Skip navigation

Judge extends restraining order vs. Lutfi

Ruling comes same day Spears' friend finally served with protective order

Image: Sam Lutfi
Sam Lutfi was reportedly lying low to avoid the restraining order from the Spears clan, but he was finally served on Thursday.
AP
  Celebrity video
Jon Bon Jovi: I believe in the power of 'we'
  Nov. 9: Pop star Bon Jovi, featured in Monday’s Making a Difference segment on Nightly News, emphasizes his conviction in empowering people to work together to alleviate social ills.

Slideshow
Image: Elizabeth Hurley
  Best and worst celebrity fashions of 2009
From glamorous gowns to stylish suits to complete fashion failures, a look at the year so far.

more photos

updated 6:48 p.m. ET Feb. 26, 2008

LOS ANGELES - A federal judge on Thursday ordered Britney Spears’ pal Sam Lutfi to stay away from the struggling pop star.

U.S. District Court Judge Philip Gutierrez extended a restraining order against Lutfi until March 17, when a hearing was scheduled on the matter.

The action came on the same day Lutfi was formally served with the restraining order, which was issued earlier this month by a Superior Court commissioner.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

In court papers, Jeffrey Wexler, an attorney for her father, James Spears, wrote that “after three weeks of apparently evading service,” Lutfi was served at 11 a.m. outside his Los Angeles apartment.

The order, which requires Lutfi to stay 250 yards away from Spears and her home, was set to expire Friday. Wexler had asked for the order to be extended.

On Feb. 7, Spears’ mother, Lynne, requested the temporary restraining order against the troubled singer’s frequent companion and sometime manager. She claimed Lutfi had held Spears hostage in her own home, drugged her and took over her finances.

Slideshow
Image: Ginnifer Goodwin
  Celebrity sightings
Ginnifer Goodwin gets serious at the “Single Man” screening, Beyonce wows Berlin at MTV awards, Claire Danes is a BAFTA beauty and more.

more photos

Attorneys for James Spears, who was named co-conservator of his daughter’s estate, told a Superior Court commissioner that investigators spent more than 200 hours trying to locate Lutfi and serve him the restraining order.

Spears and her estate, estimated to be worth $100 million, were placed under a temporary conservatorship after she was taken to UCLA Medical Center on Jan. 31. Conservatorships are granted for people deemed unable to care for themselves or their affairs.

Gutierrez’s action was somewhat unusual because the case was being tried in Superior Court. However, a lawyer claiming to represent Spears filed papers on Feb. 14 to move it to federal court, claiming the terms of the conservatorship violate her civil rights.

On Wednesday, Gutierrez ordered attorney Jon Eardley to clarify by Feb. 29 why the pop star’s conservatorship belongs in federal court.

Loyola Law School professor Laurie Levenson said Gutierrez’s decision to extend the restraining order appeared to be an attempt to “maintain the status quo” in the case until the jurisdictional issue is sorted out.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

  MORE FROM BRITNEY SPEARS NEWS  
  
Paparazzi catch Britney rear-ending an SUV
 
Add Britney Spears news headlines to your news reader:
 

Sponsored links

Resource guide