Michael Jackson spent some $34 million to buy silence from
alleged abuse victims, according to a British paper. Diane Dimond has the
inside story of the shocking report. I have
taken much grief over the years—and received many death threats—from zealous
Michael Jackson fans who have been unhappy with my investigative coverage of
their idol. Since 1993, I have reported on the Jackson saga on television,
radio, and in print. To his fans, the King of Pop was a benevolent and
misunderstood saint of sorts who was persecuted by me and other journalists who
had the audacity to report what trusted sources told us about Jackson’s private
life: the disfiguring cosmetic surgeries, the drug and alcohol abuse, the
constant companionship of young boys, the baffling short-lived marriages.
Jackson fans have
complained especially about my book Be Careful Who You Love: Inside the Michael Jackson Case,
in which I wrote about law enforcement's suspicion that Michael Jackson may
have sexually abused many young boys. I also wrote extensively about how his
money-hungry family kept their suspicions of Jackson’s pedophilia to themselves
for fear it would hurt their economic standing. If Michael’s earning were
interrupted so would have been their allowances from him.
I was
branded as a liar who was out to simply make money by destroying an innocent
man’s reputation. Among the most memorable of the myriad threatening e-mails
I’ve received came from a woman who promised to hunt me down, pin me to the
ground, gouge out my eyes with a spoon, and scrape off my face with steel wool.
Another declared she was a voodoo princess performing chants to make sure I got
breast cancer.
In this business, you have to have a thick skin. I got on with
my crime- and justice-based journalism over the years, but I continue to
periodically get sucked back into the Jackson morass. Case in point: the latest
Jackson story in the British tabloid Sunday People with the screaming headline:
“Michael Jackson paid £23 MILLION buying silence of at least TWO DOZEN young
boys he abused over 15 years.” (That translates to $34 million.) The paper
claims to have “seen secret FBI files”—supposed case numbers CADCE MJ-02463 and
CR 01046—that reportedly reveal how
the superstar bought off parents of his alleged young victims to ensure
silence. The article goes on to report that, “Many of the damning reports in
the FBI collection had been commissioned by Jacko himself.”
Here’s what I know. The FBI files are still secret. The
documents and cassette tapes reviewed by Sunday People were
offered by a private detective who has been knocking around Hollywood with them
for a long time. He remained unnamed in the U.K. paper and will remain so here,
but he’s hardly a shadowy figure. I have known him personally for many
years.
Here’s the backstory: This detective
used to work for Jackson’s high-profile private investigator, Anthony
Pellicano, in the days immediately following the first child sex-abuse
allegations against Jackson in 1993. The pair was tasked with identifying
possible trouble for the accused entertainer, and in doing so this Pellicano
associate called upon a dogged tabloid reporter named Jim Mitteager to see what
information he might have developed. At Mitteager’s home he learned that the National Enquirer reporter had died. His widow
gave the private eye a box full of tapes marked “JACKSON” that her husband had
been working on.
Included among the hours of salacious
interviews was a long discussion with a live-in domestic couple named Stella
and Philip LeMarque which was generously quoted by the Sunday People in
a companion article. The couple told a story of boys being shown pornography
and sexually molested in the Jackson house, the theater area, and in teepees
pitched on the landscaped grounds. Among the alleged victims were five child
actors, two dancers, and at least 10 other young Jackson admirers dating back
to 1989. The children were isolated from their parents, according to the
couple, who were housed a quarter mile away in guest quarters while the young
boys slept with Jackson.
(Much of what the
LeMarques said on the Mitteager tapes—and to me in 1994—was similar to stories
told by other Jackson employees. But the couple’s veracity has been questioned,
because they repeatedly and unsuccessfully tried to sell their version of
events to the media.)
Once in the detective’s possession,
all the Mitteager audio tapes were turned into printed reports for Pellicano
and filed among his vast cabinets full of Hollywood secrets. In 2002, when
Pellicano was arrested on weapons charges, the FBI
scooped up all of the gumshoe’s files. They have remained in FBI storage
and—unbelievably—never offered to prosecutors in Santa Barbara who conducted
the unsuccessful criminal case against Jackson in 2005. Jackson was acquitted
of all molestation charges and denied all the accusations up until his 2009
death.
In a prison
interview with The Daily Beast in 2011, Pellicano—who
called himself the “Sin Eater” —revealed why he hadn’t worked for Jackson for
very long. “I quit because I found out some truths … He did something far worse
to young boys than molest them.” Pellicano, the father of nine children,
refused to elaborate. The latest reports
from the British paper put actual numbers to old Jackson molestation stories—24
boys and $34 million in payoffs—but offer no confirmation of the private
detective’s information. Does it mean the stories are untrue? No, but it does
nothing to corroborate them either.
The unnamed private eye who provided
the newspaper with his copies of the old files said he came forward after
listening to Wade Robson, a one-time Jackson loyalist who now
claims he was molested by the singer for seven years. Despite being the
lead defense witness at Jackson’s 2005 child-abuse trial, Robson, now 30, has
changed his story and says the sexual abuse began when he was 7 years old. In
May, Robson filed legal papers and told the Today Show earlier
this year he could no longer stay silent about the horrible secret Jackson had
“brainwashed” him to keep.
These disclosures come as Jackson’s
mother and children pursue a sensational high-stakes wrongful death suit
against AEG, the last concert promoter to work with the entertainer. The family
maintains AEG ignored Michael’s serious health issues and literally worked him
to death. AEG insists that it was Dr. Conrad Murray, hired on by Jackson
himself, who was in charge of the singer’s health. The corporation says it had
no idea of the nightly Propofol drip the now-convicted doctor was administering
to Jackson or how sick their star really was.
The timing of the Sunday People and Robson exposés has caused some
to believe AEG is behind the leak of this legacy-damaging information. (AEG has
refused to comment on the speculation, and the Jackson family has similarly had
no comment.) On social media and on Jackson-related websites, the King of
Pop’s supporters see a conspiracy to taint the Los Angeles trial and negate the
positive PR and financial bump the Jackson family enjoyed after Michael’s death
in June 2009. Thanks to astute estate management, the hundreds of millions of
dollars of debt Jackson left behind has now been erased, replaced by a solid
portfolio worth, by some accounts, nearly a billion dollars.
It is important to
note, however, that the jury in the Jackson vs. AEG trial is admonished daily
not to watch, read, or listen to any media, so there is a viable chance that
they have heard nothing about the latest allegations. Any effort at a
conspiracy could easily have failed. The numerous ugly
revelations in court about AEG’s behavior toward Jackson as well as the
singer’s lifestyle and the state of his body at death has left many court watchers
wondering why Katherine Jackson, 83, would have brought this case in the first
place. Surely, she must have known that derogatory information about Michael
would surface and some family members have been quoted as saying the stress and anxiety
of possibly testifying contributed to 15-year-old Paris Jackson’s suicide
attempt last month. While the Jackson suit seeks unspecified billions in
damages there is obviously a more than adequate estate already in place to care
for Jackson’s three children. My best guess after following this family for
20 years? Since Katherine Jackson’s substantial allowance reverts back to the
children when she dies, she is trying to amass funds of her own to leave to her
chronically underemployed sons - From the Daily Beast.
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