Called an “emergency protective order,” it is enforced for five business days.
Officers did it to “stabilize the situation,” confirmed K-Fed’s lawyer, Mark Vincent Kaplan.
It remains unclear whether Federline will seek to extend the restraining order, but for the safety and well-being of those children, he should.
Says Kaplan, “Kevin doesn’t want to keep his kids from being involved in [Spears's] life. But foremost is that the kids be in an environment of structure [and] stability. The next goal is to get things to a point where both parents are able to participate fully in their [children's] lives.”
For the time being, Spears can’t get within 100 feet of Federline. If she does, then she faces arrest.
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