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 楼主| 发表于 2005-2-12 00:00:00 | 显示全部楼层
Former child-star Corey Feldman was grilled by Santa Barbara sheriff Sgt. Deborah Linden about the actor's close friendship with Michael Jackson. The interview occurred in 1993, as cops conducted an investigation into charges of child molestation brought against Jackson. On the tape, obtained exclusively by "CJ," Corey repeatedly insists that their friendship was totally innocent, while the cops repeatedly express suspicion, for over an hour. "Is your belief in him and your love for him getting in the way of you telling us things?" Sgt. Linden is heard to say. Feldman replies: "Everything I've told you is true and there's... I mean, nothing happened." Linden also states, "I'm so concerned that if something happened you're not going to tell us because it would be so hard to tell us..." "…No," Feldman insists. Corey also tells Linden, "You don't know how many times I have racked my brain and gone, 'is there something I'm forgetting? Is there something that, you know, I'm thinking didn't happen but it really did?' If I could find something I would love to be able to tell you, but nothing happened." We spoke with noted Beverly Hills defense attorney Jay Jaffe, who observed that, though Feldman certainly sounds believable on the tape, the investigators, "Want to hear what they want to hear, not what the witness wants to say." Jaffe noted that, while the investigators on the tape did not break the law, Jackson's defense team could use the cops' repeated, aggressive questioning of the actor to bolster their claim that DA Tom Sneddon has long been on a witch-hunt against the singer. "I think the defense would try to show that the investigators on this case are, in fact, not objective in their fact-finding process," Jaffe said. "What they have is an agenda and they're looking for something against Michael Jackson, even in the face of a claim that nothing really existed." Sgt Linden, who does most of the questioning on the tape, is reportedly the same investigator who wrote the 1993 affidavit to get court approval to photograph Michael Jackson's private parts -- an experience Jackson publicly decried, calling it, "a dehumanizing and humiliating examination by the Santa Barbara county sheriff's department." So the big question is will Jackson's team try to use Corey's 1993 interview in the current case? Now in his mid-30's Feldman is now a family man with a wife and young child. His reps confirm he has been subpoenaed by authorities to testify in Jackson's current molestation case. And there are reports that Corey may now say there were things in his relationship with Jackson that were inappropriate and wrong. Reports say Corey will not accuse Jackson of molestation. One anonymous source says Corey will claim Jackson showed him adult materials, including a Playboy magazine. Corey's reps say he's under the gag order and can't comment. However, if the judge allows Feldman to take the stand, he may also allow in the 1993 interview. As Jaffe told us, "the defense could introduce the tape to impeach Corey Feldman. He said nothing ever happened and he said that repeatedly."
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 楼主| 发表于 2005-2-12 00:00:00 | 显示全部楼层
Geller defends Jackson at unionBy Malcolm Prior BBC News, OxfordCelebrity spoon-bender Uri Geller told students at the Oxford Union if Michael Jackson is found guilty his belief in human nature will be "shattered". Mr Geller was questioned about the pop star while addressing a packed house at the Oxford Union earlier this week. He said that Mr Jackson - who is standing trial on child molestation charges which he denies - was "naive and gullible". But Mr Geller, from Sonning, Berkshire, believed his friend was innocent.Mr Geller told the BBC News website: "They asked me about Michael and I told them that God forbid I'm wrong and he is convicted, then my belief in human nature and my own ability to judge character will be shattered to the core. "I want to believe he has done none of what he has been accused of. "I will have to wait with millions of other people to see the outcome of the trial. "I will simply be patient and see what happens." Mr Geller addressed the union on Wednesday night, telling students his life story and giving them a motivational speech. He said: "I think I blew their minds. I do not want to sound boastful but they were amazed. "I came to do an hour and I stayed for three. "Not one student walked out and the pub is round the corner - and that's how one gauges things with students." Vladimir Bermant, vice-president of the union, said he had been initially sceptical but was now a "convert". He added: "As far as I could tell nobody left the talk. "It was very lengthy and normally people do not stay out of politeness but with him nobody left."
