Should Platinum Recording Child Molestors Be Treated Differently ?

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Jan 9, 2004
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SANTA MARIA – In dramatic and emotional testimony, the son of a former housekeeper for Michael Jackson told jurors Monday that he was molested by the pop star during a tickling game in 1990.
The 24-year-old man was called to the stand as prosecutors in the current molestation case against Jackson began trying to show the jury that the singer has a pattern of abusing young boys.

The witness said that over a span of several years Jackson twice touched his clothes in the groin area during tickling games at Jackson's Los Angeles-area condominium, which he and his mother referred to as "the hideaway," and in a third incident reached under his clothes at Jackson's Neverland ranch.

Halting and with his voice breaking, the witness described Jackson tickling him and then said the pop star reached into his shorts to touch his genitals.

"We were tickling. He was tickling and I was laughing and the – it was, he was – he was tickling me in the...," the witness said before asking the judge for a break. He wiped his eyes and drank some water.

"He was tickling me. I was wearing shorts again. ... He reached on my leg and I'm still laughing and he reached up to my – privates," the witness said.

As he began to describe the alleged molestation he apologized to prosecutor Ron Zonen for his halting testimony and said, "This took a lot of counseling to get over, just to let you know."

The defense asked that the comment be struck from the record and Superior Court Judge Rodney S. Melville agreed.

The witness said Jackson touched him in that incident for two or three minutes and that he remembered thinking, "I should probably go."

Asked who he first told of the incident, the witness said, "Probably God."

The appearance of the young man was allowed under a ruling last week by Melville that prosecutors may present witnesses to alleged molestation or inappropriate behavior involving five boys before the time period of the current allegations.

Jackson is charged with molesting a 13-year-old boy in February or March 2003, giving him wine and conspiring to hold the boy's family captive to get them to make a video rebutting a TV documentary in which Jackson appeared with the boy and said he allowed children to sleep in his bed, although he characterized it as non-sexual.

In the earlier ruling the judge said prosecutors could mention that the housekeeper's son and another boy received civil settlements from Jackson but could not tell the jury the amounts.

Prosecutors have said the housekeeper's son received a $2.4 million settlement in 1994.

The housekeeper's son, now married and working as lead mentor in an anti-truancy program, was asked at the outset of his testimony if he could identify Jackson in court.

"He's the light-complected gentleman," the witness said, smiling at Jackson.

The witness also described two earlier alleged incidents that involved Jackson touching him over his clothes.

"We were watching cartoons and he just started tickling me which was – cool," he said of the first incident, which he described as beginning while they were seated in a chair. "And then we went to the floor ... tickling still ... I'm tickling and he's tickling and I'm tickling and he's tickling.

"It eventually moved down to my little private region, I guess ... around my crotch area. You know, you're 7, you didn't think it was wrong. ... I probably did think it was weird but not super weird because you were tickling," he said.

In another incident, he said, Jackson began tickling him as they were cuddling on top of a sleeping bag while watching cartoons. He described the tickling proceeding in the same way.

The witness said he never talked about the incidents with anyone until 1993, when investigators came to him after another boy made allegations against Jackson in a civil case. The other boy also would later receive a settlement, reportedly in the multimillion-dollar range. No criminal charges were filed in either case.



Associated Press Writer Tim Molloy contributed to this report.









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http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/state/20050404-1343-ca-michaeljackson.html