Chris Brown: Los Angeles District Attorney Moves to Modify Singer's Probation, Alleges Discrepancies About Community Service

Prosecutors say there are "significant discrepancies" in the reports submitted by Richmond, Va., police

By Alyssa Toomey Feb 05, 2013 8:22 PMTags
Chris Brown David McNew/Getty Images

More trouble for Chris Brown.

The Los Angeles District Attorney is moving to modify the singer's probation, alleging the star failed to provide "credible, competent or verifiable evidence" that he completed his court ordered community service.

Brown was ordered to complete 180 days of community labor after his 2009 brutal attack on Rihanna as part of his five-year probation sentence for assault. 

The "Look at Me Now" singer previously had permission from the court to complete the service hours in his home state of Virginia, but now, the Los Angeles Deputy District Attorney is asking the court to order Chris to fulfill his obligation in Los Angeles County.

Deputy District Attorney Mary Murrary filed a 19-page motion today, claiming there are "significant discrepancies" in the reports submitted by Richmond, Va., police as proof that Breezy performed six-months of community labor. She says the records in question are "at best sloppy documentation and at worst fraudulent reporting."

In September, Brown tested positive for marijuana and although his probation was not revoked, the D.A. asked the singer to somehow verify his community service hours after he told the court he completed most of the work alone and "didn't sign in." 

The R&B star has also been making headlines as of late for his alleged brawl with Frank Ocean, and although their supposed altercation was mentioned in the motion, it is not connected to Brown's alleged probation violation.

Brown currently remains on probation for hitting on-again girlfriend Rihanna in 2009.