A wonderful, well researched blog.
https://vindicatemj.wordpress.com/2021/ ... he-estate/
Michael Jackson and his foes: TWO MAJOR WINS BY THE ESTATE
JUNE 20, 2021
tags: $1.5 billion, Anthony Pellicano, David Geffen, deposition, Estate, Howard Weitzman, IRS, James Safechuck, John Branca, taxes, Wade Robson
by Vindicatemj (Helena)
Resuming writing for this blog after a long hiatus is not easy, but I will nevertheless try. And the first question I ask myself 12 years after Michael Jackson’s death is where we are now as to his legacy and his name?
Judging by the comments here and there, only the inquisitive managed to go beyond the superficial propaganda of that fantasy piece called “Leaving Neverland” and the tall tales told by the media. This does not surprise me because most of the mainstream media has turned into fake news delivering sheer propaganda, and unfortunately the public tends to swallow it uncritically.
And this is no surprise either as millions have proven themselves unable to interpret facts correctly even when flatly facing them and even in much easier cases than the intricate scam around Michael Jackson.
At first the media tested their massive fakes on the poor Jackson and then continued with everything else playing people for fools, alas.
An example of the media duping the public is the way they reported on Anthony Pellicano’s release from prison in March 2019.
DEPOSITIONS
I mention his name because the recent MJ Estate memorandum asking Wade Robson to pay around $113,000 in legal costs now that he lost his civil case against the Estate, listed two Pellicano’s depositions taken in August 2020, which sounds to me as a sheer sensation.
A quick reminder of Pellicano’s role in MJ’s life: he was hired by Michael Jackson’s lawyer Bert Fields to investigate the Chandlers’ case in 1993 and agreed to handle it only after warning Michael that he’d better not be guilty or he, being a father of nine children, would “fuck him over”:
Pellicano reveals that when he agreed to work for Jackson during the star’s 1993 child-molestation case, he warned Jackson that he’d better not be guilty.
“I said, ‘You don’t have to worry about cops or lawyers. If I find out anything, I will f–k you over.”
We know that Pellicano didn’t “f—k him over” because he didn’t find a single proof of Michael Jackson’s guilt. Since then Pellicano has never said a negative word about Michael, even when a tabloid offered him half a million to lie about Jackson.
However when reporting Pellicano’s release after he served 16 years in a federal prison on wiretapping charges, every media outlet thought it necessary to reshuffle the old fakes that Pellicano quit “in disgust” when he allegedly found some “dark secrets about MJ” and mentioned that Michael did “far worse things to young boys than molest them”.
A sample of it:
“He was disgusted by truths even darker than those alleged in Jackson’s molestation scandal. “I was offered $500,000 to tell the whole story by a tabloid, and I declined, even though, while incarcerated, I needed the money.”
[the Hollywood Reporter]
Well, the dark truths Pellicano did find, only they were not about Michael Jackson, but about the Chandlers family and this is how it was originally reported by the Daily Beast in 2011 in a chart which is now certainly defunct because it mentions damning information about the accuser’s family:
As to things “far worse than molestation” it is possible that Pellicano did say it, only it is obviously a figure of speech and anyone with a little bit of brains realizes that he didn’t mean murder (the only thing that is worse) but something different – probably the fact that these youngsters were first taken to the top of the world where they basked in the reflection of Michael’s fame, and then felt inevitably frustrated when they had to return to their routine life. So when other youngsters were only stepping into life in anticipation of all the good awaiting them, those few had to live with a feeling that their best times were over and the future held nothing comparable to their brilliant moments beside Jackson – no more royalty and Hollywood stars to meet …….what a frustration!
And Pellicano did indeed quit the 1993 case and probably even ‘in disgust’, but this was done in solidarity with his boss Bert Fields, who was dismissed and replaced by Johnny Cochran, and any negative feeling Pellicano might harbor was not for Jackson, but for the opportunistic ways of Johnny Cochran and his team, of which his Carl Douglas is an example.
