

DECEMBER 9--A confidential investigation by
Los Angeles police and child welfare officials concluded earlier
this year that allegations Michael Jackson sexually abused a
cancer-stricken boy were "unfounded," according to an internal
government memo obtained by The Smoking Gun. The memo notes that the boy, now 14, and his
12-year-old brother--who also denied sexual abuse--expressed "a
fondness for the entertainer and stated they enjoyed visiting his
home, where they would often ride in the park, play video games, and
watch movies." The pair's sister, now 17, told a social worker that
she accompanied the boys on "sleepovers at the entertainers home,"
but had "never seen anything sexually inappropriate between her
brothers and the entertainer." The children's mother told investigators
that Jackson was "like a father to the children and a part of her
family." While acknowledging that her son "has slept in the same
room as the entertainer," the woman claimed "they did not share a
bed. The entertainer would sleep on the floor," according to the
November 26 memo. When an investigation is closed, child
welfare officials can summarize their findings in one of three ways.
If evidence is found to support abuse charges, the case is marked
"substantiated." A case is termed "not substantiated" when evidence
discovered is not sufficient to support allegations (though the
charges may, in fact, be true). Finally, a matter is branded
"unfounded" when officials determine there is no merit to the
allegations. As with many DCFS investigations, the
Jackson abuse case began with a call to the agency's child abuse
hotline. According to the memo, a "Child Abuse Referral" was phoned
in on February 14 by a "school official" from the Los Angeles
Unified School District, which oversees the city's sprawling public
school system. Citing the prior week's ABC broadcast of "Living with
Michael Jackson," the controversial Martin Bashir documentary, the
school official lodged allegations of "general neglect by mother and
sexual abuse by 'an entertainer,'" according to the summary memo.
The school official identified both the cancer patient, then 13, and
his younger brother as the "referred children." While the school official is not further
identified in the DCFS memo, published reports have indicated that
the older boy was taunted by classmates after the documentary aired
on ABC's "20/20" newsmagazine. During the February 6 program, the
child was seen holding hands with Jackson and resting his head
against the singer's shoulder. Jackson told Bashir that he had slept
with many children unrelated to him, but insisted, "It's not sexual,
we're going to sleep. I tuck them in...It's very charming, it's very
sweet." The boy's February 2003 interview with child
abuse investigators--not to mention those with his family--appears
to run counter to allegations he later made to law enforcement
officials in Santa Barbara, where Jackson was arrested November 20
and released on $3 million bail. District Attorney Thomas Sneddon
has said that he expects to file felony child molestation charges
against Jackson next week. In addition to the boy's original denial
of sexual abuse by Jackson, his younger brother's February 2003
statements also appear to contradict recent published reports
claiming that the child has told Santa Barbara investigators that he
witnessed his brother being molested by the star. While it is unclear what, if any, effect the
LAPD-DCFS investigation will have on a future Jackson prosecution,
the performer's defense team will surely seize on the February 2003
probe's findings to question the current veracity and motives of the
child and his family--and, of course, further muddy a case that
already promises to be a difficult prosecution. The child abuse investigation was
immediately placed with the Sensitive Case Unit since department
guidelines dictate that if "one of the clients in the referral is a
public figure" or if the case's allegations "would be certain to
generate media interest if they became known outside of DCFS," the
matter requires utmost secrecy. As with most DCFS abuse cases, a children's
social worker (CSW) was dispatched to interview the boys, as was a
LAPD investigator (the memo does not indicate whether the cop and
the social worker conducted their interviews in tandem). In either
case, it is likely that the children were questioned apart from
their mother, since the abuse referral included allegations of
neglect on the woman's part, according to a DCFS source familiar
with agency operations. The allegations examined this year in the
LAPD-DCFS probe mirror sex abuse claims that surfaced in 1993, when
a 13-year-old California boy claimed that the pop star molested him.
Jackson, who was not charged in that case, reportedly made a
multimillion dollar payment to settle a civil suit brought by the
child and his family. Click here
to read the boy's sworn declaration describing Jackson's alleged
abuse.
The probe's findings were based, in
large part, on interviews with the alleged victim, his two siblings,
and the boy's mother. According to the memo, when the child was
questioned in February by a social worker assigned to the Sensitive
Case Unit of L.A.'s Department of Children & Family Services
(DCFS), he "denied any form of sexual abuse" by Jackson and said
that he never "slept in the same bed as the entertainer." While not
specifically named in the DCFS memo, the 45-year-old Jackson is
referred to repeatedly as "the entertainer."
The joint probe by DCFS and the Los Angeles
Police Department ran from February 14-27 and, the memo states, the
"investigation by the Sensitive Case Unit concluded the allegations
of neglect and sexual abuse to be unfounded both by the
LAPD-Wilshire Division and the Department."
In a clear reference to fallout from the Bashir
documentary, the boy's mother told investigators that "she believed
the media had taken everything out of context," according to the
memo, which summarizes the DCFS child abuse investigation. The
"sensitive case" memo was prepared at the direction of Dr. Charles
Sophy, a high-ranking DCFS official who joined the department in
late-March, a month after the Jackson probe was completed. The memo
was authored by Jennifer Hottenroth, a DCFS assistant regional
administrator. In a brief telephone interview yesterday morning,
Hottenroth declined to speak about her memo, saying, "I can't talk
about it...I can refer you to our public affairs person. I can't
comment on any of this." Sophy (pictured at right) did not return a
message left with his assistant. Louise Grasmehr, a DCFS
spokesperson, said that while she had been given a copy of the
document by Hottenroth Monday morning, "We cannot comment on
anything that is stated in the memo. Because it's all protected
under confidentiality laws in California."
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