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** FILE ** Singer Britney Spears poses on the press line at the Scandinavian Style Mansion party in Los Angeles in this Dec. 1, 2007 file photo. Kevin Federline has agreed Friday Feb. 22, 2008 to give ex-wife Britney Spears visitation rights with their two young sons. Federline's attorney Mark Vincent Kaplan says the couple has "agreed to a modification of the court's order," that had stripped Spears of her visitation rights.
** FILE ** Singer Britney Spears poses on the press line at the Scandinavian Style Mansion party in Los Angeles in this Dec. 1, 2007 file photo. Kevin Federline has agreed Friday Feb. 22, 2008 to give ex-wife Britney Spears visitation rights with their two young sons. Federline’s attorney Mark Vincent Kaplan says the couple has “agreed to a modification of the court’s order,” that had stripped Spears of her visitation rights.
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LOS ANGELES — Kevin Federline agreed to give ex-wife Britney Spears visitation rights with their two young sons, nearly two months after the pop singer last saw them, his lawyer said Friday.

Federline attorney Mark Vincent Kaplan said in a statement the former couple have agreed to a modification of a court order that had stripped Spears of her visitation rights. The statement did not elaborate.

A call to a Spears’ attorney was not immediately returned.

A court commissioner gave Federline sole physical and legal custody of their two little boys and suspended the pop star’s visitation rights on Jan. 4.

Spears has not been allowed to see sons Jayden James, 1, and Sean Preston, 2, since an incident at her home that led to the first of her two hospitalizations in a psychiatric facility this year.

Before the hospitalizations, Spears had been in a downward spiral of bizarre behavior since divorcing Federline in November 2006. She shaved her head, was seen in public without underwear, ran over a celebrity photographer’s foot and attacked a vehicle with an umbrella, among other strange outbursts.

Spears’ parents came to Los Angeles the second time their daughter was hospitalized. They have pushed to have her visitation rights restored, saying that would help Spears heal.

The 26-year-old pop singer and her estate were placed under a temporary conservatorship after she was taken to UCLA Medical Center on Jan. 31. Conservatorships are granted for people deemed unable to care for themselves or their affairs.

The issue became more complicated when attorney Jon Eardley, who claims to represent Spears, filed papers on Feb. 14 to move her case to federal court. Eardley claimed the terms of the conservatorship violated her civil rights.

U.S. District Court Judge Philip Gutierrez has ordered Eardley to clarify why the case belongs in federal court. It was initially being tried in Superior Court.

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