
Spawning hits such as “Gimme More” & “Piece of Me” to more personal deep cuts such as “Why Should I Be Sad” & gave us the iconic opening line we all quote to this day “It’s Britney Bitch!” He also alleged that at some point in the last few years, Tri Star charged Britney’s estate for an advertisement touting its boss Lou Taylor placed in The Hollywood Reporter.Released October 30th 2007, “Blackout” is regarded as one of the most influential modern pop albums of our generation. Rosengart said the bedroom recording device and phone monitoring alleged in “Controlling Britney Spears” provided enough evidence of fraud or misconduct to warrant the reopening of prior accounting periods. “Notwithstanding Tri Star’s moral - and legal - obligation to provide this simple information, Tri Star’s ongoing failure to answer this question speaks volumes and leads to the unfortunate and inexorable conclusion that Tri Star has much to hide,” he wrote. 2 letter to Greenhill’s lawyer obtained by Rolling Stone, Rosengart claimed Tri Star has spent the last six weeks “stonewalling” his attempts to obtain “basic information” about Tri Star’s dealings with Spears from 2008 through the present. She and her new lawyer, Mathew Rosengart, a former federal prosecutor, have issued a flurry of deposition subpoenas against Jamie and Tri Star in a quest to investigate serious allegations of misconduct raised in Spears’ two harrowing statements to the court over the summer, and by Vlasov and others. Spears, 39, is now fighting to end her 13-year conservatorship at a key hearing set for next Friday. “You know, Britney could not have someone in the privacy of her house without those three people knowing.” Vlasov claimed that at one point, Yemini “had an audio recording device put into Britney’s bedroom.” He said the device captured more than 180 hours of audio in 2016, including interactions between Britney and her then-boyfriend as well as her children. Her intimate relations were closely managed,” Vlasov said. “Even in the sacred place, her home, every single request was monitored and recorded. Greenhill’s declaration, attempting to sidestep deposition and document subpoenas, was given after she was specifically singled out in blockbuster claims made by former Spears security staffer Alex Vlasov in the recent New York Times documentary “Controlling Britney Spears.” According to Vlasov, Greenhill was on a group chat with Vlasov’s boss, Edan Yemini, head of Black Box security, and the singer’s dad, Jamie Spears, that dissected “every step” Britney took during the depths of her court-ordered conservatorship.
