No se muy bien que dice de la madre de Gavin que fue en en silla de ruedas a un juicio en 2001 ¿? imagino que seria algun teatro por su parte o algo asi...
Pero lo mas relevante es que dice que el padre de Gavin, y su abogado H. Russell Halpern testificaron ante el Gran jurado del cado Jackson.
Source: Jacko accuser's mom uses court props
Roger Friedman, 30 de Abril de 2004
Expect no more than 150 Michael Jackson fans today at the Santa Maria courthouse. Only three buses have been arranged for, I am told, a very small showing for the King of Pop.
Everyone in the Jackson camp is hoping for a much calmer scene today than the one two months ago. No dancing on limos. No Nation of
Islam bodyguards. Fans — even small numbers — will remain behind barricades.
Meanwhile, I've recently learned that the father of the 14-year-old boy at the center of the case and his attorney, H. Russell Halpern, testified before the grand jury that indicted Jackson. Before Judge Rodney Melville issued his gag order to all participants, the father reportedly questioned his ex-wife's veracity on subjects ranging from their divorce to the family's involvement with Jackson.
In one instance, at a family court appearance in 2001 concerning her divorce, I am told that the boy's mother arrived and remained in a wheelchair — much the same way TV characters wear fake neck braces and splints on sitcoms.
"No one could figure it out," a source tells me. "There was nothing wrong with her."
Pero lo mas relevante es que dice que el padre de Gavin, y su abogado H. Russell Halpern testificaron ante el Gran jurado del cado Jackson.
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Source: Jacko accuser's mom uses court props
Roger Friedman, 30 de Abril de 2004
Expect no more than 150 Michael Jackson fans today at the Santa Maria courthouse. Only three buses have been arranged for, I am told, a very small showing for the King of Pop.
Everyone in the Jackson camp is hoping for a much calmer scene today than the one two months ago. No dancing on limos. No Nation of
Islam bodyguards. Fans — even small numbers — will remain behind barricades.
Meanwhile, I've recently learned that the father of the 14-year-old boy at the center of the case and his attorney, H. Russell Halpern, testified before the grand jury that indicted Jackson. Before Judge Rodney Melville issued his gag order to all participants, the father reportedly questioned his ex-wife's veracity on subjects ranging from their divorce to the family's involvement with Jackson.
In one instance, at a family court appearance in 2001 concerning her divorce, I am told that the boy's mother arrived and remained in a wheelchair — much the same way TV characters wear fake neck braces and splints on sitcoms.
"No one could figure it out," a source tells me. "There was nothing wrong with her."
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