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 楼主| 发表于 2005-2-12 00:00:00 | 显示全部楼层
American Psychos: The Media As Child Abusersby phatfanAs hard as I try to keep things lighthearted around here, there are some issues that are so important that they simply cannot be ignored. From 1993 until now, Michael Jackson has been assailed as a pedophile, using the allure of his money, fame, and childlike persona (at least that's what talking heads call it) to ensnare and then molest little boys.What really bothers me, however, is the fact that networks and print media are getting away with "abusing" children themselves. What do I mean by this? I mean that cesspool juke joints like NBC and ABC produce scandalous and libelous special after special that overdose on innuendo but not on fact. They are so concerned with painting Jackson as a pedophile, so obsessed with oiling the wheels of Neilson ratings, that they ignore doing their homework.Even more disgusting to me is the moral hypocrisy of such media whore blowhards as Diane Dimond and Catherine Crier. They are so busy gleefully recounting every disgusting detail of sealed grand jury testimony that paints Jackson as a sick predator that they forget to focus on the alleged "victim" and his supposed plight. Aw, poor little grafter. Whatever.By the way, I am NOT saying that the latest little scam artist is telling the truth because he is a flat out LIAR. I am only saying that the media is not really concerned with abused children at all but with the Almighty Dollar and ratings.In fact, the media is one of the biggest abusers of children around. Diana Dimond, Catherine Crier, and a host of talking heads can cry all they want to about caring about justice but the fact of the matter is that there is no justice in using the plight of children as the launching pad of salacious gossipy "news" specials to grab ratings and headlines for yourself. Then again, we should be used to this kind of behavior.Martin Bashir, who is currently interviewing witnesses for another Jackson documentary, is one of the worst media abusers around. Long before he violated Jackson's own children's space by asking them personal questions about their "mummy" on the Living With Michael Jackson mockumentary, this bushy-eyed Beelzebub was accused of duping the father of a missing Oxford University student into an interview. Apparently, Bashir had convinced Farooq Yusof that he had pertinent information as to the whereabouts of Yusof's daughter Sufiah. Of course, Bashir had no such information.In fact, the Broadcasting Standards Commission ruled partially in the father's favor after he filed a complaint against Bashir and his parent employer ITV, stating that: QUOTE ----------------------------------------------------------- "Mr. Bashir misled Mr. Yusof...into believing that he was investigating the involvement of the authorities in the disappearance of his daughter. [The BSC] takes the view that the programme-makers had lulled Mr. Yusof into a contrary belief for their own purposes, and had not given him a clear indication as to the nature and purpose of the programme." ----------------------------------------------------------- That is not good journalism; that's child abuse in my book. Bashir and his company did nothing more than use this child's story for their own personal gain. Now isn't that fresh!All of the aforementioned egregious behavior underscores the abusive media practices against the very children these overpaid clowns claim to fight for. They use the plight of kids they CLAIM were abused by Jackson to garner ratings for themselves. If you are a respectable journalist with honest intentions and you believe someone is a sexual predator, would you not investigate every angle to the hilt to make sure that the case against the alleged predator is airtight?But the media will have none of that concerning the Jackson case. Why? Because they already KNOW that Jackson is innocent. That is why network execs are killing stories likely to exonerate Jackson left and right. FOX has done it. ABC is doing it and NBC never gave a flying damn about justice and Jackson in the first place.These networks and others like them are an abomination to humanity and a grave danger to the well-being of children. My anger only rises as I see them attempt to elevate Jackson's accuser to the same level of those victims who were raped by priests. When I see the raw emotional and psychological wounds tattooed on the eyes of these men, my heart breaks for them. These are men and women who have suffered in silence for decades, imprisoned by grief, shame, and anger. But when I see Diane Dimond telling me how devastated these lying scam artists are because of Jackson's "abuse," I see a prison in which this entire family and the media clowns who enable their nonsense ought to be in. The A*****s are not courageous but rather are an incorrigible heap of West Coast trash without any heart or any sense of common decency.In fact, the A*****s cheapen the experiences of those who have actually been abused. Every time Diane Sawyer or Catherine Crier ignores the FACTS staring them dead in their faces simply to spite Jackson and paint him as guilty to the world, they take another cheap shot at those children whose innocence has been ripped from them---all in the name of revenge and advertising money. Dirty bastards.tHe cUttInG eDgE

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发表于 2005-2-13 00:00:00 | 显示全部楼层
我要76了.

