his post-presidential book ‘My Life’ published in 2001.