! ! ! THE END ! ! !

C'est la fin de ce Skky' comme pour mes autres Skyblog de la famille Jackson. Mon intérêts pour les skyblog n'est plus le même, le temps me manquent mais je vous rassure, ma passion pour Michael Jackson, les 3T et toute la famille JACKSON reste intacte et ça ne changera jamais. Qui c'est ... peut être que je reprendrai mes skyblog un jour, de toutes manières je laisse tout en ligne et je viendrai régulièrement voir les nouveaux commentaires et demandes d'amis...

Mille merci à tout les visiteurs, merci pour tout les Comm'S =)

Jackson en fooorce - Keep The Faith

Jenny Jackson

! ! ! THE END ! ! !
! ! ! THE END ! ! !

# Posté le mardi 01 juillet 2008 04:47

Modifié le vendredi 09 octobre 2009 16:51

* * * T H E V E R D I C T * * *

*  *  *   T H E   V E R D I C T   *  *  *
Time and again, Michael Jackson said he would never hurt a child. On Monday, a jury of his peers did not disagree.

Jackson, the former child prodigy who once was the world's biggest-selling music force and the lifelong curiosity piece who remains the world's most famous pop oddity, was acquitted in a Santa Maria, California, courtroom of charges of molesting a teenage boy and essentially of groping a series of young males in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

A sweeping victory for the defense, Jackson was cleared of every single charge facing him: one count of conspiracy; four counts of committing and attempting to commit a lewd act on a child, then 13; and four counts of plying the alleged victim with wine and alcohol.

"Justice is done. The man's innocent. He always was," said defense attorney Thomas Mesereau Jr. in a statement.

Jackson had faced up to 20 years in prison if convicted of the molestation. The increasingly frail-looking star, who was in and out of the hospital during the more than four-month-long trial, cried and hugged his lawyers after the verdicts were read, reports said. Even some jurors wiped back tears.

Later, Jackson, dressed in a dark suit and tie, looked as numb as a vindicated man as he had looked as an under-the-gun defendant. He left the courthouse at about 2:30 p.m., getting into his black SUV without stopping to make a statement, mustering just enough energy to blow a few stiff kisses at overjoyed fans. It was a far cry from the defiant party atmosphere Jackson encouraged at his initial January 2004 arraignment.

The 12-member jury, eight women and four men, one of whom visited Jackson's Neverland Ranch as a child, spent some 33 hours deliberating the case over seven days. The panel reached a decision at about 12:30 p.m.

In the end, the jurors told reporters in a post-verdict press conference that they just didn't buy the accusations, they just didn't buy the accusers, and they just didn't like the accuser's mother.

"What mother in her right mind would volunteer her child to sleep with someone?" said a woman identified as Juror No. 10. The juror declined to say if she thought the mother was more to be blamed for her son's sleeping arrangements than Jackson.

But it wasn't just the mother's behavior that rankled jurors, it was her demeanor on the stand. An alleged welfare cheat, the 37-year-old woman, the prosecution's chief witness for its conspiracy charge, offered scattered, disjointed and hysterical testimony. Her habit of ignoring Mesereau and talking directly to the jury box didn't win any fans, either.

"I just didn't like when she snapped her fingers at us. don't snap your fingers at me, lady," the grandmotherly Juror No. 5 said.

The mother was the defense's chief villain, the ringleader of "con artists, actors and liars," as Jackson attorney Thomas Mesereau Jr. called the accuser's family in his closing argument.

Did jurors accept Mesereau's assessment of the clan? "The thought was definitely there," Juror No. 10 said.

If the prosecution had not tried Jackson on the conspiracy charge, the mother would not have been needed in the courtroom. But even that move might not have changed anything. Mother or no, believable witnesses were hard to come by, jurors said.

"The telephone-company people were very credible," a woman identified as Juror No. 3 said, as her fellow panelists laughed. "That's all."

Others mentioned as credible from the nearly 140 who testified: former Neverland housekeeper Kiki Fournier and ex-grounds supervisor Jesus Salas. Unlike several players in the trial, Fournier and Salas never sold tabloid stories or sued Jackson. And unlike several players in the trial, Fournier and Salas didn't offer particularly salacious testimony of Jackson's Neverland activities.

Perhaps one verdict reaction best summed up the prosecution's witness problems. It came from Jackson ex-wife Debbie Rowe, a nominal prosecution witness herself. It said, "Debbie is overjoyed that the justice system really works, regardless of which side called her to testify."

Jackson's journey to judgment day began with a deliberate motorcade ride from Neverland to the courthouse. Arriving at around 1:50 p.m., the entertainer was accompanied into the courtroom by his lawyers and several family members, including superstar sister Janet Jackson.

