Jacko: Don't Call Accuser 'Victim'

staffrodore

New Member
Lawyers for Michael Jackson have asked a judge in his child molestation case to bar prosecutors from referring to his young accuser or the boy's family as "victims" in front of a jury, saying that it violates the pop star's right to a fair trial.

Jackson's attorneys also want Santa Barbara County District Attorney Tom Sneddon and his deputies prevented from telling jurors that they represent "the people," for the same reason when trial begins on Jan. 31.

"The issue for the jury to decide is whether the complaining witnesses are 'victims' (the District Attorney's theory) or whether the complaining witnesses are lying and/or mistaken (the defense theory)," Jackson's lawyers wrote in a nine-page motion made public on Wednesday.

"The prosecution, court personnel and the state's witnesses should not be allowed to characterize the complaining witnesses as 'victims' before the jury has had a chance to decide the ultimate question of whether they are victims."

Lawyers for Kobe Bryant won a similar motion in his rape case last summer before charges against the Los Angeles Lakers star were dropped.

Meanwhile, Santa Barbara Superior Court Judge Rodney Melville has granted the 46-year-old entertainer permission to make a televised statement to Fox News about the case in response to leaks of potentially damaging grand jury testimony given by his teen-age accuser.

However, a Fox News spokeswoman said executives for the News Corp.-owned cable TV network had not yet reviewed Jackson's prepared statement and an accompanying interview he gave to reporter Geraldo Rivera and that no decision had been made as to when and how the material would be aired.

A source said the interview dealt with Jackson's "personal life and family relationships" and not the criminal case.

ABC's Primetime Live program last week carried a report on the Jackson case that included verbatim grand jury quotes from Jackson's teen-age accuser describing Jackson masturbating him when the boy was 13 years old.

All grand jury testimony leading to Jackson's indictment was sealed by Melville, who has imposed nearly unprecedented secrecy in the case in what he said was a necessary move to protect the singer's right to a fair trial.

A court official and Jackson's lead defense lawyer, Tom Mesereau, declined comment.

Jackson has been indicted on 10 counts of child molestation and conspiracy stemming from accusations leveled against him by a now 15-year-old cancer survivor, who appeared with Jackson in a 2003 TV documentary by British journalist Martin Bashir.

Bashir filed a motion on Wednesday asking the judge to bar prosecutors from calling him as a witness in the trial. He cited California's "shield law" protecting journalists from being compelled to testify about their news sources.


:rofl: He's guilty and they are victims
 

Gonz

molṑn labé
Staff member
I must sadly agree with his attorneys. Until the molester is found guilty, they're alleged victims.
 

Inkara1

Well-Known Member
Fair's fair; we need a source for the story. I'm guessing Fox, but I'm not 100 percent sure.
 

abooja

Well-Known Member
Here's one source.

So, this child molesting freak's lawyers are going to try to change centuries of American judicial custom by preventing the prosecution from saying that they represent "the people" when, in fact, they do? He can kiss my ass. (Though I know he wouldn't want to. Wrong sex, wrong age.)
 
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