Lindsay Lohan received
new rules for completing her remaining community service from a Los Angeles
judge on Wednesday.
The 28-year-old
actress was not present in court but was represented by her longtime defense
attorney Shawn Holley.
Holley told the
court that Santa Monica Chief Deputy City Attorney Terry White approved of
London-based charity Community Service Volunteers monitoring Lohan's hours
after speaking to the group's director, according to an article by TMZ.
Lohan was ordered last month to provide 125 hours of community service after a judge determined she improperly received credit for appearing in a London stage play.
Lohan was ordered last month to provide 125 hours of community service after a judge determined she improperly received credit for appearing in a London stage play.
White during a February hearing said Lohan had received community service credits for time she spent performing Speed-The-Plow at a London theater.
The actress once accrued six hours of community service credit in a single day for her two-hour matinee performance, a two-hour meet-and-greet and a two-hour evening performance.
Lohan has a May 28 deadline to complete her remaining community service requirements.
The community service was one of the last elements of her sentence for a 2012 case involving reckless driving and lying to police after she crashed into a dump truck on Pacific Coast Highway.
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