Mark Geragos on His Client Frank Cascio vs Michael Jackson

Thats the thing, the Cascio family is trying to get back at the estate because they're still standing by the claim that those three songs on the Michael album were actual unfinished MJ demos that they re-worked in a studio with additional session musicians and singers, only for it to come out that MJ had absolutley nothing to do with those songs whatsoever and that they were literally nothing more than an MJ-soundalike.
Wait what??!!! The cascios are saying they real songs??...

Bwhahahaha its clear as day that tyey are fake
You can tell its not mjs vocals
 

This better not f****** with the movie or the musical
It's interesting how the media never forget to mention the allegations in every article about Michael, even when it's totally unrelated to the subject, but when it comes to the Cascios, they never mention the fake songs and how they are already known as fraudsters. We seriously need to bring that back to the front and remind people who the Cascios are.
 
This is the first time the accuser's team have explicitly mentioned sexual abuse though, correct? It was read between the lines until now?
 
This is the first time the accuser's team have explicitly mentioned sexual abuse though, correct? It was read between the lines until now?
These 5 bozos are claiming they were abused until 2009 when they were all full grown adults. The sister is also claiming abuse as an adult woman too.

Also they are using a new law that is strictly for adult abuse victims over the age of 18 to push their case.

What a joke!

The guilters will now be forced to admit Michael was attracted to adult women or else they will have to admit the Cascios are ****** liars.

I don't want to see any foolish fans going along with them framing this as child sexual abuse. They all claim they were being abused as full grown adults.
 

TJ Jackson
@tjjackson



Those guys are absolute $nakes. My uncle did nothing but try to help them and support their family. When he passed the money stopped so they had to try multiple ways to leach off of him. First fake songs, then supportive books/appearances and now extorting the estate (all this as adults might I add). It's always about $$$ with them and all these other frauds. Di$gusting. #MJInnocent
 

On Wednesday (14/01/2026), Frank Cascio, his siblings, and his parents appeared in a Beverly Hills courtroom in a highly anticipated hearing involving the Michael Jackson Estate. While some coverage framed the day as a dramatic confrontation over abuse allegations, the reality was far more procedural. The court was not asked to determine whether any allegations were true or false. Instead, the hearing focused on a narrow but critical legal question: should the dispute be handled publicly in court, or privately through arbitration as outlined in a prior agreement?

The hearing stemmed from a motion filed by the Estate seeking to enforce a 2020 agreement signed by Frank Cascio. That agreement contains a clause requiring disputes to be resolved through confidential arbitration. The Cascios are attempting to void that agreement, arguing it was coerced, unlawful, and designed to silence them. Wednesday’s hearing was strictly about whether that arbitration clause is enforceable, not about examining evidence or testimony related to the allegations themselves.

Before the hearing even began, Judge Michael E. Whitaker issued a tentative ruling indicating he was inclined to side with the Estate. In that tentative decision, the judge found that the agreement includes a valid and binding arbitration provision. He further stated that the question of whether the agreement itself is enforceable should be decided by an arbitrator, not by the court. While he did not issue a final ruling from the bench, all indications suggest the judge is prepared to compel arbitration.

Representing the Estate, attorney Marty Singer told the court that the Cascios entered into a deal with the Estate in January 2020 and later renegotiated it for significantly more money upfront. Singer argued that the family is now attempting to violate the confidentiality and arbitration clauses of that agreement by pursuing a public lawsuit. He also reiterated the Estate’s long-standing position that the dispute originated from a $213 million extortion demand and stated that the abuse allegations are categorically denied.

Mark Geragos, representing the Cascios, strongly opposed the Estate’s request and argued that the judge’s tentative ruling was incorrect. He told the court he felt ā€œpassionatelyā€ that the law and recent legislative trends support allowing the case to proceed publicly. Geragos maintains that the Cascios were emotionally vulnerable, rushed into signing the agreement, and misled about their rights. He also argues that the agreement is unenforceable because it allegedly contains illegal nondisclosure provisions related to claims of childhood sexual abuse.

