- Lohan has been warned to enroll in court-ordered psychological counseling
- Her lawyer has said that she has had a problem enrolling in counseling
- In July, a judge told Lohan that she has three weeks to enroll in counseling or face jail
- It is unclear whether Lohan has since met that requirement
Los Angeles (CNN) -- Actress Lindsay Lohan returns to a Los Angeles court Wednesday so a judge can determine whether she has made progress on the requirements of her probation from a shoplifting conviction.
A court hearing in July revealed that Lohan was in compliance with her community service, fines and shoplifting counseling requirements, but she has not signed up for the court-ordered psychological counseling.
Her lawyer argued at the time that a lapse in Lohan's health insurance -- because she's not been working in the past year -- had prevented her from paying for the psychological counseling.
Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Stephanie Sautner warned Lohan that she could face jail time if she did not sign up for the counseling in three weeks.
Group counseling, which probationers attend, is often free or low-cost, but the judge agreed with her lawyer that her celebrity status makes that unworkable.
It is unclear whether Lohan has since met that requirement.
Lohan, 25, pleaded guilty in May to stealing a necklace from a Venice, California jewelry story.
Her legal woes, which began four years ago with two drunken driving arrests, have been compounded by her failure to attend counseling classes, and alcohol and drug tes! t failur es.
Her probation is scheduled to end within a year unless Lohan breaks any laws before then. It has been extended several times because of probation violations, including failed alcohol and drug tests.
Lohan failed an alcohol test administered by a probation officer in June and was ordered to go before the judge for a probation violation hearing. But her attorney convinced the judge the testing requirement had lapsed in February.
Earlier this year, the judge ruled that she is now allowed to drink alcohol and is no longer required to take random drug tests.