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 楼主| 发表于 2005-2-19 00:00:00 | 显示全部楼层
所有接任务的成员,请搞清楚该新闻稿件是重要还是不重要新闻如果是重要新闻,请于12小时内交稿接两篇新闻的,最好是翻完一篇就交一篇!不要拖时间,谢谢!

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我回来了,几时到我。 下一个给我吧 [em26]
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 楼主| 发表于 2005-2-22 00:00:00 | 显示全部楼层
David LeGrand, the Las Vegas attorney who represented Michael Jackson in 2003, takes some hits in California grand jury testimony in the child molestation case against Jackson, according to thesmokinggun.com. Las Vegas resident Ann Gabriel, who was hired briefly by LeGrand to handle crisis management and public relations for Jackson, gave the Jackson grand jury her account of dealings with LeGrand and F. Marc Schaffel, a Jackson associate whom prosecutors have named as an unindicted co-conspirator with the performer. Gabriel testified that she received a telephone call one night from an "extremely upset and agitated" Schaffel, who said "there was a problem at the ranch." According to thesmokinggun Web site, she told the grand jury that Schaffel voiced concern that the mother might attempt to sell her story to a British tabloid. Gabriel testified that Schaffel later called to say "the situation had been contained" and "we found them and brought them back to the ranch." Gabriel said Schaffel's reference to a situation being contained left her feeling "like this was something out of a very bad `B' movie. It made me sick to my stomach," she testified. In her grand jury testimony, she said that after passing along Schaffel's comments to LeGrand, she told the attorney, "Don't make me think that these people were basically hunted down like dogs and brought back to the ranch." LeGrand "told me that he couldn't talk about it," she said. During another conversation with LeGrand, Gabriel testified before the grand jury that Jackson's lawyer said, "We've got her (the boy's mother) on tape, and we're going to make her look like a crack whore." Gabriel added: "The only thing I can tell you adamantly is that he was absolutely gleeful when he said that to me." LeGrand, a shareholder with Hale Lane Peek Dennison Howard & Anderson at 2300 W. Sahara Ave., did not return a call by deadline. Schaffel, a former porn producer with Las Vegas ties, could not be reached for comment. But Former Jackson attorney David LeGrand, who moved to Las Vegas two years ago, responded Sunday to a former Jackson rep's allegations. Ann Gabriel, hired briefly by LeGrand to handle crisis management and public relations for Jackson, told a California grand jury investigating child molestation charges against the pop singer that LeGrand indicated the mother of the accuser would be portrayed as a "crack whore." "Some people are incredibly creative at reinventing reality to suit their own needs and make themselves feel important, especially people who have failed at various careers," LeGrand said in an e-mail Sunday. "Just because someone interprets an event does not make that interpretation the truth or an accurate reflection of what occurred." He said Gabriel was fired from the Jackson team "within days of being engaged to assist with PR strategy because she wanted to go on live television nationwide as the spokeswoman for Mr. Jackson. "Even though she was specifically instructed not to do so, she was ready to proceed until legal counsel in L.A. stopped her. As a result her role in assisting with PR matters was terminated. Perhaps her interpretation of events is tainted by her abrupt termination?" Gabriel, who is listed as a Las Vegas businesswoman, could not be reached for comment.
