By Kyle Smith
Monday, January 28, 2019
It has been apparent since the mid 1990s that Michael
Jackson was a child molester. A great entertainer, yes, but almost certainly a
serial abuser of little boys. That his attorneys managed to cast doubt on
witnesses in a notorious 2005 criminal trial doesn’t inspire much confidence.
As was the case with Bill Cosby, the pattern of grotesque allegations has
become impossible to ignore.
Wade Robson, 36, and James Safechuck, 40, have previously
stated under oath that they weren’t victimized by Jackson when they were
children. They are now saying their previous testimony was untrue and that it
resulted from direct pressure by Jackson himself, who told them that he and
they would be jailed if he should be convicted of sexual abuse. “I want to
speak the truth as loud as I spoke the lie,” Robson says in the four-hour
documentary Leaving Neverland, which
has just premiered at the Sundance Film Festival ahead of being broadcast on
HBO later this year. In the film, he and Safechuck tell their stories in
gruesome, indeed sickening, detail. (A statement from the Jackson estate
dismissed the allegations as uncorroborated “tabloid character assassination.”)
I haven’t yet seen Leaving
Neverland, but those who have report that the film paints a damning
picture. Safechuck was a child actor who says he met Jackson at age ten while
filming a Pepsi commercial. Starting when he was eleven, he says, they engaged
in sex acts many times at Jackson’s Neverland compound — in a castle, in an
attic, in a pool, in a train station. Safechuck says the pop singer used to
hold drills in which he would train the boy in putting his clothes on quickly
in case any witnesses should appear. Jackson also told him that “if anyone ever
found out that we were doing these sexual things, we would go to jail for the
rest of our lives.” “I was terrified.” When Safechuck was 14, he says, Jackson
staged a mock wedding with him, complete with vows and a diamond-encrusted
wedding ring.
Robson, a Brisbane-born dancer who grew up to be a
choreographer for Britney Spears and others, says he also met Jackson in 1987,
when he was just five and performed in a dance contest that led to him meeting
the singer during the Bad tour in
Australia. When he moved to Los Angeles, the pair had sexual contact starting
while he was seven, he claims. Jackson advised the boy to throw away his
underwear after the first sexual encounter, Robson says. Jackson, who would
marry Lisa Marie Presley in 1994, said his ostensibly heterosexual
relationships with women were purely a public-relations exercise. This too was
obvious to all at the time.
Why did the parents allow their children to spend so much
time alone with Jackson? The film “captures how the parents found themselves
under the spell, and the Mob-like pushiness, of Michael’s celebrity,” wrote
Owen Gleiberman in Variety. “They
thought he was creating opportunities for their children that might otherwise
be taken away. And once inside their homes, he seemed the soul of gentleness.”
Robson and Safechuck filed civil suits against the estate
of Jackson in 2013 and 2014. Both cases were thrown out for technical reasons;
there was no ruling on the merits of their claims. The stories they tell are of
a piece with other stories we’ve been hearing about for a quarter of a century.
In 1993, the father of a 13-year-old boy named Jordy Chandler accused Jackson
of engaging in sexual acts with the boy. The criminal case was closed for lack
of evidence, but Jackson agreed to pay out a sum reported by Court TV to be
nearly $25 million. In 2004–05, Jackson was accused in an 18-month trial of
molesting and otherwise abusing Gavin Arizo, a 13-year-old boy. Jackson was
acquitted of all charges, but the evidence that emerged was disturbing. Several
adults claimed to have witnessed acts of molestation, but Jackson’s lawyers
were able to raise reasonable doubts about their credibility for various
reasons. Some were disgruntled former employees; some had previously testified
that they had seen nothing.
To some extent, we as a society have set aside the many
horrific and entirely credible claims against Jackson simply because we want
them not to be true; for the same reason, Bill Cosby got a pass for a
surprisingly long time. Jackson’s unfortunate early demise, his apparent
closeted homosexuality, and his wounded, childlike nature have made fans
fiercely protective of him, with the media largely sidestepping the issue since
he died in 2009. What punishment can be visited upon him posthumously? Should
he be erased from the culture the way Cosby has been? Should radio stations and
deejays stop playing his many great records the way broadcasters have stopped
airing The Cosby Show? I’m not sure
they should. But the label of serial child molester must be forever attached to
Michael Jackson’s name. It should be reiterated constantly like an
anti-honorific, the way we take care to refer to President Carter or General
MacArthur.
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