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The mother of the boy who's currently accusing Michael Jackson of child molestation got her small screen time this week. Someone — I can't imagine who — leaked her police interview tape to the new syndicated entertainment sideshow, "The Insider."
Last night the mother claimed that her own son shot her with a BB gun because he was so unhappy she was breaking up the relationship with Jackson. She also claimed that she feared her children would be taken away from her by Jackson's people, that she was being forced to go to a part of Brazil where "there are no hotels and no Americans." The show also implied that the boy, who's suffered from cancer, was not in remission at that time.
A real insider who knows exactly what happened to the mother and her children says her claims are "crazy" and he can prove it. He's willing to testify in January when the case is supposed to go forward. He will be watching today when the mother takes the stand in Santa Maria, California at a hearing to determine whether or not she understood private detective Brad Miller worked for then Jackson defense attorney Mark Geragos. (My insider says she most definitely did. "She said, Those people who work for Geragos are bad people.")
My source was shocked when he heard the police interview. "The boy was by no means gay, and if he was really so traumatized and molested, wouldn't he want get out of the relationship? Instead of shooting his mother? There are no guns at Neverland, anyway. No BB guns certainly. I was with them all the time and I've never heard of it."
As far as the infamous trip to Brazil goes, my source says Jackson's people planned to put the mother and family up at a condo on the beach in Brazil twenty minutes outside of Rio de Janeiro. The mother, my source points out, wouldn't have agreed to go anywhere "without stores." "She loved to take advantage of shopping with Michael's money," my source said. "She did it all the time." Furthermore, the mother's boyfriend, now her fiancee and father of her fourth child, would not have let Jackson's people "kidnap" her. "He's a U.S. Army major," my source points out.
There will be testimony about a scene the mother made in the U.S. passport office when she didn't think she was getting priority treatment as a celebrity. "Do you know who I am?" she asked the clerks.
Frank Tyson and Vinnie Amen, two Jackson employees believed to be unnamed co-conspirators in the case, could not be reached.
As my source points out, the trip to Brazil never even happened in the long run. "By the time they were going to go, all the press had died down. They didn't want to go anymore and it wasn't worth it. It's not like authorities had to be called in to stop the trip. They just didn't want to go."
The source, who was privy to all the machinations during February and March 2003 involving Jackson and this family also says that during that time the boy — who has been painted by the prosecution as frail and sick — was, luckily, in remission and quite healthy.
"He ran around and played and was not tired at Neverland," the source says. The public's view of the boy, when he was possibly still sick, was filmed six months earlier than the charges filed against Jackson.
Last night the mother claimed that her own son shot her with a BB gun because he was so unhappy she was breaking up the relationship with Jackson. She also claimed that she feared her children would be taken away from her by Jackson's people, that she was being forced to go to a part of Brazil where "there are no hotels and no Americans." The show also implied that the boy, who's suffered from cancer, was not in remission at that time.
A real insider who knows exactly what happened to the mother and her children says her claims are "crazy" and he can prove it. He's willing to testify in January when the case is supposed to go forward. He will be watching today when the mother takes the stand in Santa Maria, California at a hearing to determine whether or not she understood private detective Brad Miller worked for then Jackson defense attorney Mark Geragos. (My insider says she most definitely did. "She said, Those people who work for Geragos are bad people.")
My source was shocked when he heard the police interview. "The boy was by no means gay, and if he was really so traumatized and molested, wouldn't he want get out of the relationship? Instead of shooting his mother? There are no guns at Neverland, anyway. No BB guns certainly. I was with them all the time and I've never heard of it."
As far as the infamous trip to Brazil goes, my source says Jackson's people planned to put the mother and family up at a condo on the beach in Brazil twenty minutes outside of Rio de Janeiro. The mother, my source points out, wouldn't have agreed to go anywhere "without stores." "She loved to take advantage of shopping with Michael's money," my source said. "She did it all the time." Furthermore, the mother's boyfriend, now her fiancee and father of her fourth child, would not have let Jackson's people "kidnap" her. "He's a U.S. Army major," my source points out.
There will be testimony about a scene the mother made in the U.S. passport office when she didn't think she was getting priority treatment as a celebrity. "Do you know who I am?" she asked the clerks.
Frank Tyson and Vinnie Amen, two Jackson employees believed to be unnamed co-conspirators in the case, could not be reached.
As my source points out, the trip to Brazil never even happened in the long run. "By the time they were going to go, all the press had died down. They didn't want to go anymore and it wasn't worth it. It's not like authorities had to be called in to stop the trip. They just didn't want to go."
The source, who was privy to all the machinations during February and March 2003 involving Jackson and this family also says that during that time the boy — who has been painted by the prosecution as frail and sick — was, luckily, in remission and quite healthy.
"He ran around and played and was not tired at Neverland," the source says. The public's view of the boy, when he was possibly still sick, was filmed six months earlier than the charges filed against Jackson.
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