Now that self-styled King of Pop Michael Jackson has been cleared of all child molestation and related charges, the prevailing question becomes: Will he change his lifestyle?
His lawyer, speaking on NBC’s Today Show, says yes:
“He’s not going to do that anymore,” attorney Thomas Mesereau Jr. told NBC’s Today. “He’s not going to make himself vulnerable to this anymore.”
Indeed, from the jury’s statements, there were signs that although Jackson was cleared of all charges in this case, he is also being sent a message:
Jurors may have acquitted Jackson of all charges of molesting a 13-year-old cancer survivor, but not all of them were convinced the King of Pop had never molested a child.“He’s just not guilty of the crimes he’s been charged with,” said Ray Hultman, who told The Associated Press he was one of three people on the 12-person panel who voted to acquit only after the other nine persuaded them there was reasonable doubt about the entertainer’s guilt in this particular case.
And:
But Hultman said he believed it was likely that both boys had been molested. He said he voted to acquit Jackson in the current case because he had doubts about his current accuser’s credibility.
“That’s not to say he’s an innocent man,” Hultman, 62, said of Jackson.
Some jurors noted they were troubled by Jackson’s admission that he allowed boys into his bed for what he characterized as innocent sleepovers.
“We would hope first of all that he doesn’t sleep with children anymore and that he learns that they have to stay with their families or stay in the guest rooms or the houses or whatever they’re called down there,” jury foreman Paul Rodriguez said. “And he just has to be careful how he conducts himself around children.”
Other jurors simply didn’t believe the accuser and — most of all — his mother, described by most print and broadcast reports as (to be diplomatic about it) a “flake.”
Meanwhile, now that this is over, there are some new questions:
There are many other implications and questions that are covered here.