A social worker testified on Tuesday at Michael Jackson’s child-molestation trial that she met privately with the accuser and his family during the time they claim they were Jackson’s captives, and they praised the singer and denied any sexual abuse.
Irene Lavern Peters, a 30-year veteran of the Los Angeles county department of children and family services, said she met with the mother and her three children on February 20 2003, after the airing of a British-produced documentary that drew attention to Jackson’s relationship with the boy who is now his accuser.
”I asked him if he had ever been sexually abused by Michael Jackson and he became upset. He said, ‘Everybody thinks Michael Jackson sexually abused me. He never touched me,”’ Peters testified.
She said the accuser told her Jackson ”was very kind to him and treated him like a father [would]”.
Jackson (46) is accused of molesting the then 13-year-old boy between February 20 and March 12 2003, plying him with wine and conspiring to hold the family captive to get them to make a video to rebut the documentary Living with Michael Jackson, which aired in the United States on February 6 2003.
The boy, a cancer survivor, appeared with Jackson in the documentary. Jackson told interviewer Martin Bashir that he let children sleep in his bed, but that it was non-sexual.
Prosecutors first charged Jackson with committing lewd acts with the boy between February 7 and March 10 2003. A superseding grand-jury indictment pushed back the period to between February 20 and March 12.
Peters said when she interviewed the mother, the boy, his younger brother and older sister on February 20, all of them praised Jackson. She said the mother, who was present at each child’s individual interview, even gave Jackson credit for curing her son.
Rather than wanting to flee Jackson’s Neverland ranch, the mother initially asked if the social worker could do her interview at the pop star’s estate, Peters said.
Peters said, however, that she wanted to see where they were living and so she was invited to the home of the mother’s boyfriend, who is now her husband.
”She denied all allegations of general neglect,” Peters said. ”I asked her about the relationship with Michael Jackson. She went on to say he was like a father to her children and she felt he was responsible for helping [the boy] to survive his cancer, for his cancer to go into remission.
”I asked her if the kids ever slept in Michael Jackson’s room and she said no, that never happened.”
Under questioning by defence attorney Thomas Mesereau Jnr, Peters said the family members never mentioned being held against their will.
The interview took place the morning after the family made the rebuttal video, which they later claimed they were forced to do by Jackson’s associates.
Peter’s testimony touched on an element of the prosecution’s conspiracy case when she noted that she ran into the mother in April 2003 at a restaurant.
Peters said the mother told her that ”Michael wanted to send them to Brazil and she didn’t want to go”.
She said the mother referred to Brazil as ”that dump”.
The prosecution claims that Jackson and associates wanted to send the family on a one-way trip to Brazil after the documentary aired. A travel planner has testified that she arranged a March 1 2003 flight, but the trip was abruptly cancelled.
Associated Press writer Tim Molloy contributed to this report