In other words, it is an established fact that Anthony Pellicano was completely, totally and absolutely sure of Michael’s innocence and this is why he wanted the Chandler case to be tried in the court of law. Actually Michael himself insisted on a trial (only imagine insisting on your own trial!), however Cochran was inclined to settle the case from the very moment he was retained. The OJ Simpson trial was looming ahead, so Cochran didn’t focus too much on Jackson. And he was also so much awestruck by Larry Feldman, the Chandlers’ lawyer, that as soon as the Chandler’s case was over, he hired him as his own attorney – all of which was of course disgusting to Pellicano who is known for a rare and exceptionally strict personal code of honor.
This is the real truth about Anthony Pellicano’s take on Michael Jackson. It has been discussed in this blog many times over and is backed up by numerous sources. So when the current media perpetuate lies about Pellicano and MJ, it means that the media propagandists lie about them knowingly, and this alone testifies to their nefarious goals.
One day we will probably have access to the transcripts of Anthony Pellicano’s depositions in Robson’s case and I genuinely look forward to that day.
So if we go back to the question “where we are” at the moment the answer is that on the surface everything is the way it used to be – the media goes on lying, and the lazy and the infantile swallow the toxic stuff spoonfed to them by the official propaganda.
A disgusting sight.
But none of these people notice that the actual environment around Michael Jackson has drastically changed and it happened due to two major wins made by MJ’s Estate in the past few months.
Only those who are masterminding this massive anti-Michael campaign surely took notice of their failures and must be furious at their plan falling flat in its key elements. As to the smearing campaign against Jackson being orchestrated by someone from behind the scenes, this fact cannot be even disputed.
TWO MAJOR WINS
The first massive win is the recent MJ Estate’s victory over the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) which claimed back in 2013 that the Estate owed them $702,000,000 in underpaid taxes. The ludicrous claim forced the Estate to petition the US Tax Court and litigate the case in which they prevailed. The Tax Court judge leaned towards the Estate’s valuation of Michael Jackson’s assets, so the sum to be paid by the Estate after the court’s ruling this May should be no more than $50 mln, which is a fraction as compared to the initial IRS demands.
And the second major win is the recent dismissal by the US Superior Court of Wade Robson’s case against Michael Jackson’s companies as having no merit and not deserving of a trial. I place this event second because to me it is indeed secondary to the IRS case.
Though seemingly different I see the two cases as absolutely interconnected as both pursue the same goal – that of ruining the MJ Estate. In my opinion the financial factor was the crux of both matters, and even Robson’s complaint was meant not only to shred Michael Jackson’s reputation into pieces and enrich the accuser beyond measure, but to also rob the Estate of everything they had.
And I do mean everything as the creditor’s claim filed by Robson’s lawyers with the probate court was reportedly for 1.62 bln Australian dollars (the equivalent of 1.5bln in US dollars). This news was first published in the Australian media, hence the difference in the sum.
Up to today the notorius filmmaker Dan Reed goes around telling the gullible public some nonsense about Robson and Safechuck not seeking any money at all, let alone $1.5 bln. – as they allegedly “just wanted their experience of abuse put on the court record”. If you listen to him any money award in the civil court is just an unintended consequence of litigation
To be fair to the sceptics, the sum of $1.5 billion claimed by Robson was indeed so stunning that even Michael Jackson’s fans didn’t believe it, thinking it to be a mistake and that Robson’s demands were confused with the gross amount of everything the Estate had earned by that time ($600 mln) plus the cost of Michael’s share in the ATV catalog thought to be worth around $1bln then.
But it wasn’t a mistake, and I see no reason for doubt that Robson indeed demanded the sum of $1.5 billion.
When on May 1st, 2013 his legal papers for a late creditor complaint were filed with the probate court, everything was very much hush-hush on Robson’s part as the papers were filed under seal and his then lawyer Granstein even said that they did not ask for any specific amount of money, making it unclear why they filed the creditor’s claim at all.
But the sole purpose of a creditor’s claim is to demand a certain amount of money – see the special Judicial Council form DE-172 any such claim requires and taken by me from the official Judicial Council website.
Just one look at this standard form makes it clear that it is impossible to file a creditor’s claim without specifying the sum wanted by the claimant and this means that Robson’s lawyers lied.
