Chris Brown’s Probation Revoked

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Man, who can keep up with this kid’s court schedule? I didn’t realize Chris Breezy was due back in court.

Well, the bad news is that a judge revoked his probation yesterday. The good news for him since apparently he can do no wrong in the court system is that he wasn’t sent directly to jail. The judge cites his progress in anger management rehab as part of the rationale.

“I’m pleased that he’s doing well in the program,” Judge James Brandlin said in Los Angeles County Superior Court.

The judge yanked the probation after reviewing a report on Brown’s Oct. 27 arrest for allegedly punching a man in the face outside a hotel near the White House.

The judge said declarations in the Washington D.C. police report led him to believe Brown violated his probation, but he wasn’t “inclined” to toss the short-fused singer in jail during the 90 days of residential treatment ordered at his last court hearing.

Chris was donned in glasses, a tweed jacket over a double-breasted vest, jeans and newly bleached hair as he smiled. (Sidebar: Why the glasses? Are they prescription or do people believe they make you look smart and approachable?)

The judge went on to order him to continue taking the psychotropic drugs prescribed by his rehab doctors and refrain from using the medical marijuana that led to a dirty drug test in Virgina.

His latest probation report states he has passed a series of recent drug tests and already has completed 60 hours of community labor.

He was give an additional 1,000 hours of community labor in August following claims he misreported hours completed in his home state of Virginia.

A progress report from his rehab attached to the probation report released Monday states Chris has shown marked progress since re-enrolling after the violent episode involving the shattered car window. A probation report from his November hearing stated he was kicked out of a voluntary rehab stay last month because he lost his cool and threw a rock through his mom’s car window.

“He has relinquished access to his cell phone and been ‘very committed’ to his 24 hours of weekly community service. This young man has made significant strides and appears to be a customer for change,” the redacted rehab report states.

The judge ordered Chris back to court Feb. 10 and gave him permission to travel to the capital for a hearing in his misdemeanor assault case on Jan. 8.

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