Siblings Accusing Michael Jackson of Sexual Abuse Allegations Claim the Late Star 'Groomed' Them as His ‘Soldiers’

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They just gave a new interview today (April 24) to New York Times


In December 2010, Oprah Winfrey invited Dominic and Connie Cascio and three of their five children onto her talk show to discuss Michael Jackson.

The pop star and Dominic, a manager of a Manhattan hotel where Mr. Jackson often stayed, had become good friends. For more than two decades, Mr. Jackson had eaten at the Cascios’ New Jersey home, brought them to his Neverland Ranch, took them along on tours around the world and celebrated with them on holidays.

The Cascios had become, as they often said, Mr. Jackson’s “second family.”

So a year and a half after Mr. Jackson’s death, the family came forward to talk to Oprah at length about their special relationship — and also to shield their friend from the ugly sexual abuse accusations that had long trailed him.

“Were there ever any improprieties with you and Michael Jackson?” Ms. Winfrey asked the Cascio siblings, Eddie, Frank and Marie Nicole, who were now adults, at the interview.

They responded in unison: “Never.” They each shook their heads.

Their friend Michael, Eddie asserted, “was a target.”

More than 15 years later, the Cascios now say that was a lie. All five of the Cascio children say they were groomed to protect Mr. Jackson and became, as they call it, his “soldiers” — the front line of his defense.

{paywall stops me from accessing the rest of the trash article}

 
One could fill books with the stories of all the supposed friends who betrayed him at some point. Why doesn't anyone write about this?
They never will. I think people see so many people accusing him of things or of seeing things, even after his death, they just think there's no smoke without fire - without looking into anything. I still see people quoting Adrian McManus as fact 🙄
 
Article continued.. mentions the Cascio tracks, how some of them have profited off of MJ in the past and how their positions have shifted dramatically:

Four of the five siblings now say in a lawsuit and in an interview with The New York Times that, in fact, Mr. Jackson had repeatedly sexually assaulted each of them. (The fifth sibling told The Times he was abused, but for legal reasons, his lawyers say he cannot join his siblings’ suit.)
Some of the siblings say they recognized at an early age that Mr. Jackson’s behavior was wrong but felt too overwhelmed by his celebrity and signs of affection to come forward publicly, or to one another. Others say they did not recognize that what had happened to them was abusive until they watched a 2019 documentary containing allegations by two men who said Mr. Jackson had molested them.


Aldo, now 35, said he was around 7 and in bed with Mr. Jackson one day, playing a Game Boy, when Mr. Jackson [redacted for decency]. He said the sex acts continued for years, and he eventually became aware that what he was enduring was wrong. But he said he so convinced himself that he could never disclose it that he came to believe: “I’m just going to live to die.”

Court documents say the abuse happened at a variety of places, including Mr. Jackson’s home, on trips and during tour stops. Just days before the pop star died in 2009, Aldo said, Mr. Jackson requested they go to “Disneyland” — which he described as a coded request for sex.
Mr. Jackson and, since his death, the Jackson estate have consistently denied all allegations that the pop star molested children. Marty Singer, a lawyer for the estate, characterized the lawsuit as “a desperate money grab.”
“The family staunchly defended Michael Jackson for more than 25 years, attesting to his innocence of inappropriate conduct,” Mr. Singer said in a statement. “This new court filing is a transparent forum-shopping tactic in their scheme to obtain hundreds of millions of dollars from Michael’s estate and companies.”

Debate over the truth of Mr. Jackson’s life has been revived not just by the lawsuit, but also by a biopic, “Michael,” set to debut on Friday. The film, which is expected to have a sequel and was produced in partnership with the estate, ends in 1988, before the first of the allegations surfaced.

Years before filing their lawsuit, the Cascio siblings told the estate that, actually, they had been abused by Mr. Jackson. But the parties reached an agreement in 2020 and the siblings received, in total, roughly $16 million in payments over five years. The accusations were never aired. In the estate’s view, Mr. Jackson’s family avoided being confronted by more “false allegations.”

But the payments ended in 2025 as the siblings were seeking additional compensation, and negotiations became strained. Now what was once a quiet dispute has erupted into bitter litigation.