A little later Robson filed a civil lawsuit against the Estate and its companies MJJ Productions and MJJ Ventures, which were named “co-conspirators” responsible for the alleged abuse. At some point the allegations were made public in their most graphic detail, and the huge sum demanded by Robson under the creditor’s claim seemed even instrumental in manifesting the gravity of the accusations.
It was at this point that the media reported that the creditor’s claim was for 1,62 billion Australian dollars:
The Estate’s lawyers did not comment as they discarded the allegations as rubbish from their very start, but occasionally they did mention that both Robson and Safechuck demanded hundreds of millions dollars in their lawsuits.
For example, five years later, on February 7, 2019 Howard Weitzman, attorney for the Jackson estate, wrote a 10-page letter to HBO chief executive Richard Plepler criticizing Leaving Neverland as journalistically unethical and this is where he wrote about the two guys’ demands in black and white:
“Given that they were both seeking hundreds of millions of dollars against the Estate, they had hundreds of millions of reasons for aligning their stories” [from Howard Weitzman’s letter to HBO, Feburary 7, 2019]
…contrary to Robson’s and Safechuck’s lawyers’ predictions when they first filed their lawsuits for hundreds of millions of dollars in 2013, no “flood” of further identifiable “victims” ever came forward beyond these two” [Howard Weitzman’s letter to HBO]
Also remember Robson’s note “It’s time to have mine” and the fact that he was infuriated that the job of directing Michael Jackson’s ONE went to Jamie King (as Cirque du Soleil and John Branca didn’t think him qualified enough for it)
Also remember the amount of money he wanted for his book that was so large that no publisher would accept it.
All these things testify to Robson’s enormous appetite for money and to his possible desire to take revenge on the Estate, though at his deposition he certainly “didn’t remember” any of it.
Q. BY MS. KLEINDIENST When I spoke to Mr. Nevins on the phone he volunteered to me that you had demanded a large amount of money for your book. Are you saying that he’s lying?
THE WITNESS: Tell me again what he said I said.
Q. That you were demanding a very large amount of money for your book.
A. Not true.
Q. The last sentence says, “It’s time for me to get mine!” Do you know what you meant by that?
A. I don’t.
To me there is no question that Robson did demand a huge sum and possibly even wanted everything the Estate had, which was thought to be around $1.5 bln at that time, and that he possibly even intended to plunge the Estate into a deep debt.
Actually making Michael Jackson penniless has been the most coveted goal of some people since the moment in early 90s when he made really powerful enemies in Hollywood and entertainment industry.
In other words, I regard Robson’s and Safechuck’s heinous lies not as something separate but as a part of a long and multi-faceted campaign aimed at turning Michael’s name and fortune into ashes and attempting to force the Estate into no less than bankruptcy.
You may wonder who on earth would be so intent on trying to deprive Michael and his Estate of all their money?
As to who is the most probable force behind orchestrating this never-ending anti-Michael Jackson campaign, there are several posts in this blog – here and here and here and here and here are only some of them.
The modus operandi of this person is always the same and is pursuing two goals simultaneously. These are 1) damaging the reputation of the designated victim beyond repair and 2) financial ruin of the victim so that nothing is left of his fortune but a pile of dust. Otherwise the revenge plans are not complete.
And the third notable feature of those plans is that they are always carried out by someone else.
The malice of this operator is legendary and there are numerous examples of his revenge taken on lots of other people, including Walter Yetnikoff, the long-time President of CBS Records under whose guidance Michael Jackson thrived, and Michael Ovitz, the one-time entertainment mogul who had the misfortune to be regarded by this person as an enemy and whose money and success were gone for the only reason that they had different views on family life. And many, many others.
In fact even Anthony Pellicano seems to have also fallen victim to this person’s campaign against Michael Ovitz (which his foe actually admitted). Pellicano was working for Ovitz when he was first sentenced for illegal possession of weapons that belonged to a client and were kept in his evidence safe:
“The FBI guys asked if there was anything in there that could hurt them,” he recalled of the raid.
“I opened the safes and left the lab, completely forgetting about the C-4 and two grenades that were locked in one of my evidence safes. Well, you can imagine the result of that.”
After serving the initial 30-months sentence for possessing those weapons and just weeks before his scheduled release Pellicano was charged with racketeering and wiretapping, and was sentenced to another 15 years in prison.
