STYLETHREAD -- LET'S TALK SHOP!

Members Login
Username 
 
Password 
    Remember Me  
Post Info TOPIC: The Michael Jackson jury is back!


Marc Jacobs

Status: Offline
Posts: 2353
Date:
The Michael Jackson jury is back!
Permalink Closed


Wow - I am on the edge of my seat!!  If he is found guilty I know that he will not survive prison.

__________________

"Whatever you are, be a good one." --Abraham Lincoln



Marc Jacobs

Status: Offline
Posts: 2117
Date:
Permalink Closed

absolutely -- if he goes to regular prison he won't survive long.  right now i am tuned in to live radio from the associated press through the new york times website...it says the verdict will be announced at 4:45.



__________________
http://fugitiveduck.blogspot.com/


Marc Jacobs

Status: Offline
Posts: 2232
Date:
Permalink Closed

Farrah wrote:


Wow - I am on the edge of my seat!!  If he is found guilty I know that he will not survive prison.


especially if he's in prison with charlie manson.  apparently, they will be in the same place.  wow.



__________________
I feel sorry for people who don't drink. When they wake up in the morning, that's as good as they're going to feel all day. -Frank Sinatra


Hermes

Status: Offline
Posts: 6944
Date:
Permalink Closed

10 mins. until we know the verdict!  If he is convicted, which I don't know if I think he will be, he's not going to go to a regular prision.  He'd go somewhere he's protected from other prisoners.

__________________


Marc Jacobs

Status: Offline
Posts: 2117
Date:
Permalink Closed

shopchicago33 wrote:


10 mins. until we know the verdict!  If he is convicted, which I don't know if I think he will be, he's not going to go to a regular prision.  He'd go somewhere he's protected from other prisoners.


good point -- the authorities would know he'd be at such high risk to be incarcerated at a regular place.  i kind of expect him to be acquitted, although i think he's guilty.



__________________
http://fugitiveduck.blogspot.com/


Chanel

Status: Offline
Posts: 3388
Date:
Permalink Closed

Geez they are taking forever!!


 


Not guilty of conspiracy; Not guilty lewd act upon a child (and again for count 3, 4, 5, 6); not guilty for administering intoxicating agent to assist in commission of a felony (and again for count 8, 9, 10); not guilty of providing alcoholic beverages to a child (and again in count 8, 9, 10)


So, not guilty of anything?



-- Edited by theotherjess at 17:18, 2005-06-13

__________________
Bad taste is like a nice dash of paprika. We all could use more of it. It's no taste I'm against. -Diana Vreeland


Marc Jacobs

Status: Offline
Posts: 2053
Date:
Permalink Closed

He was acquited!


ETA:  not guilty on all counts!



-- Edited by esquiress at 17:17, 2005-06-13

__________________


Gucci

Status: Offline
Posts: 2744
Date:
Permalink Closed

NOT GUILTY! I can not believe it.. so disappointed!

__________________
-jocey-


Marc Jacobs

Status: Offline
Posts: 2353
Date:
Permalink Closed


JoceyBaby23 wrote:


NOT GUILTY! I can not believe it.. so disappointed!


Honestly I think he was not guilty in this case, but he has definitely commited these crimes before.  I really think he is very sick in the head and he needs a lot of help.  In this case I think it was some shady people crying wolf.  They tried to get Jay Leno and Chris Tucker to give them money too.  It is really too bad that there are people out there that exploit their children for monetary gains.



__________________

"Whatever you are, be a good one." --Abraham Lincoln



Dooney & Bourke

Status: Offline
Posts: 896
Date:
Permalink Closed

wow.  another celebrity acquitted.  somehow i'm not surprised....

__________________


Chanel

Status: Offline
Posts: 3257
Date:
Permalink Closed


Farrah wrote:


JoceyBaby23 wrote:
NOT GUILTY! I can not believe it.. so disappointed!

Honestly I think he was not guilty in this case, but he has definitely commited these crimes before.  I really think he is very sick in the head and he needs a lot of help.  In this case I think it was some shady people crying wolf.  They tried to get Jay Leno and Chris Tucker to give them money too.  It is really too bad that there are people out there that exploit their children for monetary gains.




I totally agree with everything you said!

__________________


Hermes

Status: Offline
Posts: 6944
Date:
Permalink Closed

Farrah wrote:


JoceyBaby23 wrote: NOT GUILTY! I can not believe it.. so disappointed! Honestly I think he was not guilty in this case, but he has definitely commited these crimes before.  I really think he is very sick in the head and he needs a lot of help.  In this case I think it was some shady people crying wolf.  They tried to get Jay Leno and Chris Tucker to give them money too.  It is really too bad that there are people out there that exploit their children for monetary gains.