Four Siblings, Now Plaintiffs​

In an interview this month, the Cascio siblings suing the Jackson estate each provided grim details of what they say they endured.
Marie Nicole Porte, now 37, said she was 12 the first time Mr. Jackson abused her inside her family home, where he stayed for months following the Sept. 11 attacks. Mr. Jackson, she said, [redacted for decency].

Dominic, 39, said he was on a trip to Euro Disney with Mr. Jackson when he was about 8 years old when the pop star [redacted for decency].

The Cascio family’s relationship with Mr. Jackson led its members, by their accounts, into a world of closely guarded secrets. None of the children told their parents or one another what was happening, they said. When their parents did ask about their relationship with Jackson, the children said they denied that anything untoward had occurred.

The parents, Connie and Dominic, declined to be interviewed through the family’s lawyer, Howard King. But in a prior interview they described a mix of feelings — betrayal, remorse and responsibility — for what their children say they encountered.
“I should have known, and I didn’t,” Connie told [demagogue right wing channel] GB news last month. “Honestly, God knows, I didn’t.”
Why did the children stay quiet? Several said that Mr. Jackson stressed to them that their relationship with him was special, the only one like it, and that if anyone found out, his life — and their lives, too — would be destroyed.
“We were brainwashed, we were groomed,” said Eddie, who said that Mr. Jackson, whom he described as “the biggest star in the world,” taught the siblings to defend the popstar against the allegations.
But the siblings said that in 2019, after they watched the “Leaving Neverland” documentary about Mr. Jackson, they were struck by how closely the allegations of child abuse in the film matched their own experiences.

Aldo was the first to approach his family to say he had been abused. A few days later, Dominic, the son, said he told Eddie that Aldo was telling the truth — because it had happened to him. Eddie said he then also came forward. And finally Marie Nicole.

“I felt like he took my manhood away,” Eddie, 43, said in the interview, beginning to cry. He said he had sexual encounters with Mr. Jackson into adulthood. But when they began, he said [redacted for decency] .
The Cascio siblings began meeting with representatives of the estate in 2019, according to court documents. And eventually, after they shared “explicit details about Jackson’s abuse,” the court papers say, the estate eventually agreed to pay each plaintiff what the family called “the wholly inadequate sum of five annual payments of approximately $690,000.” Lawyers for the estate say in their own filing that it “reluctantly” entered into the agreement “to prevent Michael’s family, particularly his children, from having to be subjected to any further false allegations.”
But as the payments were nearing their end in 2024, the estate says in court papers that one of the siblings, Frank, through his lawyer, had demanded that he and his brothers and sister be paid $213 million more, and that he had threatened to file a “bogus public lawsuit.”
Frank said in an interview that he too was abused. But because he is involved in an arbitration proceeding with the estate over the original agreement and other matters, his lawyer said Frank was barred from being a party to the federal lawsuit filed by his siblings.
Mr. Singer said that all of the siblings were involved in the pending arbitration proceeding and that their lawsuit is an effort to try to evade their obligation, under the prior agreement, to arbitrate any disputes. The estate plans to ask the court to dismiss the federal case or to put it on hold while the arbitration goes forward.
Asked to address the specific accusations leveled by each of the siblings, Mr. Singer said: “The Cascios are the epitome of unreliable sources. Their stories have repeatedly shifted and changed to suit whatever their current agenda happens to be.”

Bringing Home a Pop Star​

When Mr. Jackson stayed at the Helmsley Palace in Manhattan in the 1980s, it was Dominic Cascio, the general manager of the towers and the suites, who took care of him. Their friendship built to the point where one night, Jackson showed up at their home in Hawthorne, N.J.
Frank later recounted the evening in a fawning book, “My Friend Michael: An Ordinary Friendship With an Extraordinary Man,” in which he repeatedly denied that Mr. Jackson ever acted inappropriately with children. “My brother and I sprang out of bed to greet him,” Frank wrote of himself and Eddie.
Mr. Jackson would visit the home many more times, helping their mother clean and enjoying her turkey dinners, Frank wrote. The Cascios sat on the side of the stage at Mr. Jackson’s concerts. They had a sleepover at F.A.O. Schwarz. Mr. Jackson covered these expenses and the family installed a phone line at their home just for him.
By 1993, the Cascios had begun to visit with Mr. Jackson at Neverland, his estate in Santa Barbara County that was outfitted with a movie theater, a zoo and even amusement park rides. Frank and Eddie were later permitted to go alone, Frank wrote in his book.
“He made us feel like he was everything: a friend, father, like every sort of emotional support,” Eddie said in the interview. “And he was.”


