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Britney Spears' father will maintain in control over the singer's $100 million estate, a judge ruled yesterday.
US District Judge Philip Gutierrez rejected a challenge to Jamie Spears' conservatorship filed by Washington attorney Jon Eardley.
Eardley - who claims Britney phoned to ask him for help before she was admitted to hospital last month for psychiatric treatment - requested the conservatorship case be moved from a Californian state court to a federal court, after claiming "Ms. Spears' civil rights are being violated".
However, Judge Gutierrez dismissed the case after deciding Eardley had no link to Toxic star Britney or the case whatsoever.
Eardley vowed today to continue his fight, one day after Judge Gutierrez ruled he is not the singer's lawyer.
"We have only just begun the fight," Eardley said in a statement. "There is nothing that will stop me from dismantling, if necessary, this oppressive and unjust conservatorship."
In his three-page ruling, Judge Gutierrez said: "Mr. Eardley fails to explain why he can bring this claim for her in the first instance. He cannot. Mr. Eardley had no authority to remove the case from state court. He is neither a party nor a defendant.
"While he claims to be Ms. Spears's attorney, the probate court found that she was incapable of retaining her own counsel."
Britney's father Jamie will retain control over the singer's estate and day-to-day affairs, along with co-conservator, attorney Andrew Wallet, until March 10.
Jamie called Eardley's attempt "a brazen, but vain, attempt to strip a probate court of jurisdiction, by an attorney without a client."
Meanwhile, Jamie has allowed Britney to see her paparazzo lover Adnan Ghalib, despite reports the photographer is a bad influence on the mother-of-two.
British-born Adnan was seen entering Britney's Beverly Hills home late on Monday night.
- BANG! SHOWBIZ