I totally agree w/everything you said Farrah.  What's scary is that now, he won't get any mental help and will probably still try to have young boys over to his house.  Hopefully, no parent will be crazy enough to let that happen.

__________________


Marc Jacobs

Status: Offline
Posts: 2053
Date:
Permalink Closed

i hadn't really been following the case but somehow got caught up in it the last couple of days.  so from my limited knowledge here're my two cents:  i think he is severely severely severely disturbed.  and imo, he probably did molest this little boy as well as others but because this little boy's parents seemed like such dishonest people, that created enough reasonable doubt to get him off.  what's scary is that he has kids of his own!  i so hope they somehow manage to grow up unscathed...



__________________


Chanel

Status: Offline
Posts: 4658
Date:
Permalink Closed

I totally agree w/Farrah.


O.J Simpson,Michael Jackson free, whos freakin next?!!!!!


I think the boys mom screwed the case up for them. maybe the boy was lying, who knows, but we know for sure the mom was crazy.maybe MJ didn't do anything to this boy, but I'm sure he's done it to others, too bad.........



__________________



Hermes

Status: Offline
Posts: 5600
Date:
Permalink Closed

I know we have a jury system, I know it's innocent until proven guilty, but the very first thing I thought was "what about the next boy - will he have to DIE?" I mean, obviously things are going on in that house that are inappropriate. And he keeps getting away with it, there are no consequences. What has to happen for this to not be ok? I know the people may be crooked, I know it's "reasonable doubt", but I also know that if parents let them, there will be new young boys in that house before the week is out & DAMN - don't we have some kind of responsibility to protect children? I just hope nothing even more awful happens. That's just my gut feeling, no reason other than woman's intuition which I trust with all my being.

__________________
Who do you have to probe around here to get a Chardonnay? - Roger the Alien from American Dad


Gucci

Status: Offline
Posts: 2744
Date:
Permalink Closed

esquiress wrote:


i hadn't really been following the case but somehow got caught up in it the last couple of days.  so from my limited knowledge here're my two cents:  i think he is severely severely severely disturbed.  and imo, he probably did molest this little boy as well as others but because this little boy's parents seemed like such dishonest people, that created enough reasonable doubt to get him off.  what's scary is that he has kids of his own!  i so hope they somehow manage to grow up unscathed...

I agree with you!

__________________
-jocey-


Marc Jacobs

Status: Offline
Posts: 2117
Date:
Permalink Closed

i was just reading the account of the acquittal on the NY times website and it sounded as though the jurors were swayed by a strong dislike of the mother.  i didn't follow the case really closely, but apparently she was combative with the lawyers and lectured the jury while she was on the stand, and even snapped her fingers at them.


i just hope people keep their kids away from him now, and also that his own kids escape abuse.  this is so disappointing.



__________________
http://fugitiveduck.blogspot.com/


Gucci

Status: Offline
Posts: 2818
Date:
Permalink Closed

slate had a pretty interesting analysis  of the trial http://slate.msn.com/id/2120812/fr/rss/


Since the early 1990s, Santa Barbara, Calif., cops and prosecutors have viewed Michael Jackson not as Peter Pan, but as the wolf in "Little Red Riding Hood" (only this time he likes boys). Two kids have come forward before to accuse Jackson of molesting them, taken multimillion-dollar settlements from the star, and then refused to cooperate. Now the state has blown its chances of nailing him on charges of molesting a third boy, who said that two years ago, when he was 13, Jackson fondled him four or five times. Maybe the jury acquitted Jackson on all counts because the cops got it wrong. Or maybe the problem is that any family crazy enough to get intimately entangled with Jackson—and intimate the relationships are, sex or no sex—is too crazy to be believed, at least beyond a reasonable doubt.


Two different narratives emerged from the Jackson trial. The prosecution's story was that Jackson finds vulnerable families, often headed by single mothers, with whom he enters into an implicit bargain: Give me your son to sleep with (and fondle), and I'll buy you a Cartier bracelet, take you to the Caribbean, and (in one instance) put you on my payroll. In the defense's version, the gold-digging families seek out Jackson, and the bargain is an innocent one: Michael embraces your family as his own, which, no big deal, means letting your son share a bed with him. "I'm your daddy," Jackson wrote to the boy accusing him in a note read at the trial. "I'm very happy to be your daddy. Blanket, Prince Michael Jr., and Paris are your brothers and sister. Love, your daddy." This characterization of Jackson as playful father to a rotating series of Lost Boys wasn't entirely implausible, as my colleague Seth Stevenson has argued. It was also what defense lawyers had to work with, given that Jackson had talked about sharing his bed with young boys in the 2003 documentary Living With Michael Jackson that rekindled the interest of Santa Barbara police and social workers.