With the acquittal, Jackson's future now lies anywhere, from Africa, where the Reverend Jesse Jackson said the entertainer wants to build a theme park, to Europe, where he continues to pack arenas, to Las Vegas, where a since-denounced report had him signing as a casino headliner. A Jackson Five reunion tour with his brothers also has been floated.

On the stand, the accuser, his family and the family's lawyer repeatedly denied plans for a post-trial civil suit against Jackson. All the same, the boy, now 15, has until the age of 20 to take the pop star to court.

The verdict, meanwhile, was a crushing defeat for Santa Barbara County District Attorney Tom Sneddon, who'd once before tried, but failed, to pin charges on Jackson, and who was derided for his efforts in the 1995 Jackson song, "D.S.," featuring the taunting lyric, "Dom Sheldon is a cold man."
"Obviously, we're disappointed with the verdict," Sneddon said at a press conference.

Perhaps ominously, Sneddon declined to comment if his epic pursuit of Jackson was ended with the 10 "not guiltys."
Jackson's latest clash with Sneddon began more than 18 months ago when police swarmed the grounds of Neverland, questioned the estate's employees and boxed up truckloads of adult magazines and perfectly legal but questionably tasteful art books depicting young, naked males.

The Nov. 18, 2003, raid was prompted by the allegations of a Los Angeles boy, then 13, who told authorities that Jackson "put his hands in my pants...[and] started masturbating me."

The boy recounted his allegations at the trial. Also taking the stand was the boy's younger brother, 14, who told jurors that he twice saw Jackson touch his sibling as the child slept. Both teens talked about tasting alcohol and viewing pornography at Jackson's behest.

The alleged seduction and molestation occurred at Neverland between February and March of 2003, around the same time the singer was plotting to hold the brothers, their mother and their sister captive, the indictment charged.

Prosecutors argued that Jackson maintained a long-held prurient interest in dark-complected boys, aged 10-14. The current accuser fit the profile precisely.

On Monday, Sneddon took exception to the notion that his department built its case around the "wrong" family. "We don't select our victims," he said. "We don't select the families they come from."

As jurors suggested, the boy's family was hardly the prosecution's only problem. When Sneddon's team brought in a string of ex-Neverland workers to tell lurid tales of Jackson groping boys, including Home Alone star Macaulay Culkin, in the late 1980s and early 1990s, the defense countered with three of the alleged victims. On the stand, Culkin denied being molested. Wade Robson and Brett Barnes did the same.

The most salacious allegation of the trial concerned the boy whose allegations a decade ago first found Jackson publicly accused of molestation. An ex-Neverland security guard testified that he saw Jackson perform oral sex on the boy in a shower. The alleged victim,who refused to cooperate with authorities after reaching a reported $23 million settlement with Jackson in 1994, did not testify.

In his closing argument, prosecutor Ronald J. Zonen said the prosecution had proved Jackson had "molested [the current accuser] and numerous other boys."

Jackson denied any wrongdoing, from the 1993-94 investigation to the current trial. In both cases, he issued the denials via videotaped appeals and TV interviews. Despite hints from his own lawyers that Jackson would take the stand in the current case, the singer remained silent.

If Jackson had remained silent and not talked to journalist Martin Bashir in 2002, he might have avoided his current straits.

In an interview for Bashir's Living with Michael Jackson, the entertainer raised red flags about his conduct by holding the hand of a boy--his future accuser--while talking about how he routinely cuddled in bed with children.

The special aired on ABC on Feb. 6, 2003, creating a public-relations disaster for Jackson, the prosecution argued, and setting in motion the chain of events that led to the molestation and conspiracy.

The defense maintained that Jackson was the victim--a ripe, rich target for the accuser's family to exploit.

Born Aug. 29, 1958, in dirt-poor conditions in Gary, Indiana, Jackson was performing onstage at five. If it was a childhood lost, as Jackson would say, it was not a childhood entirely misspent. By the time he was 11, Jackson and his older brothers--Jackie, Marlon, Tito and Jermaine--were topping the charts with a trio of infectious hits, including "I Want You Back," "ABC" and "The Love You Save."

The group was known as the Jackson Five; Jackson, its lead singer, was known as its star.

While Jackson scored his first solo number-one hit with 1972's "Ben," his career as a singular act, right down to the singular sequined glove that would become a trademark, began in earnest with 1979's Off the Wall. The disco-dance-R&B album sold 19 million copies worldwide and spawned the hits "Don't Stop 'Til You Get Enough" and "Rock with You."