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发表于 2005-2-13 00:00:00 | 显示全部楼层
78楼!
无时无刻的想念
mkgenie 该用户已被删除
 楼主| 发表于 2005-2-13 00:00:00 | 显示全部楼层
楼上是否连75楼也一并??
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 楼主| 发表于 2005-2-13 00:00:00 | 显示全部楼层
THE JACKSON TRIAL: Intense scrutiny awaits jury members By SCOTT HADLY Others who've served recall threats, hate mail While potential jurors in the Michael Jackson child molestation case may ultimately judge the superstar, most everyone else may end up judging them. In high-profile trials, jurors often become central to the story. Who they are, what they they do for a living and the dynamic during deliberations become significant for those who scrutinize the verdict. Polls show that Americans by and large believe jury service is important and not a burden. Many look forward to it, according to a Harris International survey done in August for the American Bar Association. As Judge Rodney Melville emphatically told prospective jurors earlier this month, "Jury duty is an obligation and duty of citizenship." "Freedom is not free," Judge Melville said. "Jury service is part of the cost of freedom." What he did not say was that the experience can be intense, arduous and sometimes even scary. Jurors in other high-profile cases have felt so uncomfortable in the spotlight that they've moved or changed their phone numbers. Some have had their lives threatened. Still others have found that despite the pressures, sitting on a jury that is in the spotlight can be a fulfilling exercise in good citizenship. JUDGE NOT "We were told by the judge that our names would not be divulged and that we should not factor any potential threats against our lives into our judgement," said Retta Kossow, an Ojai resident who served as a juror in the 1992 Simi Valley trial of the Los Angeles police officers accused of beating Rodney King. But their names were divulged and the jurors -- who acquitted the officers in the case that helped trigger the Los Angeles riots -- received death threats, obscene phone calls and hate mail. Ms. Kossow moved out of her home for several months. Other jurors moved away. One bought a gun for protection and they all got unlisted phone numbers. "It's not for everybody," she said. The commitment takes you away from your work and family. The state compensates you only $15 a day and most private employers don't pay your salary during long trials. Local, state and federal government employees, however, are paid while they serve. The experience of locking away information about the case you are hearing, refraining from discussing it with those closest to you or even your fellow jurors -- all while serving side by side with 11 other people for days, weeks or even months on end -- can take its toll. "It's high stress. You can't help but be stressed," said Ms. Kossow. "But you go with the evidence presented to you. You listen to the instructions from the judge and you stay in that cocoon-type environment." In the end, you hope you did the right thing. Ms. Kossow said judging jurors without going through what they go through is unfair. Inevitably in cases like the trial against the police officers who beat Mr. King, the O.J. Simpson trial or the Jackson trial, the jurors themselves will be judged, said David Graeven, president of Trial Behavior Consulting Inc. in San Francisco. The potential jurors -- everyday people far removed from the singer's rarified world at Neverland Valley Ranch -- are already part of the story. The attention on the trial is unique even among high-profile cases attracting international attention, said Mr. Graeven, an expert on designing and evaluating mock trials and advising attorneys on developing themes for their cases. Although it is not supposed to influence a jury, celebrity and the accompanying attention can contribute to the stress of serving. Often, people distort the truth to get out of serving on juries, but in a