Juries are often willing to cut kids slack when they testify about being sexually abused. Jackson's accuser, now 15, wasn't great on the stand. On cross-examination, he couldn't remember when exactly the alleged fondlings took place. But he performed better in his initial interview with police investigators, a video of which the prosecution played at the close of the trial. In the video's most compelling moment, he asked the cops not to tell his mother what had happened, undermining the defense team's claim that she'd put him up to making false allegations and then coached him.


Still, to buy the prosecution's whole case, jurors didn't just have to believe the boy. They also had to believe his mother, because she was the key to the charge that the family had been imprisoned at Neverland. And once the mother took the stand, the family's grifter past was hung out in all its tawdriness. The jury heard testimony that she'd lied about being beaten and groped at J.C. Penney to wring a $152,000 settlement out of the store (after shoplifting there); hid the settlement from state social workers so she could collect welfare checks; and then helped her husband try to shake down various celebrities for cash once their son was diagnosed with cancer at age 10. "Don't judge me—please don't judge me!" she cried while testifying that she saw Jackson lick her son's head on a plane flight but did nothing about it. But it was hard not to, as Judith Shulevitz has pointed out, and at the same time not so hard to imagine that this family could have snared Jackson, rather than the other way around, in order to win a big settlement like that of his two previous accusers.


The prosecution's biggest apparent weapon may have only served to hone the grifter image. In 1995, Jackson was on the mind of one of the drafters of a new California law that made it one of about a dozen states to allow the admittance of evidence of past sex offenses in a sex-crime trial. The law cuts against decades of common law that bars jurors from hearing testimony about past bad acts, for fear that it will be too prejudicial. In 1999, the California Supreme Court upheld the law in a case in which a defendant accused of attempted sodomy had pled guilty to two past rapes. The "evidence" that Jackson had previously molested kids had never led to a conviction or plea, but Judge Rodney S. Melville of Santa Barbara Superior Court let it in anyway.


All of which is a terrible idea, if you care about protecting a defendant's right to a fair trial. But in Jackson's case, it may have redounded to his benefit. The former employees and complicit mothers who trooped in to regale the jury with stories of Jackson's past indiscretions—neon-green Spider-Man underwear on the floor outside the shower next to Jackson's white briefs, Jackson with his hands down Macaulay Culkin's shorts—were all easily portrayed by the defense as gold-diggers themselves. There was the chef who asked the tabloids to pay him $500,000 for the Culkin story and the maid who accepted $2 million from Jackson after bringing her son to him. Two of the former employees who testified had participated in a wrongful-termination suit against Jackson that ended with a $1.4 million judgment—against the employees for legal fees. These witnesses made Jackson look unsavory, but they also may have made the jury suspect the whole Jackson-trashing enterprise. Once one tattler gets paid off for his kinky Michael story, why not try to join him?


To be sure, it's an odd pact that Jackson makes with his favorites-of-the-moment. This may be the only child sex-crime case in which the defense put on a witness who described arriving at the alleged perpetrator's home in the middle of the night and sending her young son straight to bed with the accused molester. But before you get too exercised about the unpunished depravity that all this suggests, remember that this isn't a case of sex offenders getting off and roaming around, free to strike unawares. It's a case about Michael Jackson getting off and roaming around, free to strike only because a few parents hand over their kids to him. "And who could possibly believe this?" the mother of the accuser asked at the trial, recounting how Jackson's assistants threatened to kill her boyfriends and her parents if she left Neverland. No one, really, especially if her question were turned inward.



__________________
www.musingsfromamall.com  (my main blog)
http://musingsfromamallinreallife.wordpress.com/ (my personal style blog)


Coach

Status: Offline
Posts: 1915
Date:
Permalink Closed

I was just lisetening to the song "Ben". I love that song. The whole thing makes me sad- guilty or not.

__________________
I don’t want no part of your tight-ass country-club, you freak bitch!


Hermes

Status: Offline
Posts: 6944
Date:
Permalink Closed

Well, on a positive note, I just read in the Chicago Tribune newspaper that Michael has vowed not to share his bed w/young boys anymore.  His attorney made a statement saying that. 

__________________
1 2  >  Last»  | Page of 2  sorted by
 
Quick Reply

Please log in to post quick replies.

Tweet this page Post to Digg Post to Del.icio.us


Create your own FREE Forum
Report Abuse
Powered by ActiveBoard