Then came Thriller. The 1982 album was a greatest-hits collection unto itself--seven of its nine tracks became top 10 singles, including the title cut, "Billie Jean," "Beat It" and "Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'." In the end, it won Jackson eight Grammys, sold 59 million copies worldwide and arguably made him bigger than the Beatles, whose song catalog he snapped up at the height of his buying power.

With the increased fame came increased scrutiny about his apparent penchant for plastic surgery (he would later swear he'd had but two nose jobs), about his quirks (he once supposedly bid on the Elephant Man's bones), about his bank account (his lavish spending and litigious ways raised speculation that he is teetering on insolvency) and about his habit of surrounding himself with young boys.

The 35-year-old bachelor took a wife, Lisa Marie Presley, in 1994, shortly after the original child-molestation case forever damaged his career, especially in the U.S. market. The two divorced in 1996. Later that same year, Jackson wed Debbie Rowe, a nurse at his dermatologist's office.

Rowe bore Jackson two children, but as she told jurors during the trial, the two never shared a home. The couple divorced in 1999. Jackson welcomed a third child, believed to be the product of a surrogate, to his growing family in 2002.

It was the youngest child, known as Blanket, whom Jackson dangled over a hotel balcony in Germany in November 2002. The incident and its aftermath were captured on tape by Bashir, then traveling with the entertainer.

The Zelig figure of the Jackson case, Bashir would become the first witness at the singer's trial.

To another journalist, 60 Minutes' Ed Bradley, Jackson denounced the latest allegations that put his life and livelihood in jeopardy.

"Before I would hurt a child, I would slit my wrists," Jackson said in that December 2003 interview. "I would never hurt a child."

# Posté le mardi 28 juin 2005 10:49

*** DAY 67 and more ***

*** DAY 67 and more ***
The 12-member jury, eight women and four men, one of whom visited Jackson's Neverland Ranch as a child, spent some 33 hours deliberating the case over seven days. The panel reached a decision at about 12:30 p.m.

In the end, the jurors told reporters in a post-verdict press conference that they just didn't buy the accusations, they just didn't buy the accusers, and they just didn't like the accuser's mother.
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# Posté le jeudi 16 juin 2005 11:21

Modifié le jeudi 16 juin 2005 13:35

*** DAY 65 and DAY 66 ***

*** DAY 65 and DAY 66 ***
Beginning of the End: Prosecution and Defense Trade Scathing Indictments in Closing Arguments

June 2, 2005

ON THE DOCKET
Day 65: Closing arguments


POINTS FOR THE PROSECUTION
Prosecutor Ronald J. Zonen summed up the case as being about "the exploitation and sexual abuse of a 13-year-old cancer survivor at the hands of an international celebrity."
Lest jurors missed his initial point, Zonen likened the waif-like Jackson to a "lion on the Serengeti" on the hunt for prey.
Make that a "lion on the Serengeti" with a "drinking problem," another of Zonen's charges.
Zonen said the defense's contention that the boy at the center of the case and his family have simply made up their allegations against Jackson was "unmitigated rubbish."
Zonen tied in the prior abuse allegations to the current case by arguing that the prosecution proved that Jackson "molested [the current accuser] and numerous other boys." The pop star's MO, then as now, Zonen said, was to "seduce boys into his confidence, into his bedroom and into his bed."
In the event that jurors missed the above point, Zonen made it again, only pithier, by saying Jackson's accuser was welcomed into "the world of the forbidden."
Zonen argued that the accuser's mother would be unlikely to make up an allegation such as seeing Jackson lick her son's head because the behavior is so "bizarre." Also, he said, the woman had no way of knowing that Jackson had been accused of doing the "bizarre" deed to another child a decade ago.
Freed of the judge's vocabulary restrictions, Zonen called porn "pornography," instead of "sexually explicit" materials. He reintroduced jurors to Jackson's pornography stash, too.
Zonen charged that Mesereau broke a promise to jurors by failing to prove several damaging allegations against the accuser's mother.


POINTS FOR THE DEFENSE
Defense attorney Thomas Mesereau Jr. summed up the case as being about "the life, the future, the freedom and the reputation of Michael Jackson."
Mesereau said his client "must be acquitted."
While Mesereau did not manage to make a rhyme with "acquitted," he did manage to disparage the accuser and the boy's family as "con artists, actors and liars."
Mesereau brought that above point home by saying, "There is no way in the world you can find that [the accuser and his family] are trustworthy beyond a reasonable doubt."
Mesereau said it was "absurd" to charge that Jackson molested his accuser at the same time he was "under the microscope" for the 2003 Martin Bashir documentary, Living with Michael Jackson.
Mesereau said it was "absurd" to charge that Jackson, a man who "likes to sit in a tree and do music," orchestrated a plot to abduct children and send them away to Brazil.
Mesereau said it was absurd, a paraphrase this time, that Jackson would give a child, much less an ex-cancer patient, alcohol in order to set up the boy to be molested.
Pulling the CSI card, Mesereau said there was no DNA evidence to link Jackson to his accuser. (In child-abuse cases, there rarely is.)
Mesereau pointed out all the prosecution witnesses who blew up on the prosecution, such as Jackson ex-wife Debbie Rowe, and all the alleged Jackson molestation victims who came to court to deny being molested, such as Macaualay Culkin.
• Mesereau accused the prosecution of a "barbaric attempt" to destroy Jackson by ridiculing everything from his penchant for legal porn to his reputedly troubled finances.
• Mesereau accused Zonen of being mean to him because the prosecutor didn't have a case.

