Sweat Log: How Chris Brown spent community labor

In this Monday, Sept. 24, 2012 file photo, Chris Brown appears in a Los Angeles courtroom with his attorney Mark Geragos.

Sunday, September 30, 2012

In this Monday, Sept. 24, 2012 file photo, Chris Brown appears in a Los Angeles courtroom with his attorney Mark Geragos. Judge Patricia Schnegg has ordered a further review of Brown's community service and travel to determine whether he has violated the terms of his probation for the 2009 beating of then-girlfriend Rihanna. (AP Photo/David McNew, Pool, File)After Chris Brown pleaded guilty to beating then-girlfriend Rihanna in 2009, a judge ordered the R&B singer to do six-months' worth of what was described as "community labor." The singer was allowed to perform the service in his home state of Virginia under the supervision of Richmond's police chief, who this week submitted documents to a Los Angeles judge indicating that Brown had finished his service.Not so fast, say a judge and prosecutor, who have ordered more documentation be produced to prove that Brown worked the more than 1,400 hours he claims to have performed. A third of the hours were recorded at the Tappahannock daycare center, where Brown spent time as a child and where his mother once served as director.The Associated Press analyzed records filed on Brown's community service, showing how he and Richmond officials say he cleaned up. The following are some of the tasks documented in Brown's service log:— 371 hours logged picking up trash in various locations around Richmond.— 346 hours of "general cleaning," all logged at Tappahannock Children's Center.— 82 hours painting.— 79 hours spent washing police cars and fire trucks.— 77 ½ hours spent stripping and waxing floors, all but 4.5      of which were done at Tappahannock Children's Center.— 56 hours destroying old police files.— 41 ½ hours cleaning and organizing storage rooms,       kitchens and other areas at police and fire stations.— 41 hours tending stalls at the Richmond Police Department stables.— 19 hours doing inventory of smoke detectors and fire extinguishers.   Where Brown's logs say he worked:— 647 hours — Richmond Police Department stations and facilities.— 508 hours — Tappahannock Children's Center.— 97.5 hours — Richmond Fire Department stations      and headquarters.— 16 hours — Richmond Parks and Recreation department.— 133.5 hours — various other sites, including street cleanup and   painting student residences at Virginia Union University.When Brown logged hours:— 2009 (Sept-Dec.) — 116 ½ hours.— 2010 (Jan.-Nov.) — 464 ½ hours.— 2011 (June-Dec.) — 120 hours.— 2012 (Feb.-Aug.) — 701 hours.