Thursday, 21 November 2013

CHRIS BROWN KICKED OUTTA REHAB AFTER ATTACKING MOTHER

Chris Brown got kicked out of anger management rehab after he threw a rock through his mom’s car window, a letter from the treatment center revealed. - The short-fused singer lost his temper Nov. 10 during a family therapy session in which his mother disagreed with his plans to shorten his stay due to limited phone access. “Mr. Brown proceeded to walk outside and pick up a rock and threw it through his mother’s car window and shattered it,” the letter said.“We discharged him from residential treatment and told him he could leave immediately as he had signed a non-violent contract when he enrolled,” the letter stated. Brown was in a Los Angeles courtroom Wednesday and listened quietly as the judge overseeing his Rihanna assault probation ordered him to get more help. Judge James Brandlin ordered Brown to complete another 90 days of residential rehab and submit to periodic drug testing. The judge said Brown must stay in Los Angeles County during the treatment and continue to chip away at his pending community labor sentence at a pace of 24 hours per week. The “Run It!” singer also was ordered to take any medications prescribed by his doctors and return to court Dec. 16. Prosecutors did not seek immediate jail time, rather they asked for a supplemental report on Brown’s recent assault arrest in Washington D.C. The judge granted the request. The Grammy winner checked into rehab voluntarily on Oct. 29 after cops arrested him on suspicion of breaking a man’s nose outside a hotel just blocks from the White House. His lawyer said the treatment was for anger management. The letter from the treatment center said Brown had “dual diagnosis” issues but did not elaborate. The Los Angeles County Probation Department recommended the 90 days of additional rehab saying Brown had some success during his initial 13 days of treatment. In a probation report, Brown’s officer stated that the R&B star had issues with Attention Deficit Disorder and “underwent a period of depression” when he was given an additional 1,000 hours of community labor in August following claims he mis-reported hours completed in his home state of Virginia.The probation report said Brown started his new community labor shortly after his rehab release and recommended further treatment – not jail. “We ask that the court adopt the (Probation Department) recommendations,” Brown’s lawyer Mark Geragos said in court Wednesday. The Deputy District Attorney said her side was reserving its right to seek a probation violation after seeing the supplemental D.C. report. Brown and his bodyguard were arrested on suspicion of felony assault in the nation’s capital late last month. Prosecutors dropped the charge down to a misdemeanor at his arraignment. The “Kiss Kiss” singer pleaded not guilty and faces up to 180 days in jail if convicted. If his Los Angeles judge finds his recent actions violated his Rihanna probation, Brown could get new time behind bars. Brown’s latest troubles are part of a long string of allegations. He allegedly destroyed property during a backstage brouhaha on the set of ABC’s “Good Morning America” in 2011 and was implicated in the bottle-throwing nightclub brawl with rapper Drake last year in Manhattan. Last January, Brown clashed with singer Frank Ocean at a recording studio in West Hollywood, and Ocean later complained of an injury on Twitter. After his D.C. arrest, Brown returned to California, met with his probation officer and made a beeline for rehab. Geragos said the treatment was Brown’s idea. He wanted “do a little introspection and understand everything that’s going on around (him),” Geragos said. “It was his decision, and he should be applauded.” Geragos said the self-imposed stint was far from “an admission” of any wrongdoing in the D.C. case. “Why now? People have realizations at various times. Maybe sitting in a jail cell for 36 hours for something you didn’t do is enough to rock you a bit,” the prominent lawyer claimed. The letter from Brown’s rehab center said the singer’s prognosis depended on his willingness to follow doctors’ orders. “Our hope is that Mr. Brown will re-engage in treatment and get the help he requires for his dual diagnosis issues and become a positive role model in society that we absolutely believe he has the ability to become,” the letter reads. SMDH! What do you think?

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