*******************************************************************

The Final Word (Finally!): With Closing Arguments in the Can, Jackson's Fate Lies with Jurors

June 3, 2005

ON THE DOCKET
Day 66: End of closing arguments; day 1 of jury deliberations

Verdict? Nope. Jurors got about two hours of work in before breaking for the weekend.

POINTS FOR THE PROSECUTION
All those boxes of evidence Santa Barbara County District Attorney Tom Sneddon collected on Jackson a decade ago did not go for naught. The trial was Sneddon's chance to unload on the Pop Star Who Got Away. And, win or lose, that's what he did.
In the final portion of closing arguments by Sneddon lieutenant Ronald J. Zonen, the prosecutor did his boss proud and linked the 1993-94 accuser--the reason for all those boxes of old evidence--to the current accuser. Zonen said the current accuser was a "clone" of the previous boy, a boy with whom Jackson was "in love."
Zonen appealed to jurors as parents, saying that they themselves would call the cops on a porn-collecting and booze-addled man, such as Jackson, who crawled into bed with children not his own.

POINTS FOR THE DEFENSE
Jackson got through 66 days of proceedings without completely melting down--surely a personal best for the once spider-bit defendant. There was the morning he showed up in pajama bottoms, sure, but as defense attorney Thomas Mesereau Jr. argued, Michael Jackson is no average Joe--he is a "very naïve, very idealistic musical genius" who "likes to sit in trees and compose." Nowhere did Mesereau say his client had a talent for showing up to court, or anywhere else, on time.
Jackson, by the way, apparently did melt down, or at least dehydrate, on Thursday night. But despite a hospital visit, he was at the defendant's table bright and early Friday morning.
In summing up his case one final time, Mesereau sounded the old, familiar refrain when depicting the accuser and the boy's family: liars, liars, pants on fire.
Mesereau called the Jackson case the "biggest con" of the family's dubious career.
Style points to Jackson sisters Janet, LaToya and Rebbie, who in a tribute to Dynasty and/or a protest of the prosecution, shot up out of their court seats and left the room as Zonen was beginning his presentation.


IN THE HOUSE
More Jacksons than the Jackson 5. In addition to Janet, LaToya and Rebbie, brothers Jermaine and Randy and parents Joe and Katherine were in attendance.
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# Posté le jeudi 16 juin 2005 11:20

Modifié le jeudi 16 juin 2005 11:43

*** DAY 63 and DAY 64 ***

*** DAY 63 and DAY 64 ***
Judge Melville Sets the Stage for Closing Arguments and Jury Instructions

May 31, 2005

ON THE DOCKET
Day 63: Hearing on jury instructions

Absent of further testimony and evidence, Superior Court Judge Rodney S. Melville tentatively scheduled closing arguments for Thursday and set about determining the ground rules for how jurors will be asked to weigh the counts facing Jackson.

Among the key rulings:
The charge of plying a minor with alcohol may be considered a misdemeanor. Jurors will be advised that Martin Bashir's Living with Michael Jackson documentary, which was played in court, may only be considered admissible evidence on a limited basis.


IN THE HOUSE

Not Jackson. It was a day off for the defendant and jurors.

*******************************************************************

Jurors Given Their Marching Orders, Setting the Stage for Closing Arguments

June 1, 2005

ON THE DOCKET
Day 64: Conclusion of hearing on jury instructions, followed by the reading of said instructions to said jurors

This is it. The jurors are prepped. The stage is set. Closing arguments are scheduled to begin Thursday and are expected to run into Friday, with the jury getting the case later that day.

Superior Court Judge Rodney S. Melville apprised the jury of their mandates--what charges they'll be deciding on and how they should approach their deliberations--by reading the instructions aloud. A printed version of those instructions also will be distributed.

Above all, Melville told jurors, per the Associated Press, to reach their verdicts without "pity for or prejudice toward" Jackson.
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# Posté le jeudi 16 juin 2005 11:19

Modifié le jeudi 16 juin 2005 11:44