When Mr. Jackson was accused of molestation by the family of a 13-year-old boy in the 1990s, Frank recalled in his book how, he, Eddie and their father flew to join him on tour in Tel Aviv in a sign of support. When their father had to return home, he allowed his sons to stay. Eddie says now that it was the time when Mr. Jackson first began to molest him.
A year later, in 1994, Mr. Jackson reached a roughly $23 million [incorrect sum] civil settlement with the boy’s family that had accused him of molestation. Mr. Jackson denied any wrongdoing.
A decade after that, prosecutors in Santa Barbara County brought charges against Mr. Jackson that included several new counts of child molesting and serving alcohol to minors. “All bullshit,” Frank wrote. “These people were after Michael’s money.”
Frank recalled in the book that he went on “20/20” and “Good Morning America” to defend Mr. Jackson. The rest of the family flew to California to testify on the singer’s behalf, the siblings said, but once they got there, they were told they were not needed.
Following a 14-week trial, Mr. Jackson was acquitted by a jury.
After Mr. Jackson died, some of the Cascios profited from their relationships with him. In addition to revenues from his book, Frank sold Jackson memorabilia. Eddie sold the rights to three songs known as the “Cascio tracks” that were said to have been recorded in the basement of the Cascios’ home in 2007.

The demos were included by Sony Music in an album released after Mr. Jackson’s death. But their authenticity came under scrutiny, and Sony Music removed the tracks in 2022 amid a court battle. It ended in a settlement with the defendants, including Sony, the Jackson estate and Eddie, according to court documents.
Sony and the estate did not concede that the songs had been sung by an impersonator, as had been contended, but said that removing them was “the simplest and best way to move beyond the conversation associated with these tracks once and for all.”
When the siblings saw the “Leaving Neverland” documentary, they were suddenly “deprogrammed,” their lawsuit says — forced to confront the reality of their experiences with Mr. Jackson. Released by HBO in 2019, the film focused on the accounts of two men — Wade Robson and James Safechuck — who came forward with separate lawsuits a few years after Mr. Jackson’s death that accused him of having abused them as children.
The Jackson estate denied all of the allegations and sued the network. Court documents show that the case was dismissed in 2024 after what a spokesman for HBO described as an amicable resolution. Civil cases for both Mr. Robson and Mr. Safechuck are ongoing in Los Angeles.
After the documentary’s release, the Cascios say in court papers that representatives of the estate sought them out, falsely representing that they were trying to help get them fair compensation “for the suffering Jackson had caused.” This, they said, led to the settlement agreement that involved the annual payments.
The Cascio lawsuit says that two years ago, the estate’s representatives began discussing the possibility of additional compensation and “further arrangements to ensure plaintiffs’ continued silence.”

But the lawsuit says that, after the siblings hired lawyers and demanded more compensation, the estate and its representatives started leaking “false and defamatory statements” saying that the estate was being blackmailed by the siblings.
The estate’s court filings present a starkly different narrative. They paint the Cascios as opportunists who are seeking to extort the estate by lying about Mr. Jackson’s alleged abuse. The siblings are said to have used the negative publicity of “Leaving Neverland” as an opening to “repudiate their prior support of Michael and manufacture false and specious allegations against him unless they were paid money.”
The Cascios say that, actually, their goals now are about more than money — they are about telling the truth about Mr. Jackson to the world and to some they hold close.
Like Eddie’s daughter, who is 16 and was born just months after Mr. Jackson’s death. For years, she too lived under the impression that the pop star had been a great friend to the family.
After all, her middle name is “Michael.”
 