Following the hearing, Geragos spoke to reporters and said the family traveled from the East Coast to attend because they wanted to witness firsthand what he described as the Estate’s position, one that, in his view, labels them as liars. One family member appeared visibly emotional. Geragos stated that if the judge formally adopts his tentative ruling and orders arbitration, the Cascios plan to appeal.

Arbitration is at the heart of this dispute because of what it represents. Unlike a public court case, arbitration is private, confidential, and largely final, with very limited opportunities for appeal. Proceedings are not open to the public, evidence is not released, and media coverage effectively stops. While arbitration still allows for testimony and evidence to be presented, it removes the case from public scrutiny entirely, a key reason the Cascios are fighting to stay in court and the Estate is pushing to enforce the agreement.

At this stage, the judge has effectively paused the court case pending arbitration. The Estate has been ordered to submit a proposed order by January 23, 2026, and judicial proceedings are stayed until arbitration is completed. The only remaining court matter currently scheduled is a March 5 hearing regarding whether certain documents in the case should be sealed.

CAscio-Case-photo-14-01-2026.jpg
The Cascio family line up in court on Wednesday, January 14, 2026
In short, Wednesday’s hearing did not determine guilt, innocence, or credibility. It did not evaluate evidence or hear testimony about the allegations. What it did signal is that the court believes the agreement Frank Cascio signed still carries legal weight and that this battle is likely to move out of the public courtroom and into private arbitration, away from headlines and public debate.
 
Which one is Frank these days? Baldy with the beard? Is he the one who was closer to MJ than the rest? and the one who was by his side at the 2001 album signing and also in the limo during the trip to Gary in 03?
 
Wait what??!!! The cascios are saying they real songs??...

Bwhahahaha its clear as day that tyey are fake
You can tell its not mjs vocals
Yup, thats where all this bullshit is coming from. They're no longer recieving any royalty checks from those three songs after Sony and the estate agreed to remove them from future pressings of the Michael album, presumably because it was finally confirmed that MJ didn't sing a note on them nor did he even write them.
 
Yup, thats where all this bullshit is coming from. They're no longer recieving any royalty checks from those three songs after Sony and the estate agreed to remove them from future pressings of the Michael album, presumably because it was finally confirmed that MJ didn't sing a note on them nor did he even write them.
The songs weren't removed until 2022 or 2023 though - the Cascios approached the Estate in late 2019 and the agreement thing was signed in 2020. I think removing the songs was a reaction to this, if anything.
 
What the judge said to Frank Cascio after throwing out his BS:

 
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You know, I think it was undoubtedly for the best that Geragos dropped out of defending Michael in order to focus entirely on Scott Peterson at the time. After all, Geragos is a typical lawyer, who bends in the direction the wind takes him. (Like David Boies, for example). Mesereau is not so much a real-life Atticus Finch by any means, as he's defended obviously guilty people, but he's always had integrity with regards to Michael, to go above and beyond defending his innocence, to go "I KNOW for a fact that he was innocent, I have seen the proof."

Geragos probably would've just tried to sleaze his way through the Arvizo case, and could've easily done something stupid that backfired.
 
Yup, thats where all this bullshit is coming from. They're no longer recieving any royalty checks from those three songs after Sony and the estate agreed to remove them from future pressings of the Michael album, presumably because it was finally confirmed that MJ didn't sing a note on them nor did he even write them.
Ahhh so thats why they doing this ....those scumbags
 
I noticed that after the fake songs were removed from the Michael album, that’s when everything went to heck between the Cascios and the Estate. The Cascios even allegedly said that if they weren’t paid that enormous amount of money, they would publicly say terrible things about Michael. The estate itself should sue them for extortion. NOW. Not just sit back and watch while the Cascios shatter them for good.
Do you think it would have been better for those songs not to have been removed? Would the Cascios have ended up making up such allegations if the songs were left on the record?
 
While we all understand what is going on, that article can very much read like the MJ Estate are trying to suppress and challenge details of CSA rather than contest a legal agreement made in 2020.

Hopefully this will be cut and dry and addressed quickly, because the timing is very unfortunate. I would not blame anyone attached to the movie being pissed off to find out about a settlement made in 2020 four years after the fact.
 
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