LOS ANGELES (AP) — A
judge ordered an audit of Chris Brown's community service progress
Tuesday after a prosecutor handling his felony assault case cited a
possible discrepancy in the amount of work he has performed.
Deputy
District Attorney Mary Murray requested the audit because she says the
records are not clear on how many hours Brown performed and where the
work has been done. Brown had been allowed to perform six months' worth
of community labor in his home state of Virginia, but a judge said
probation officials in Los Angeles should review detailed records to
ascertain how much work he has actually done.
Superior Court Judge Patricia Schnegg said Brown had completed a significant number of hours, but did not elaborate.
Brown's
attorney Pat Harris did not object to the audit, and said after the
hearing the issue was related to which jurisdiction his client performed
his community service in.
The judge said part of the issue was
that the court hadn't received detailed logs of Brown's community
service, which is supposed to comprise of graffiti removal, roadside
cleanup and other manual labor. Schnegg said those logs had previously
been provided, but not for recent updates.
Brown, 23, remains on
probation for beating his then-girlfriend Rihanna in February 2009. He
has completed domestic violence and anger management counseling.
Schnegg
ordered Brown to appear at the next hearing, tentatively scheduled for
Aug. 21. It will be the first time Brown has had to appear in court in
several months, and the R&B singer has generally received favorable
reports from probation officials and Schnegg.
There was no mention
of the recent New York City bottle-throwing nightclub brawl that left
Brown with a cut on his chin, or a woman's claim that the singer had
snatched her cellphone in Miami after she tried to take a picture of
him. The melee occurred members of singer Drake's entourage stopped
Brown and his group from leaving the club W.i.P., though neither
entertainer has been arrested. Drake has said he was leaving the club
when the fight began.
Brown's attorney Mark Geragos asked that the
singer's probation be terminated in February. But a judge declined,
stating that the Grammy nominee should complete more of his community
service obligations.
At the time, officials reported that Brown
had completed half of the six months' worth of roadside cleanup,
graffiti removal and other manual labor that he was ordered to do after
pleading guilty.
Brown is serving a five year probation sentence.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.