To see the severity of the sentence, compare it with a similar case of private investigator Ernie Rizzo who openly boasted of exactly the same methods, but was only stripped of his PI license and even went on working as an investigator after being sentenced to a “work-release program”. Incidentally Ernie Rizzo was also a one-time investigator for Evan Chandler and was Pellicano’s rival.
See how all these seemingly unrelated factors are actually tightened into one knot? Someone wanted to keep Pellicano behind bars until his dying day so that he didn’t tell the real truth about all the rope-pulling done by the powerful few, while the unsuspecting public is fed by the media with kindergarten fairy tales.
Getting back to the main point again let me make a conclusion after 12 years of studying the Michael Jackson case: the life-long smearing campaign of Michael and now his Estate is aimed not only at the irreparable damage to their reputation but also at their total and unconditional financial ruin.
This conclusion is also confirmed by the lurid claim made by the Internal Revenue Service right at the time when Wade Robson made his.
THE IRS CLAIM
An extremely interesting point about the IRS claim is not only its timing, which coincided with Robson’s claim almost to the day, but the fact that they also demanded from the Estate a crazy amount around a billion dollars.
According to Tax Court documents IRS wanted $505.1 million in taxes and $196.9 million in penalties plus the accrued interest. All of it totaled $702 million (plus the interest to be added to it).
At some point the IRS claim reached the unholy figure of $1.1 billion and this happened in the course of litigation when Michael’s image and likeness were adjusted upward by $434 million, one of his Trusts by $469 million and the other Trust by $58 million.
In case you are interested in details here is an excerpt from the Forbes article about the IRS whose figures were mostly rejected by the Tax Court judge in May this year:
Michael Jackson’s Estate Mostly Prevails In Valuation Fight With IRS
May 4, 2021
“Jackson died in 2009 and the Tax Court case has been going on since 2013. The Estate and the IRS narrowed their differences over the years leaving just three assets for Judge Holmes to value. There were two bankruptcy remote trusts NHT II and NHT III and Jackson’s likeness and image.
In the litigation the Estate valued the likeness and image at $3,078,000, The IRS had likeness and image at $161,307,045. Judge Holmes went with $4,153,912.
The estate, in Tax Court, argued that NHT II was worthless because of the debt it was buried under. [ ] Judge Holmes [ ] agreed with the estate that there was not enough value to overcome the debt. IRS had NHT II at $206,295,934.
The estate valued NHT III whose principal asset was an interest in a production company called Mijac jointly owned with Sony at $2,267,316. The IRS had NHT III at $114,263,615, Judge Holmes leaned toward the IRS on that one coming in at $107,313,561.
The notice of deficiency that prompted the petition that got the litigation rolling had much more dramatic adjustments. They totaled over $1.1 billion with image and likeness adjusted upward by $434 million, NHT II by $469 million and NHT III by $58 million. [ ]
In short, both IRS claim and Robson’s complaint demanded from the Estate the sums revolving around a billion dollars each.
And both came at a time when the Estate must have invested millions in their second Cirque du Soleil show (2013) called “ONE”, and devoted to Michael Jackson same as “IMMORTAL” that opened two years prior to that, in October 2011 (the Tax Court documents say that the ‘Immortal’ show was sponsored by Cirque du Soleil).
‘COINCIDENCES’
To see that something is not right about the various coincidences of that period look at the dates of the events that took place in the highly condensed spring of 2013.
February 21– the Estate of Michael Jackson and Cirque du Soleil announce that “Michael Jackson ONE” directed by Jamie King will start its preview performances on May 23, 2013 and have its official premiere on June 29, 2013.
March 21 – the judge dismisses AEG’s appeal and rules the trial to go ahead.
March 21 – Wade Robson puts his LA house up for sale for $789,000 and enjoys much luck with it as just a week later he sells it for $825,000 at a price higher than the asking price by $36,000.
April 30 – the AEG trial begins. The Estate is no party to the litigation as it is Katherine Jackson’s lawsuit against AEG Live. The media is having a field day with the sum of $40 bln allegedly demanded by Katherine Jackson. During the trial it turns out that the complaint itself never specifies any sums and that the above figure was taken from a draft of the lawyers’ statement that was not even filed with the court and was never seen by Katherine Jackson. The correct sum calculated and claimed by her lawyers was $1.5 bln.