Last edited:
"When Mr. Jackson was accused of molestation by the family of a 13-year-old boy in the 1990s, Frank recalled in his book how, he, Eddie and their father flew to join him on tour in Tel Aviv in a sign of support. When their father had to return home, he allowed his sons to stay. Eddie says now that it was the time when Mr. Jackson first began to molest him."

So we are supposed to believe that Michael decided to wait until the WHOLE WORLD, including the Cascios parents, were aware he was being accused of molesting children, to start molesting Eddie? This conniving, manipulative predator, who for some reason only ever decides to abuse children AFTER the whole world thinks he did and he's under a spotlight anyway (Gavin Arvizo).

Also, please, someone explain to me how it took until 2019 to realise this was abuse, when Frank Cascio was part of the trial?
 
"When Mr. Jackson was accused of molestation by the family of a 13-year-old boy in the 1990s, Frank recalled in his book how, he, Eddie and their father flew to join him on tour in Tel Aviv in a sign of support. When their father had to return home, he allowed his sons to stay. Eddie says now that it was the time when Mr. Jackson first began to molest him."

So we are supposed to believe that Michael decided to wait until the WHOLE WORLD, including the Cascios parents, were aware he was being accused of molesting children, to start molesting Eddie? This conniving, manipulative predator, who for some reason only ever decides to abuse children AFTER the whole world thinks he did and he's under a spotlight anyway (Gavin Arvizo).

Also, please, someone explain to me how it took until 2019 to realise this was abuse, when Frank Cascio was part of the trial?
You forgot to add that Franck Cascio wrote a book about his friendship with michael. This doesn't add up at all like always...
Like I say "Money" is a helluvah drug
 
So sad, I remember really enjoying the book, My friend Michael. I did take note, however, that Frank seemed to have a dislike for Lisa Marie Presley. Insinuating that Michael married her purely for "business." I felt rather Frank perceived her as a threat. OR he just didn't know EVERYTHING about Michael like he assumed. Michael did have other close relationships with different families and also private relationships with women.
 
maybe its all projection and frank had a crush on michael. would explain why he didnt like lisa and why hes making up these bizarre allegations; its his creepy fantasy
 
Also their track record for scummery... the tracks... and we can assume they aren't trustworthy because who can say one thing as adamant truth for years and years only to completely 180... when others are profiting and you see an opportunity
 
“I felt like he took my manhood away,” Eddie, 43, said in the interview, beginning to cry. He said he had sexual encounters with Mr. Jackson into adulthood. But when they began, he said [redacted for decency] .
Is Eddie the only one claiming to have had sexual encounters with Jackson as an adult?
 
I refuse to click on the article

but based on the comments in this post it sounds like NYTimes actually brought up some of the issues with their claims?

Do I have have that correct?


Has Hell frozen over?
 
It kind of looks that way, I believe some of the article has been copied and pasted above to avoid clicks. by Visionary.
 
So sad, I remember really enjoying the book, My friend Michael. I did take note, however, that Frank seemed to have a dislike for Lisa Marie Presley. Insinuating that Michael married her purely for "business." I felt rather Frank perceived her as a threat. OR he just didn't know EVERYTHING about Michael like he assumed. Michael did have other close relationships with different families and also private relationships with women.

Michael and Lisa were seeing each other on and off for about 4 years after their divorce, weren't they? This overlaps with Michael's marriage to Debbie so it would have been bad business to feign that. It always seemed to me like they had a genuine passion and affection for one another.

I haven't trusted this family since the fake music but I never thought they'd stoop this low. I'm so tired of the vampires who are still after Michael's money or the exposure of having their name attached to his even if only in the process of trying to smear it.
 
Michael and Lisa were seeing each other on and off for about 4 years after their divorce, weren't they? This overlaps with Michael's marriage to Debbie so it would have been bad business to feign that. It always seemed to me like they had a genuine passion and affection for one another.

