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- <text id=94TT0137>
- <title>
- Feb. 07, 1994: The Price Is Right
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Feb. 07, 1994 Lock 'Em Up And Throw Away The Key
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- LAW, Page 60
- The Price Is Right
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Michael Jackson pays a hefty settlement to his boy accuser.
- But what does it settle?
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Corliss--Reported by Martha Smilgis and Jack E. White/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> The other glove finally dropped. Last week representatives
- of Michael Jackson and the 14-year-old boy who accused him of
- sexual molestation agreed to settle the boy's civil suit. No
- promises were put in writing--and no judge would tolerate
- such promises--but it was understood that the boy will not
- testify in pending criminal investigations of Jackson being
- pursued by the Los Angeles and Santa Barbara district attorneys.
- Meanwhile, the star gets to maintain his innocence. The price
- tag was estimated between $15 million and $50 million--part
- paid in cash, part to be fed into a trust fund for the boy.
- </p>
- <p> Afterward, the two parties sounded as if they were the same
- side. Both professed to be pleased with the resolution; both
- blamed the media for snooping; both underlined that Jackson
- proclaims himself blameless; both implied that they settled
- to protect their sensitive clients. "A child can't heal until
- this is behind him," declared the boy's attorney, Larry Feldman,
- and the same could apply to the childlike Jackson. "Michael
- wants to get on with his life," said his lawyer, Johnnie Cochran,
- "and let the healing process begin."
- </p>
- <p> For Michael that may take a while. His bodyguards, for example,
- are pressing their own suit against him, and court cases await
- over the cancellation of his tour. And Los Angeles D.A. Gil
- Garcetti insisted that his office has not closed the Jackson
- file. But California law does not allow the state to compel
- testimony from juveniles in sex-crime cases. Without the boy's
- evidence, the authorities may have only hearsay testimony--probably not enough to win or even bring a case against Jackson.
- So for now his freedom is assured, if not his reputation. Neither
- he nor the boy will be required to relate bedtime intimacies
- under oath.
- </p>
- <p> The agreement capped five months of tawdry wrangling in what
- now seems like the all-tabloid media. Maids and chauffeurs,
- lissome lads and their parents fed their accusations of misconduct
- or declarations of support to the avid press. Tracking the story
- was a full-time job for many newshounds--250 littered the
- lawn of the Superior Court building in Santa Monica last week
- to hear the announcement of the epochal compromise--and for
- the two squads of lawyers. The main attorneys got high marks
- for their work. "Feldman publicized, publicized, publicized,
- and then got the big settlement," says New York City attorney
- Raoul Felder. "Cochran and Howard Weitzman did a good job by
- hobbling the criminal case."
- </p>
- <p> Last August, at the beginning of the case, both sides were in
- disarray. The boy's first attorney, Gloria Allred, famous for
- trying cases in the media, didn't last long. For a while, Jackson's
- improbable front man was private detective Anthony Pellicano.
- As for Jackson's lawyers, one of them never met his client;
- the other spent only 30 minutes with him in Moscow and promptly
- departed for the South of France. They did not even know if
- Garcetti was issuing an arrest warrant for Jackson. The savviest
- legal and personal adviser was actress Elizabeth Taylor, whose
- own lawyer told her, "Cochran is the only man for the job."
- </p>
- <p> Cochran signed on in early December and persuaded Jackson to
- return to the U.S. and take an active role in his defense. "For
- months," Cochran told Time, "Hard Copy and the tabloids had
- been beating up Michael. I wanted to bring him back here, at
- the center of what was happening. Michael always has and always
- will be the most effective advocate for the fact of his innocence."
- But after a month of drug therapy, Jackson was off on the fringe.
- So blithe was he about the charges that, when he arrived home
- from London, he was accompanied by two young boys from New Jersey.
- One friend of Jackson's told him to "get those boys out of here
- right away!"
- </p>
- <p> Garcetti had issued no arrest warrant for Jackson. But he had
- obtained a warrant for a humiliating full-body exam and photo
- session. The Santa Barbara D.A. obtained a similar warrant,
- with this threat: "Michael Jackson shall be advised that he
- has no right to refuse the examination and photographs, and
- any refusal to comply with this warrant would be admissible
- at trial and would be an indication of his consciousness of
- guilt." The Santa Barbara D.A. also wanted several police to
- be present when Jackson was photographed, and for a ruler to
- be used to measure any splotches of vitiligo, a pigment disorder,
- that might be found on his penis. But Jackson's team managed
- to deflect those medieval demands.
- </p>
- <p> Court-appointed psychiatrists had already reported that the
- boy would be harmed by testifying, but Feldman kept insisting
- he would bring the case to court. He also filed for the singer's
- financial records, almost certainly so that he could attach
- to them--for all the media to see--a transcript of the boy's
- deposition, which contained a gruesome list of Jackson's alleged
- pedophiliac predations. "The media ran with it," says Malcolm
- Boyes, producer of the tabloid TV show Inside Edition, "and
- it helped Feldman push the settlement."
- </p>
- <p> By early January, a source close to Jackson's defense says,
- "the case had become a nightmare. The D.A.s were building their
- case on the discovery in the civil case. It was part of their
- strategy to wait and see what happened in there before they
- took their shot at us." The civil case had to be resolved quickly
- so that at the very least, the criminal proceedings would not
- benefit from it. From Jackson's viewpoint, a multimillion-dollar
- payoff was an easier option than the humiliation of testifying--and the possibility of jail time.
- </p>
- <p> Time: that was the ace up Feldman's sleeve. He knew Jackson
- was slated to make a deposition in the civil suit on Jan. 18.
- The star's lawyers faced three unsavory options: let Michael
- talk and possibly strengthen the prosecution's case against
- him; have him take the Fifth Amendment and a severe public relations
- hit; or pay the king's ransom. All Feldman had to do was let
- the clock tick and the meter run up. Sure enough, Jackson's
- team got the deposition postponed for a week, by which time
- negotiations for a settlement were well advanced. Now that the
- deal has been approved, he won't have to testify at all. Jackson
- settled, Feldman believes, because "his business people made
- a judgment call." What he surely means is, Better to be judged
- guilty in the court of public opinion than in a court of law.
- </p>
- <p> Now Feldman and his client are a wealthy man and boy. The attorney's
- contingency fee could be in the $5 million to $15 million range,
- and he would be worth it, considering that according to Pellicano,
- $20 million was the amount demanded by the boy's father last
- year. The trust will ensure that not all the millions end up
- in the parents' pockets. But how much will the megarich star
- be left with? Reportedly, Cochran has asked TIG Insurance, the
- Transamerica subsidiary that holds Jackson's personal-liability
- policy, to cover the settlement.
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps Jackson, who has been accused of impropriety by no other
- boy in these five months of glaring publicity, can revive his
- charisma and career. "Michael's state of mind is good," Cochran
- says. "He'll be back in the recording studio soon." He will
- also participate in NBC's The Jackson Family Honors show on
- Feb. 21--an event that could lure more rubberneckers than
- a Tonya Harding free skate in the Olympics.
- </p>
- <p> Jackson has always seemed emotionally bewildered, adrift in
- a toy boat on a roiling sea outside Neverland. His accuser wins
- sympathy, but he earns pity. If he never goes to jail, he still
- seems condemned to solitary confinement in his own bizarre Eden.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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