Singer Chris Brown turned over to federal marshals for D.C. trial
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - R&B singer Chris Brown was taken from his Los Angeles jail cell by the U.S. Marshals Service and will be transported to Washington, D.C. for a hearing in a 2013 misdemeanor assault charge, federal authorities said on Thursday.
Brown, 24, was jailed last month after
violating his probation when he was dismissed from a facility where he was receiving
the court-ordered treatment related to his 2009 assault of his then-girlfriend,
singer Rihanna. He will be taken to Washington, where he is scheduled to stand
trial on April 17, U.S. Marshals Service spokeswoman Lynzey Donahue said.
Brown's lawyer Mark Geragos had asked
the court to have Brown released ahead of the trial into his custody so that
they could prepare for the trial and travel together to Washington.
A court hearing on the matter was set
for Thursday, but Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge James Brandlin
canceled it and issued a written decision instead.
The judge said Brown's attorneys have
been visiting him "on an almost daily basis" at the Men's Central
Jail in Los Angeles to prepare for the D.C. trial, the City News service
reported.
Brandlin issued an eight-page ruling on
the matter, noting that while the transfer may cause "some
inconvenience" to the singer and his legal team, Brown would not be
deprived of his right to counsel if transported by federal authorities.
Brown faces a misdemeanor assault charge
in Washington from an October 2013 incident where he was accused of allegedly
punching a man who was trying to get a picture with him, breaking his nose.
The singer was sentenced by Los Angeles
County Superior Court Judge James Brandlin to 90 days in a treatment program
following his altercation in Washington.
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