Judge tosses out case, but how will it impact Brown's probation status?
A week after Chris Brown threatened to retire from the music business
after expressing his frustrations with his ongoing legal problems, the
singer caught a rare break in the courtroom on Thursday (August 15).
According to TMZ,
a judge dismissed Brown's hit-and-run case after the singer and his
alleged victim reached a compromise on the matter. Though the prosecutor
in the case had argued that Brown deserved to be punished for allegedly
leaving the scene of an accident
because he is still on felony probation from his 2009 assault on former girlfriend Rihanna, the judge disagreed.
The
victim in the case was reportedly not interested in payment from Brown
because the damage to her car was so minor and she'd asked for the
matter to be dismissed. The L.A. City Attorney objected, though, arguing
that Brown was very aggressive to the victim and called her a bitch.
Brown's probation in the Rihanna case was revoked in July in connection with the hit-and-run and the singer spent less than an hour in jail
on the charge last week. He is due in court on Monday for a probation hearing and could face up to four years in jail
if he is found in violation.
Before
Thursday's ruling, veteran Los Angeles-based criminal defense attorney
Mike Cavalluzzi, who has no firsthand knowledge of the case, told MTV
News that Brown's probation would likely be reinstated if the
hit-and-run was dismissed.
"Once that [hit-and-run] case is
dismissed, if it is due to a finding of no wrongdoing, it is also
routine to reinstate the probation on the felony [assault] case," said
Cavalluzzi. However, he added that even if the misdemeanor case is
dismissed but there is proof of some wrongdoing, the judge could still
look at that case and determine for himself if there was some wrongdoing
on Brown's behalf and decide to violate his probation.
"It could
be anything from reinstating probation with no punishment, to extending
his probation, to additional community service, jail time or state
prison time," he said. The likely scenario, though, is that the judge
will reinstate Brown's probation with a violation noted on his official
record.
Brown's lawyer, Mark Geragos, told TMZ, "The case never
should have been filed in the first place. It's unfortunate he was being
prosecuted for who he is rather than what he's done." MTV News could
not reach Geragos for additional comment at press time.
A spokesperson for Brown confirmed that the singer suffered a nonepileptic seizure
while in the recording studio last Friday that was partially a result
of the stresses of his ongoing legal problems. "His doctor tended to him
this afternoon and attributes the NES to intense fatigue and extreme
emotional stress, both due to the continued onslaught of unfounded legal
matters and the nonstop negativity," read the statement.
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