Britney Spears shares texts she sent mom from a mental health facility in 2019

Britney Spears has posted, and quickly deleted, screenshots of text messages she sent to her mother, friend and former lawyer after she was allegedly forced into a mental health facility in 2019.

“It’s a little different with the test,” Spears, 40, wrote on Instagram early Monday, reports the New York Post.

In the first screenshot, the toxic The singer wrote to her mother, Lynne Spears: “She was saying she wants to go up the seracile [sic] and i’m like whoaaaaaaa horsey go f**k yourslwf [sic].

“Seraquil I thought was a sleep aid, but it’s for bipolar and it’s WAAAAAY stronger than lithium.”

It’s unclear whether Britney was referring to a doctor or her father, Jamie Spears, who controlled her medical care as a conservator.

Seroquel, also known as quetiapine, is an antipsychotic medication that treats mood disorders, such as schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, according to WebMD.

“I literally feel everything [sic] medicine sick to my stomach,” Britney continued in her text message to her mother. “I feel like she’s trying to kill me. I swear to God I do.”

The Grammy winner claimed in her Instagram caption that she didn’t hear back from Lynne, 67, at the time, but did hear from her mother when she left the facility.

“His words were, ‘You should have let me visit and give you a hug,'” Britney wrote.

In the second screenshot, Britney asked her childhood friend Jansen Fitzgerald to help her find a new tip.

When Britney’s conservatorship began in 2008, a Los Angeles judge appointed an attorney to represent her. He didn’t win the right to hire his own attorney until 2021.

“I need John Bells [sic] number please,” Britney texted Fitzgerald in 2019. “When you can.”

She then asked her friend about lithium, the mood-stabilizing drug Britney claimed in 2021 made her feel “drunk” after her team allegedly switched her medication without telling her.

“I feel like you’re going to say I’m going to be fine, but it still doesn’t make sense,” Britney texted Fitzgerald, claiming in her Instagram caption that she “never heard from her.”

However, Fitzgerald insisted on his Instagram stories on Monday afternoon that he “responded”. He speculated that “some of [her] messages were deleted” from Britney’s phone, which Jamie, 70, allegedly monitored during conservatorship.

“When he left the facility, my phone number was blocked and we never spoke again,” Fitzgerald added. “I’ve tried to get there through every possible avenue and I’ve always failed.”

Lynne reposted Fitzgerald’s response on her Instagram, writing that she also has “all the entire conversations.”

In the final screenshot of her 2019 text messages, Britney informed her court-appointed attorney, Samuel D. Ingham III, that she wanted to make some changes in her life after being released from the facility.

“I want to talk about going to court when this is over and getting my medical rights,” she wrote, adding that she wanted her conservatorship to end.

“When this show is over, I don’t want to work at all … I want to live for myself and have an adventurous life,” Britney told Ingham, who is stepping down in 2021, paving the way for the former federal prosecutor Mathew Rosengart joins. the case.

Britney concluded her Instagram caption by sharing a text her sister, Jamie Lynn Spears, allegedly sent her at the same time, though she didn’t include a screenshot.

“‘They won’t let you go so why fight,'” Jamie Lynn, 31, allegedly wrote.

Britney claimed in her first public court appearance last summer that her father, Jamie, sent her to a mental health facility against her will after a disagreement over their residency “Domination,” cancel since then.

“My father and anyone involved in this guardianship, and my management, who played a major role in punishing me when I said no, ma’am, they should be in jail,” he told the judge in that moment

Jamie, who has denied any wrongdoing, was suspended as Britney’s conservator last September, and the legal settlement ended in full that November.

Lynne previously partially credited the end of the guardianship, arguing in court documents obtained by Page Six that “the status quo would have continued” if not for his “tireless defense” of his daughter.

Page Six Lynne’s attorney, Jamie Lynn’s rep and Fitzgerald have been contacted for comment.

This article originally appeared in the New York Post and is reproduced with permission

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