celebrity case like this one, there are those who try to get on the jury. Juries are meant to be insular and work through a group process, Mr. Graeven said. The deliberation process has its own sort of checks and balances. If an individual juror has an ax to grind or refuses to participate, the group dynamic kicks in. Often, the rest of the jurors will isolate a holdout and perhaps stop communicating with him or her. "It's a very powerful dynamic," Mr. Graeven said. LIFE CHANGING When the dynamic goes awry, it can be uncomfortable for jurors, even unbearable. When it goes well, the experience can be fulfilling. "It was one of the most defining experiences in my life," said Eric Little about his service on a murder trial three years ago in Santa Barbara. Mr. Little said he gained a better understanding of the legal system. Listening to the details of the case -- in which 17-year-old Graham Pressley got sucked into the kidnapping and killing of 15-year-old Nicholas Markowitz in 2000 -- made him hold his own daughters closer. "It was important and life changing," said Mr. Little, who operates Aquasports, an adventure travel business in Goleta. It was Mr. Pressley's second trial, held after the jury in the first one failed to reach a verdict. The second jury found Mr. Pressley guilty and sent him to the California Youth Authority until 2008. In such a small community, Mr. Little and his fellow jurors soon found themselves having to defend their decision. Mr. Pressley's defense attorney called the jurors unfeeling "cold fish." They were attacked in letters to the editor. People on the street confronted Mr. Little. He felt compelled to defend himself, writing an opinion piece for the newspaper. The jury wasn't unfeeling, said Mr. Little. But jurors stuck to the instructions from the judge, who delineated their responsibilities and the law. "It doesn't leave room for personalities and philosophies or emotions," said Mr. Little. "In a way, it should be freeing you from the anxiety of being one person and having to make this big of a decision." WANTED: THOUGHTFUL PEOPLE People who follow the case by reading it in the newspaper or even those who spend time in the courtroom are not seeing the same case that is presented to the jury. The jury is not allowed to read anything about the case, watch coverage of the trial or do any independent research. Members of the jury are meant to absorb just the evidence presented to them at trial. John Mostachetti, a Goleta property manager, spent three months on a jury in the 1997 murder trial of Diana Haun, an Oxnard grocery worker sentenced to death for killing her lover's wife, Sherri Dally. Although at one point he was confronted by two of Ms. Haun's relatives, Mr. Mostachetti never felt he had to defend the jury's decision. He was comfortable with the outcome. The case had attracted so much attention that the Ventura County Superior Court was forced to draw jurors from Santa Barbara County to serve. The jurors got up each morning of the trial and took a bus to the courthouse in Ventura. The biggest difficulty for Mr. Mostachetti was avoiding media coverage of the case. "I had to change my habits," he said, which meant no newspaper and no television news. But "I figured sports was OK." Whenever he watched television, he kept the remote control close by in case a station broke in with a news update on the sensational case. He said he felt the pressure of deliberations. At one point the jurors, closely shadowed by news crews, were bused to the scene of the crime. "We knew the case was important," said Mr. Mostachetti. "We knew this could mean life or even a death sentence." But in the end, he said, his jury duty experience was a positive one. "The way I look at it is, what if you or me were on trial? Wouldn't we want interested and thoughtful people to be members of the jury?" he asked. "If we all said, ?Gee I don't want to be involved,' the system would fall apart."