I haven't trusted this family since the fake music but I never thought they'd stoop this low. I'm so tired of the vampires who are still after Michael's money or the exposure of having their name attached to his even if only in the process of trying to smear it.
I completely agree, although Lisa Marie had left, said she didn't know what she was thinking in interviews, she always said she never saw anything that would make her believe the negative allegations, she would have "killed" him if she did. In her posthumous memoir the part about her love story with Michael was so sweet. I think they had a very real love affair. I wish she didn't leave, I think she was scared to have children with him, there were a lot of "vampires" she called them around him. Yes, they did date on and off for 4-5 years after, he called her asking if she still loved him (I think during the 2005 trial time) she said she was indifferent. He cried. By his bedside was her picture as a little girl when he passed. ( sorry for the long story )

I think MJ did attract a lot of vampires, and when he passed, these vampires had no more blood...
 
Article continued.. mentions the Cascio tracks, how some of them have profited off of MJ in the past and how their positions have shifted dramatically:

Four of the five siblings now say in a lawsuit and in an interview with The New York Times that, in fact, Mr. Jackson had repeatedly sexually assaulted each of them. (The fifth sibling told The Times he was abused, but for legal reasons, his lawyers say he cannot join his siblings’ suit.)
Some of the siblings say they recognized at an early age that Mr. Jackson’s behavior was wrong but felt too overwhelmed by his celebrity and signs of affection to come forward publicly, or to one another. Others say they did not recognize that what had happened to them was abusive until they watched a 2019 documentary containing allegations by two men who said Mr. Jackson had molested them.


Aldo, now 35, said he was around 7 and in bed with Mr. Jackson one day, playing a Game Boy, when Mr. Jackson [redacted for decency]. He said the sex acts continued for years, and he eventually became aware that what he was enduring was wrong. But he said he so convinced himself that he could never disclose it that he came to believe: “I’m just going to live to die.”

Court documents say the abuse happened at a variety of places, including Mr. Jackson’s home, on trips and during tour stops. Just days before the pop star died in 2009, Aldo said, Mr. Jackson requested they go to “Disneyland” — which he described as a coded request for sex.
Mr. Jackson and, since his death, the Jackson estate have consistently denied all allegations that the pop star molested children. Marty Singer, a lawyer for the estate, characterized the lawsuit as “a desperate money grab.”
“The family staunchly defended Michael Jackson for more than 25 years, attesting to his innocence of inappropriate conduct,” Mr. Singer said in a statement. “This new court filing is a transparent forum-shopping tactic in their scheme to obtain hundreds of millions of dollars from Michael’s estate and companies.”

Debate over the truth of Mr. Jackson’s life has been revived not just by the lawsuit, but also by a biopic, “Michael,” set to debut on Friday. The film, which is expected to have a sequel and was produced in partnership with the estate, ends in 1988, before the first of the allegations surfaced.

Years before filing their lawsuit, the Cascio siblings told the estate that, actually, they had been abused by Mr. Jackson. But the parties reached an agreement in 2020 and the siblings received, in total, roughly $16 million in payments over five years. The accusations were never aired. In the estate’s view, Mr. Jackson’s family avoided being confronted by more “false allegations.”

But the payments ended in 2025 as the siblings were seeking additional compensation, and negotiations became strained. Now what was once a quiet dispute has erupted into bitter litigation.


Four Siblings, Now Plaintiffs​

In an interview this month, the Cascio siblings suing the Jackson estate each provided grim details of what they say they endured.
Marie Nicole Porte, now 37, said she was 12 the first time Mr. Jackson abused her inside her family home, where he stayed for months following the Sept. 11 attacks. Mr. Jackson, she said, [redacted for decency].

Dominic, 39, said he was on a trip to Euro Disney with Mr. Jackson when he was about 8 years old when the pop star [redacted for decency].

The Cascio family’s relationship with Mr. Jackson led its members, by their accounts, into a world of closely guarded secrets. None of the children told their parents or one another what was happening, they said. When their parents did ask about their relationship with Jackson, the children said they denied that anything untoward had occurred.

The parents, Connie and Dominic, declined to be interviewed through the family’s lawyer, Howard King. But in a prior interview they described a mix of feelings — betrayal, remorse and responsibility — for what their children say they encountered.
“I should have known, and I didn’t,” Connie told [demagogue right wing channel] GB news last month. “Honestly, God knows, I didn’t.”
Why did the children stay quiet? Several said that Mr. Jackson stressed to them that their relationship with him was special, the only one like it, and that if anyone found out, his life — and their lives, too — would be destroyed.
“We were brainwashed, we were groomed,” said Eddie, who said that Mr. Jackson, whom he described as “the biggest star in the world,” taught the siblings to defend the popstar against the allegations.
But the siblings said that in 2019, after they watched the “Leaving Neverland” documentary about Mr. Jackson, they were struck by how closely the allegations of child abuse in the film matched their own experiences.