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110楼 ISOBEL接了
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 楼主| 发表于 2005-2-23 00:00:00 | 显示全部楼层
King Of Pop Beats the January Blues as 'Number Ones' Re-enters the USA and British Album Charts Created: Tuesday, 22 February 2005 It's no surprise that January has long been regarded as the darkest month of the year due to fading Christmas memories, foul weather, debt, etc. For the King Of Pop, however, it was business as usual as January saw the artist's Number Ones album re-enter both the USA and British album charts while simultaneously lengthening it's stellar 63 week+ consecutive chart run in Australia. Meanwhile, in a follow up to last month's report, additional 2004 year-end chart information reveals the artist racked up extra honors Stateside as his multi-platinum Number Ones DVD ranked as the 5th Best Selling Music Video of the Year while over in the UK, for the second year in a row, Michael Jackson was the #1 solo catalog artist of 2004 with the most titles on the UK End Of Year Catalog Chart. USA With sales of approximately 60,000 units** for the month of January, Michael Jackson's library of Epic/Sony era material continued to demonstrate it's enduring appeal in the United States. In fact, Jackson's Number Ones album re-entered the Billboard 200 on January 13th posting three consecutive weeks of increased sales climbing 177-170-162. With combined CD/DVD sales of over 30,000 units for the month, the Number Ones project continued to roll forward in the USA as the platinum* album and triple platinum* DVD amassed 24 and 46 weeks respectively on the charts. In other Number Ones news, Billboard's End Of Year 2004 video survey yielded more kudos for the King Of Pop as the aforementioned Number Ones DVD came in at #5 on the Top Comprehensive Music Videos Sales chart and #12 on the Top Music Video sales chart - an impressive showing in light of the fact that, according to p2pnet.net, the Number Ones DVD was Sony Music's top selling music video DVD worldwide for 2003.*** And finally, January wouldn't be complete without mentioning that the artist's legendary mainstay on the R&B/Hip-Hop Catalog Chart Thriller amassed its 320th week on the chart shifting an additional 14,000 units for the month. UK The United States wasn't the only territory that saw a surge in January sales for Jackson's Number Ones album. In fact, the artist's British fans outdid their U.S. counterparts by moving the album back into the Top 75 on January 2nd with a monthly chart performance that looked exactly like this: 53-48-56-64. The 5X platinum* album has now amassed a cumulative 10 months inside the Top 75 Album Chart. In other news, leading British trade publication Musicweek yielded more great news for the King Of Pop on 1st January as, for the second year in a row, Michael Jackson was the #1 solo catalog artist in the UK. In a repeat of 2003's chart performance, Jackson had the most titles on the UK End Of Year 2004 Catalog Chart with the same three albums in the same order: Thriller improved 9-6, Off The Wall slipped 16-17 and Bad stumbled 22-47, with sales of 134,729, 91,675 and 56,209, respectively. Interestingly, 1979's Off The Wall was one of the oldest titles on the list. With sales of 660,000 albums for 2004 (excluding sales of Jackson 5/Jacksons releases), Michael Jackson was the UK's 30th Best Selling Albums Artist of 2004. Thanks to such an impressive showing in 2004, Jackson was the highest climber of the year on The Guinness British Hit Singles and Albums book which ranks artists every year according to how many weeks they have spent in the UK singles and albums charts. He is now number eight. Australia In keeping with it's uninterrupted 16 month chart run, Michael Jackson's triple platinum* Number Ones retained another five weeks on the ARIA Urban Album Chart in January. The album remained fixed in the Top 20 and charted as follows: 14-12-17-13-17. Elsewhere on the same chart, the gold certified The Very Best Of The Jacksons album continued treading ground with a 32-37-dropout-39-38 chart run for the month. Living up to it's title as Australia's #1 Best Selling Music DVD of 2004, Jackson's 8X platinum Number Ones DVD also flexed it's chart muscle in the Top 30 as follows: 20-26-18-13-18. The title has now spent an impressive 59 weeks on the ARIA Top 40 Music DVD Chart. Summary Thanks to a successful January chart run coupled with additional End Of Year 2004 chart news, the new year kicked off nicely for the King Of Pop. With February already in full gear, it's worth noting that Jackson's Number Ones album posted its fifth consecutive week of increased sales in the USA last week - up 41% selling 9,198 units. And the record continues to spin. Source: MJJSource Written By: Amit Khanna USA Soundscan information courtesy of Jim Radenhausen. * Certification figure based on shipment information compiled in each respective country/territory. ** This tally does not include sales for The Ultimate Collection (4 CD/1 DVD), single sales, certain music DVD titles (eg. The One, Dangerous: The Short Films, Moonwalker, The Making Of Thriller, etc.), material recorded with The Jacksons, and Motown era Jackson 5/solo recordings. *** As per Billboard, the Top Comprehensive Music Video Sales chart focuses solely on stand-alone video titles (DVD or VHS). Meanwhile, the Top Music Video Sales Chart includes combo packages that include both CD and DVD components.
