Prosecution portrays Jackson as molester (Agencies) Updated: 2005-03-01 08:52
SANTA MARIA, Calif. - Jurors were given opposing images of Michael
Jackson as the pop star's trial opened Monday — the prosecution portraying
him as a perverted child molester and the defense saying he was the victim of a
con artist who used her cancer-stricken son to prey on celebrities for money.
District Attorney Thomas Sneddon outlined a complicated and sometimes bizarre
story alleging that Jackson showed the boy sexually explicit material and groped
him as his associates threatened to kill the boy's mother if he told anyone.
![Followed by one of his defense attorney, Brian Oxman, left, Michael Jackson appears at the Santa Barbara County Superior Court after the first day of his child molestation trial Monday, Feb. 28, 2005, in Santa Maria, Calif. The prosecution and defense teams presented their opening statements to the judge and jury on the first day of the trial. [AP]](xin_140302010856640189492.jpg) Followed by one of
his defense attorney, Brian Oxman, left, Michael Jackson leaves the
Santa Barbara County Superior Court after the first day of his child
molestation trial Monday, Feb. 28, 2005, in Santa Maria, Calif. The
prosecution and defense teams presented their opening statements to the
judge and jury on the first day of the trial. [AP]
| Sneddon said the boy, now 15, will describe to the
jury his sexual experiences with Jackson and show that the musician's Neverland
Ranch was a devilish lair.
"The private world of Michael Jackson will show that instead of reading them
Peter Pan, he's showing them sexually explicit magazines. ... Instead of cookies
and milk, you can substitute wine, vodka and bourbon," he said.
Jackson, 46, sat still as a statue with one hand pressed against his cheek as
Sneddon outlined the accusations. In the front row of the courtroom, Jackson's
mother, Katharine, sat beside her son Jermaine. They were the only Jackson
family members present.
Jackson is charged with molesting the then-13-year-old cancer patient at
Neverland in 2003, plying him with alcohol and conspiring to hold him and his
family captive.
After the nearly three-hour opening by the prosecutor, defense attorney
Thomas Mesereau. Jr. went on the attack, saying the mother of the accuser
fraudulently claimed to many people that she was destitute and that her son
needed money for chemotherapy. In truth, he said, the boy's father was a member
of a union that covered his medical bills.
Mesereau said the mother went to comedian Jay Leno for money and Leno was so
suspicious that he called Santa Barbara police to tell them he had been
contacted and "something was wrong. They were looking for a mark."
The mother also approached comedian George Lopez and a Los Angeles TV
weatherman who staged a fund-raiser for the child at a comedy club, the defense
attorney said.
"At the fund-raiser, there was (the boy) in the lobby of the Laugh Factory
with his hand out, prodded by (his mother)," Mesereau said.
He said celebrities including Mike Tyson and Jim Carrey turned the
family away, but Jackson was too sympathetic.
"The most vulnerable celebrity became the mark, Michael Jackson," Mesereau
said.
But the prosecutor said Jackson had intended to use the boy as part of a
comeback attempt by discussing in a television documentary how the singer helped
him through his cancer.
Before the interview with documentary maker Martin Bashir in 2002, Jackson
privately told the boy what to say when he was in front of the camera, Sneddon
said.
When the February 2003 TV documentary "Living With Michael Jackson," aired,
showing the pop star holding hands with the boy and saying he allows children to
sleep in his bed, "Jackson's world was rocked," Sneddon said.
He said one of co-conspirators described the airing as "a train wreck" and
Jackson's associates began a bid to get the family's help in a public relations
campaign to rebut it.
The molestation began a short time later, Sneddon said.
Sneddon said Jackson told the boy that masturbation was normal, then reached
into the boy's underpants and masturbated the boy and himself. The second event
occurred the same way, Sneddon said, but Jackson tried to move the boy's arm
toward his own genitals and the boy resisted.
The prosecutor alleged that when the boy and his family first visited
Neverland, Jackson told the boy to ask his mother if he could sleep in Jackson's
bedroom. He said Jackson then showed sexually explicit Web sites to the boy and
his own son, Prince Michael, on that visit.
When an image of a woman with bare breasts came on the screen, Sneddon said,
Jackson turned to the group and said: "Got milk?"
Searches of Neverland turned up sexually explicit DVDs and magazines,
including 1960s-era periodicals with pictures of naked children, and
correspondence from the accuser addressed to "Michael" or "Michael Daddy,"
Sneddon said.
Some magazines had the fingerprints of Jackson, others had the prints of the
boy and his brother, and one had prints from both Jackson and the accuser, he
said.
Before opening statements, Judge Rodney S. Melville read the indictment,
revealing for the first time the names of five Jackson employees and associates
described as unindicted co-conspirators.
The indictment alleged a series of bizarre activities following the 2003
documentary, including a panicky effort by Jackson employees to get the family
of his accuser ready for a trip to Brazil. The indictment also outlined the
alleged death threat and said that Jackson's staff in February 2003 was
instructed in writing not to let the boy leave Neverland.
Jackson's attorney, meanwhile, suggested a history of fraud by the mother
against others including J.C. Penney, which paid her $152,000 to settle claims
stemming from an encounter with security guards when her son left a store with
items that had not been paid for. The mother claimed they were battered, held
against their will and that she was groped.
Mesereau said an employee of a law firm that represented the mother in the
J.C. Penney suit has come forward and will testify that the mother admitted
lying. The employee didn't come forward before because the mother said her
husband had a cousin in the Mexican mafia and she feared for her life, Mesereau
told the jury.
Jackson was depicted by his attorney as a humanitarian who built his
Neverland ranch to give children something he never had — a childhood.
He said that an appeal for help by the accuser's family touched Jackson's
heart and "he took time away from his career to help this family, not knowing
that the trap was being set."
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