Aldo was the first to approach his family to say he had been abused. A few days later, Dominic, the son, said he told Eddie that Aldo was telling the truth — because it had happened to him. Eddie said he then also came forward. And finally Marie Nicole.

“I felt like he took my manhood away,” Eddie, 43, said in the interview, beginning to cry. He said he had sexual encounters with Mr. Jackson into adulthood. But when they began, he said [redacted for decency] .
The Cascio siblings began meeting with representatives of the estate in 2019, according to court documents. And eventually, after they shared “explicit details about Jackson’s abuse,” the court papers say, the estate eventually agreed to pay each plaintiff what the family called “the wholly inadequate sum of five annual payments of approximately $690,000.” Lawyers for the estate say in their own filing that it “reluctantly” entered into the agreement “to prevent Michael’s family, particularly his children, from having to be subjected to any further false allegations.”
But as the payments were nearing their end in 2024, the estate says in court papers that one of the siblings, Frank, through his lawyer, had demanded that he and his brothers and sister be paid $213 million more, and that he had threatened to file a “bogus public lawsuit.”
Frank said in an interview that he too was abused. But because he is involved in an arbitration proceeding with the estate over the original agreement and other matters, his lawyer said Frank was barred from being a party to the federal lawsuit filed by his siblings.
Mr. Singer said that all of the siblings were involved in the pending arbitration proceeding and that their lawsuit is an effort to try to evade their obligation, under the prior agreement, to arbitrate any disputes. The estate plans to ask the court to dismiss the federal case or to put it on hold while the arbitration goes forward.
Asked to address the specific accusations leveled by each of the siblings, Mr. Singer said: “The Cascios are the epitome of unreliable sources. Their stories have repeatedly shifted and changed to suit whatever their current agenda happens to be.”

Bringing Home a Pop Star​

When Mr. Jackson stayed at the Helmsley Palace in Manhattan in the 1980s, it was Dominic Cascio, the general manager of the towers and the suites, who took care of him. Their friendship built to the point where one night, Jackson showed up at their home in Hawthorne, N.J.
Frank later recounted the evening in a fawning book, “My Friend Michael: An Ordinary Friendship With an Extraordinary Man,” in which he repeatedly denied that Mr. Jackson ever acted inappropriately with children. “My brother and I sprang out of bed to greet him,” Frank wrote of himself and Eddie.
Mr. Jackson would visit the home many more times, helping their mother clean and enjoying her turkey dinners, Frank wrote. The Cascios sat on the side of the stage at Mr. Jackson’s concerts. They had a sleepover at F.A.O. Schwarz. Mr. Jackson covered these expenses and the family installed a phone line at their home just for him.
By 1993, the Cascios had begun to visit with Mr. Jackson at Neverland, his estate in Santa Barbara County that was outfitted with a movie theater, a zoo and even amusement park rides. Frank and Eddie were later permitted to go alone, Frank wrote in his book.
“He made us feel like he was everything: a friend, father, like every sort of emotional support,” Eddie said in the interview. “And he was.”


When Mr. Jackson was accused of molestation by the family of a 13-year-old boy in the 1990s, Frank recalled in his book how, he, Eddie and their father flew to join him on tour in Tel Aviv in a sign of support. When their father had to return home, he allowed his sons to stay. Eddie says now that it was the time when Mr. Jackson first began to molest him.
A year later, in 1994, Mr. Jackson reached a roughly $23 million [incorrect sum] civil settlement with the boy’s family that had accused him of molestation. Mr. Jackson denied any wrongdoing.
A decade after that, prosecutors in Santa Barbara County brought charges against Mr. Jackson that included several new counts of child molesting and serving alcohol to minors. “All bullshit,” Frank wrote. “These people were after Michael’s money.”
Frank recalled in the book that he went on “20/20” and “Good Morning America” to defend Mr. Jackson. The rest of the family flew to California to testify on the singer’s behalf, the siblings said, but once they got there, they were told they were not needed.
Following a 14-week trial, Mr. Jackson was acquitted by a jury.
After Mr. Jackson died, some of the Cascios profited from their relationships with him. In addition to revenues from his book, Frank sold Jackson memorabilia. Eddie sold the rights to three songs known as the “Cascio tracks” that were said to have been recorded in the basement of the Cascios’ home in 2007.