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 楼主| 发表于 2005-2-13 00:00:00 | 显示全部楼层
Attorneys Wary of 'Stealth Jurors' in Jackson's Trial By Steve Chawkins Times Staff WriterFebruary 13, 2005In the Martha Stewart conspiracy case, there was the juror who failed to disclose that he had been sued several times and was jailed for allegedly beating up his girlfriend.In the Scott Peterson double-murder case, there was the juror who was dismissed after telling fellow senior citizens on a gambling outing that the defendant "was guilty as hell and I'm going to get him."In the Michael Jackson child-molestation case, nobody knows what secrets prospective jurors might be concealing when they face questioning in open court.But as attorneys prepare for the grilling, which could start as soon as Monday, they will be looking hard at the candidates whose answers appear too perfect, whose neutrality is too evident, whose eagerness to serve is all too keen.Earlier this month, more than half of the 400 or so people summoned to the courthouse in Santa Maria, Calif., indicated that they could spend as long as six months on the jury. Their willingness to endure the tedium of a long trial immediately raised alarms among legal consultants: How many, they asked, may be less interested in delivering a fair verdict than in becoming media stars, selling their stories to the tabloids, and maybe even becoming consultants themselves?And how many of these "stealth jurors" have deep-seated prejudices about the case that they know better than to reveal?"There's no question that each side really has to be worried," said San Francisco trial consultant Beth Bonora. "Maybe there's a hidden fan who can't believe that Michael Jackson is guilty, or doesn't care if he is, or just wants to acquit him. And the defense has to worry about people who have made up their minds that Jackson is so bizarre and difficult to understand that he must be guilty."Judges and attorneys agree that the great majority of people who serve on juries, however grudgingly, take their duties seriously. But a 2001 survey done by DecisionQuest, a Los Angeles trial-consulting firm, concluded that one of every seven Americans is willing to hide personal information in order to sit on a high-profile jury.Even in less publicized cases, stealth jurors have lied their way on to panels where they felt they could make a buck or prove a point.In a lawsuit over a biotechnology patent, a juror who was an attorney bullied the other panelists during deliberations, spouting dubious legal theory to defend one of the feuding companies, according to DecisionQuest consultant Philip K. Anthony, who was involved with the case.After the verdict, the juror immediately approached the company he favored and offered his services as a legal consultant, Anthony said. The offer was rejected.In Tampa, Fla., a man was removed from a jury five years ago after revealing to other jurors that his mother had died of lung cancer and that he had bladder cancer. The problem was that he hadn't revealed it to attorneys during jury selection in the case, which involved a man suing the R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. over his wife's death from cancer.In Helena, Mont., a group called the American Jury Institute advises people on how to get on juries in order to combat what they feel are unjust laws and out-of-control judges."There should be no happier day in the life of a marijuana activist than the day he opens his mail and finds a summons for jury duty," an article on the group's website states.In the article, readers are coached on delivering answers that attorneys are likely to find pleasing during jury selection. For instance, when they are asked whether they know anyone with a drug problem, the suggested response is: "Yes, but not well."The rationale given in the article is that drug users never allow themselves to get close to anyone.In the Jackson courtroom, trial consultants on both sides will be on the alert as prospective jurors answer questions posed by the attorneys and by Santa Barbara County Superior Court Judge Rodney S. Melville.Howard Varinsky, who recently worked for prosecutors in the Peterson trial, will help prosecutors in the Jackson case. The defense will be assisted by Lee Meihls, who worked on the Robert Blake murder trial when Jackson's lead attorney, Thomas A. Mesereau Jr., was defending the actor from late 2002 to early 2004.The lawyers and the consultants are under a gag order imposed by Melville. But others in the same field have no problem predicting that attorneys will dig deep into jurors' attitudes about childhood, sexuality, celebrity, race and money."If people have contrived a script to sound the best they can, you start to get a feel for it," said Richard Gabriel, a Los Angeles trial consultant who worked for the defense in the O.J. Simpson case."Sometimes their wording is a little too perfect," Gabriel said. "Sometimes they'll use legal language that they feel will get them on the jury. And if they keep insisting that they have no feelings whatsoever about something like child molestation, then you might have a question about that."The attorneys' task will be made tougher by the sparseness of the jury questionnaire that panel members were asked to fill out last week. Potential jurors were asked only 41, mainly yes-or-no questions, with fewer than half related to issues in the case."Jurors are more honest in questionnaires than in oral voir dire," said San Francisco trial consultant David Graeven. "It's too embarrassing for a lot of people to speak about these things in public."Studies have shown that jurors in open court will minimize their knowledge of highly publicized cases, Graeven said."They'll say they only read the headlines, but they'll also let you know they're familiar with some detail that was down in the 27th paragraph," he said.By their own example, judges can exert a powerful influence in getting jury candidates to speak honestly, experts said."I've seen judges come down off the bench, sit on the counsel table, and say, 'I want to tell you a little bit about myself,' " Gabriel said. "They have to get jurors to really disclose who they are as people."Gregory Mize, a retired Washington, D.C., judge, agrees."It's essential that you develop some kind of contact with the individual, even if it's momentary," Mize said.He proved it in 1998, when he took the time to do quick interviews with every one of his prospective jurors in a side room.Among the startling revelations that had not emerged during questioning in open court was: "I'm the defendant's fiancee."A veteran of roughly 500 trials, Mize was struck by the relatively small number of prospective jurors who claimed hardship in the Jackson case."It's a problem I wish judges around the country had in garden-variety cases," he said.