April 30 – Robson’s lawyers sign his late creditor’s claim with a probate court, and it also amounts to the sum of $1.5 bln as discussed above. Following the usual practice the text of the complaint does not specify the sum wanted by Robson and only enumerates the type of damages he requests (“compensatory damages, punitive damages, an award of interest, an award of attorneys’ fees, the costs of suit and further relief the Court deems appropriate). The demand for $1,5 billion was stated only in the creditor’s claim which in Robson’s case was filed with the court.
May 7 – Robson’s allegations go public.
May 10 – Robson files a civil complaint against the Estate.
May 13 – the Internal Revenue Service sends the Estate a “Notice of Deficiency” disclosing the deficiency in the amount of $505,142,894 and intending to charge the additional $196,910,310 in penalties “plus interest to be computed at the legal rate on the amount due”. This happens four years after Michael Jackson’s passing.
May 16 – Wade Robson goes on national TV.
May 23 is the date of preview performances for the Michael Jackson “ONE” show, which was first announced at the end of February that year.
In other words, the spring of 2013 is virtually packed with all sorts of coincidences:
Robson puts up his house for sale on the day he learns that the AEG trial will go forward
his creditor’s claim is signed the same day as the AEG trial starts
Robson wants $1.5 billion from MJ’s Estate for the alleged abuse which he vehemently denied only 8 years earlier, same as Katherine Jackson wants $1.5 billion from the AEG for the death of her son
in the midst of it all the IRS sends a note of deficiency to the Estate claiming immediate payment of $702,000,000 plus interest in “underpaid taxes”
and all of it happens right before the premiere of the new Cirque du Soleil show in which the Estate has surely invested a lot of money.
Impressive, isn’t it?
I remember those events and my disbelief at the intensity of it all, when all those blows kept coming one after another. We can imagine that a similar feeling of a sudden avalanche of unimaginable money claims overwhelmed the Estate executors too.
Not only did the two complaints amount to the unheard of sum of a billion each, thus wiping away twice the sum the Estate had at that moment, but their timing right before the premiere was putting the show at a huge risk and threatened to deprive the Estate of the future earnings too…
The first impression of this avalanche was that it was a way for AEG Live to intimidate the Jackson family and divert public attention from their trial. However what restrained me from denouncing it as AEG’s foul play was that this company is no fool to expose itself so openly and the fact that both claims were targeted not at the Jackson family, but the Estate. Besides that the IRS claim also looked like something separate and coming from a seemingly independent US tax agency, so the whole picture was not yet clear.
But as the dust settled all those coincidences as well as the magnitude of those claims began to point to something different.
With AEG Live now gone from the scene, what stood out was Robson’s and Safechuck’s continuous legal saga financed year after year by we-don’t-know-who and the still ongoing IRS fight with the Estate for all the money they had.
On top of that came the ‘Leaving Neverland’ movie which was somehow obtained by no other than David Geffen for a private screening with Oprah Winfrey, done obviously for publicity sake and well in advance before the movie was shown to the general public.
Someone was definitely on a war path against MJ’s Estate so that it would lose all its past and future revenue due to the massive legal claims and bad publicity, same as someone wanted total Michael Jackson’s ruin through legal claims and bad publicity when he was alive.
But could anyone have the power to manipulate and influence the federal agency like the IRS led by the Commissioner appointed by President himself?
At first the idea looked impossible, but only until the moment when the news came that the IRS estimation was based on the appraisal of one person only and this person (Weston Anson) was caught in several lies during litigation, which greatly undermined his credibility.
THE SOLE APPRAISER
Here is another piece from Forbes explaining that in his 271-page memo released on May 3, 2021, Judge Holmes of the U.S. Tax Court didn’t mince words as regards Weston Anson:
The first hint that things will not go well for the IRS comes on page 59 when Judge Holmes discusses the credibility of Weston Anson, the sole appraiser used by the IRS, who had been caught in a lie about whether he had previously worked for the IRS. Judge Homes indicated that the hit to credibility affected the judge’s factfinding.