The demos were included by Sony Music in an album released after Mr. Jackson’s death. But their authenticity came under scrutiny, and Sony Music removed the tracks in 2022 amid a court battle. It ended in a settlement with the defendants, including Sony, the Jackson estate and Eddie, according to court documents.
Sony and the estate did not concede that the songs had been sung by an impersonator, as had been contended, but said that removing them was “the simplest and best way to move beyond the conversation associated with these tracks once and for all.”
When the siblings saw the “Leaving Neverland” documentary, they were suddenly “deprogrammed,” their lawsuit says — forced to confront the reality of their experiences with Mr. Jackson. Released by HBO in 2019, the film focused on the accounts of two men — Wade Robson and James Safechuck — who came forward with separate lawsuits a few years after Mr. Jackson’s death that accused him of having abused them as children.
The Jackson estate denied all of the allegations and sued the network. Court documents show that the case was dismissed in 2024 after what a spokesman for HBO described as an amicable resolution. Civil cases for both Mr. Robson and Mr. Safechuck are ongoing in Los Angeles.
After the documentary’s release, the Cascios say in court papers that representatives of the estate sought them out, falsely representing that they were trying to help get them fair compensation “for the suffering Jackson had caused.” This, they said, led to the settlement agreement that involved the annual payments.
The Cascio lawsuit says that two years ago, the estate’s representatives began discussing the possibility of additional compensation and “further arrangements to ensure plaintiffs’ continued silence.”

But the lawsuit says that, after the siblings hired lawyers and demanded more compensation, the estate and its representatives started leaking “false and defamatory statements” saying that the estate was being blackmailed by the siblings.
The estate’s court filings present a starkly different narrative. They paint the Cascios as opportunists who are seeking to extort the estate by lying about Mr. Jackson’s alleged abuse. The siblings are said to have used the negative publicity of “Leaving Neverland” as an opening to “repudiate their prior support of Michael and manufacture false and specious allegations against him unless they were paid money.”
The Cascios say that, actually, their goals now are about more than money — they are about telling the truth about Mr. Jackson to the world and to some they hold close.
Like Eddie’s daughter, who is 16 and was born just months after Mr. Jackson’s death. For years, she too lived under the impression that the pop star had been a great friend to the family.
After all, her middle name is “Michael.”

TL,DR: "I can't make money off of the fake tracks anymore, ergo, Michael touched my penis."

Same bullshit, different people.
 
did he speak on a podcast?

I doubt he will do anything. Most of these impersonators are exploiters. They don't see MJ as a real person.
I'm sure there's an audio recording of him admitting to it on the Damien Shields thing
 
I listened and I don't remember an audio of malachi himself confessing. I believe they said he confessed
Maybe I've misremembered. I thought he was in there on a recording admitting it.

Either way they'd never platform that guy on mainstream media - they are busy putting out hourly articles recommending how to get a VPN to watch LN or Dan Reed's hourly thoughts on the biopics raging success
 
Oh Michael you silly man, why put yourself in these positions? He really should have had more awareness how all this looked.
 
HEY WAIT A SEC!
Just days before the pop star died in 2009, Aldo said, Mr. Jackson requested they go to “Disneyland” — which he described as a coded request for sex.
But I thought Robson and Safechuck claimed MJ lost interest in kids after they turned 13. If Aldo was 35 in 2025, wouldn't that have made him 19 in 2009?

These accusers not only contradict their own narratives, they also contradict the narrative of others. Same goes for the whole "female victim" angle when the media always claimed he went after little boys.

The day people stop listening to the accusers and realize MJ was always innocent will be a day I'll eagerly await.
 
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