(AFP) – A US judge ordered US rapper
Chris Brown on Monday to remain behind bars for allegedly breaching his
probation stemming from his notorious 2009 assault of then-girlfriend Rihanna.
The 24-year-old, arrested Fridayafter being booted out of a rehab facility in Malibu, will have to stay in
custody until a probation violation hearing on April 23.
Judge James Brandlin said he found
it troubling that Brown had told a group therapy session there: “I am good at
using guns and knives,” prompting his ejection from the center for drug and
anger management.
Brown also violated the center’s
internal rules by “touching elbows or standing very close to a female client,”
the singer’s attorney Mark Geragos acknowledged.
Geragos asked for Brown to be
allowed to
begin another rehab program immediately, but prosecutor Mary Murray opposed this, saying the court had given him “repeated opportunities.
begin another rehab program immediately, but prosecutor Mary Murray opposed this, saying the court had given him “repeated opportunities.
“He’s put himself in custody,”
Murray told the Los Angeles Superior Court judge.
Brown was arrested in February 2009
after getting involved in a physical confrontation with Barbadian superstar
Rihanna that left her with a bruised and battered face.
He pleaded guilty to the assault and
was sentenced to five years’ probation and community service, as well as being
required to take part in domestic violence counseling.
California authorities filed
probation violation charges against Brown last year, giving him an additional
1,000 hours of community service work on his sentence for beating the pop star.
In October, Brown checked into the
rehab facility two days after being charged over an altercation in the US
capital Washington, in which he allegedly hit a man trying to take a picture of
him outside a hotel.
In February, judge Brandlin said
Brown was doing well with the court-ordered treatment program, but ordered him
to remain at the rehab facility.
The judge warned him at the time
that any negative change in behavior “could dramatically change your custodial
status.”
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