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发表于 2005-2-13 00:00:00 | 显示全部楼层
83楼哦[em01]
僻静的小路,狭仄而又险峻;
他知道,生于普遍性之外,
在行走时碰不到一个旅行者,是十分可怕的。

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发表于 2005-2-14 00:00:00 | 显示全部楼层
第 84 楼
mkgenie 该用户已被删除
 楼主| 发表于 2005-2-16 00:00:00 | 显示全部楼层
Why the Prosecution Should Be Sick truth hurts 2.15.05 ---------------------- Michael Jackson was admitted to a local hospital today due to a case of the stomach flu. That stuff is vicious. I should know; I had it myself over two months ago and it took me nearly a month to get back to my old self. Of course, if you listen to some media pundits and dimwits, Jackson is clearly faking an illness to delay the trial. Whatever, truth be told, Jackson is ill because he is catching what a lot of folks in the U.S. have struggled with the last several months: a vicious strain of influenza. Doctors have confirmed his illness, conferred with Judge Melville, and Jackson was given a week to recuperate. So it makes little sense for inflatable TV dummies like Diane Dimond to suggest that Jackson is faking to avoid going to trial. Truth be told, the prosecution is the one who really ought to callin' in sick to this trial. What should be making Tom Sneddon sick? • His defense lawyers have nearly 250 witnesses on their list while the prosecution has pilfered nearly 75 witnesses from the defense list. By the way, did I also mention that Sneddon is also on the defense witness list? God has a great sense of humor. • The alleged "victim" will have the pleasure of having two of his own family testify AGAINST him and FOR the defense. • The accuser and his family have a clear and established pattern of past scams that are documented and ready to launch once Jackson is tried. • The accuser will be confronted with celebrities his mentally unstable and admittedly "dumb" mother Janet Arvizo Jackson claimed were her family's "friends." That's right; the accuser will get to see Kobe Bryant and a host of famous comedians they scammed in the past several years. Something tells me that they will not be offering the family any autographs. • Jackson will be confronted by documented liars, grifters, and thieves who stole things from him, got busted, got fired, and then turned on him. Can you say "tainted testimony"? • Sneddon has enough skeletons in his closet to make his own version of Jackson's video "Ghosts." And believe this: ALL of them will rattle once Jackson is vindicated and the media, feeling duped by the prosecution, will turn on him and give Sneddon a rub down he won't EVER forget. Where's my popcorn? • If you thought Jackson's rebuttal of Martin Bashir's Living With Michael Jackson documentary was telling, fasten your seatbelts, grab a latte, and sit back for a video viewing we may not forget. The video presentation will star G**** A***** as the "accuser," Twinkle Fat A** S*** A***** as "Da Eyewitness", Janet Arvizo Jackson as "The Stark Raving Mad Mama," and Jay Jackson as "The Lug." Enough said. So tell me, who the hell should be coming up with reasons why he can't come to "work," Sneddon or Jackson? Jackson may be the one who is waylaid by the flu but it is Sneddon who should really feel sick right about now.

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发表于 2005-2-16 00:00:00 | 显示全部楼层
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Sometimes you've got to sacrifice the things you like

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发表于 2005-2-16 00:00:00 | 显示全部楼层
预定预定下一篇哈
无时无刻的想念

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发表于 2005-2-16 00:00:00 | 显示全部楼层
新年好啊,下下一个是我的哦![em02]
…In a world filled with anger
we must still dare to comfort
In a world filled with despair
we must still dare to dream
And in a world filled with distrust
we must still dare to believe…MJ
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