That was on page 61. On page 133 Judge Holmes really gives it away when discussing Anson’s valuation of Jackson’s “image and likeness” he wrote “We reject Anson’s analysis as fantasy”.
Yes, you’ve read it right – the judge rejected Anson’s appraisal of Michael Jackson’s image and likeness as sheer fantasy. Here is a quote from the Tax Court memo:
“We reject Anson’s analysis as fantasy. He:
– valued the wrong asset,
– included unforeseeable events in his valuation, and
– miscalculated the assets’ value.”
Of Anson’s credibility the judge said:
“As the Commissioner’s only expert witness, Anson’s credibility was an especially important part of the case. And it suffered greatly at trial. When asked whether he or his firm had previously been retained by the Commissioner to write an intellectual-property valuation report in Whitney Houston’s estate-tax case, Anson replied: “No. Absolutely not.” That was a lie. [ ]
Anson also testified that neither he nor his firm ever advertised to promote business. This was also a lie. In the midst of trial, Anson touted his testimony in the Hollywood Reporter which called CONSOR Chairman Weston Anson “the expert of the century [that] will be testifying on behalf of the IRS.”
As Anson was touting himself in the Hollywood Reporter, the latter presented the case in the craziest manner possible, leading the public into thinking that the Estate valued all Michael Jackson’s assets at a mere $2,105 while Anson’s estimation was close to $1billion. So no wonder that the original HR source quoted by the judge is actually no longer found on the Internet.
Here is a piece from the Judge’s memo starting with a quote from the Hollywood Reporter:
“The big discrepancy in the value of the Jackson estate will be sure to bring testimony tailor made for a Hollywood blockbuster. While CONSOR valued the intellectual property assets of the Jackson estate at a total close to $1 billion, the estate initially valued the assets at time of death at a mere $2,105.“
And in a lecture given before trial Anson referred to his valuation in this case, stating, “I’m sitting today [ ] in a deposition in what’s known as the ‘Billion Dollar Tax Case.’ When asked at trial whether he had in fact referred to this case as a billion-dollar case, Anson replied with his own question: “Would you like to be called the lawyer of the century?”
The judge explained:
“…there is nothing wrong about marketing one’s services or taking on another case for the IRS while working on this one. But Anson did undermine his own credibility in being so parsimonious with the truth [ ], as well as in not answering questions directly throughout his testimony.”
And when the judge stated that Weston Anson consciously overvalued Michael Jackson’s assets the whole thing began to smack of a scam:
We note that Anson’s overbroad description of the asset he was valuing was conscious.
We have his earlier draft report, in which he based his valuations solely on the image-and-likeness rights defined by California law. We conclude from this that he tried to reach a higher number by broadening the rights he valued.
It turned out that not only did Anson broaden the valuation of Michael Jackson’s image and likeness to the point of it becoming a fantasy, but sometimes – when evaluating MJ’s unreleased songs, for example – his appraisal was based on Wikipedia as his ‘primary source’ in addition to ‘an interview that is two decades old and a book whose own sources are unclear’:
His primary source was Wikipedia though he also relied on a deposition Jackson gave back in 1993, a book, Michael Jackson: For the Record, and a 2015 report from the Estate showing previously unreleased songs at the time of death that have since been released.
So this is how the so-called independent IRS auditor made his evaluations? By studying Wikipedia as his primary source? And it is as a result of these findings that the IRS wanted the Estate to pay more than $700 mln? What an amazing stuff!
Surprisingly, many of the IRS auditor’s arguments coincide with the constant criticism of the Estate by MJ fans so that it often looks like either Anson repeats the fans’ arguments or the fans echo Anson’s populist declarations.
The latter seems a much more likely scenario and this means that Anson’s ideas were somehow imposed on the MJ fan community so that the unsuspecting and often well-meaning fans would ‘rise as one in their struggle against the horrible Estate executors’ who undervalued the great (truly great) Michael Jackson. Little did they know that someone was deliberately stirring up enmity towards the Estate to minimize the Estate’s chances in defending their case against the IRS and undermine their ability to generate income for Michael Jackson’s children in principle.
In other words, by seeding all that discord some forces used the MJ fan community for their own ulterior motives and this also adds to the list of all those strange coincidences enumerated above.
Continued