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 楼主| 发表于 2005-2-23 00:00:00 | 显示全部楼层
Why Are Michael Jackson's Fans So Devoted? Despite His Legal Woes and Years of Bad Press, 'The King of Pop's' Fans Have Stayed in His Corner By BRYAN ROBINSON Feb. 23, 2005 — Deborah Dannelly knows about the charges Michael Jackson faces and has read about media leaks in the case. But she doesn't care — she still loves "The King of Pop." Dannelly, 49, is the president of the Michael Jackson Fan Club, an international club based in Corpus Christi, Texas, and is proud to say she has been a fan of the entertainer for 36 years. "I think the media has painted a pretty dark picture of Michael," Dannelly said in a telephone interview, although she was initially reluctant to talk to ABCNEWS.com. These are difficult days for Dannelly and fans like her as Jackson faces trial on charges he molested a now-15-year-old boy who spent time at his Neverland ranch. The boy is believed to be the cancer survivor who appeared with the singer in the 2003 British documentary "Living With Michael Jackson." Jackson, 46, has pleaded not guilty to 10 charges that include felony conspiracy with 28 overt acts involving child abduction, false imprisonment and extortion. Dannelly's faith in Jackson has not wavered. Media coverage of the case, she believes, has been biased, demonizing Jackson and jeopardizing his chances for a fair trial. "I don't think they have been interested in finding the truth but rather in putting out whatever would make headlines," she said. "And I thought the media would have better principles and integrity in this important of a case." Fan Worship in the Face of Adversity Jackson's fans showed him that they were still in his corner when jury selection began on Jan. 31. They came in throngs from all over the world to gather outside the Santa Barbara County Courthouse in Santa Maria, Calif., holding signs that read, "Michael's Innocent, Leave Him Alone," "Save Michael Jackson," and "France Supports and Loves MJ." Some continued to show their support when Jackson was hospitalized last week with the flu, gathering outside the Marian Medical Center where he was staying and fainting and crying at the thought of his illness. To a lesser extent, celebrity defendants such as Kobe Bryant and Martha Stewart saw similar fan support in their criminal cases. As Bryant faced trial for allegedly sexually assaulting a woman at a Vail, Colo. ski resort, his supporters traveled to the courthouse just to catch a glimpse of the NBA star and scream his name. (Prosecutors dropped the criminal case against Bryant when the alleged victim said she would not testify at the trial. Bryant has maintained his innocence, but still faces a civil lawsuit from his accuser.) Stewart's fans continued to insist on her innocence and argued she was unfairly targeted by federal prosecutors after she was convicted of conspiracy, making false statements and obstruction of justice for lying about a stock sale. That fan support has made Stewart a hot product even as she serves her sentence. Publishers are reportedly vying for a memoir Stewart is said to writing about her prison experiences. Her company, Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, has survived, and NBC has announced plans for Stewart to host her version of the hit show "The Apprentice." Fans of Bryant, Stewart and Jackson are not just supporting idols and pop icons they believe have been wrongly accused of crimes, experts say. They consider them to be members of their family. "This is a very widespread phenomenon where fans take a celebrity into their hearts, whether it be a pop star, a movie star or a TV star, and that celebrity becomes almost bulletproof to the fan," said Paul Levinson, professor and chair of communication and media studies at Fordham University in New York. "They bring the celebrity into their hearts and soul. It's almost like they've become part of their family." Media Distrust and Feelings of Betrayal Many celebrity fans may distrust — or feel betrayed by — the media because of the bad press a scandal generates, Levinson said. The way they see it, their idol, who was once a media darling, is now being torn down by the same reporters who sang his praises. "When some government agency accuses a celebrity of doing something, it's hard for that celebrity's fans to believe that it's true and they believe he's being persecuted," Levinson continued. "Maybe the fan will believe it [the accusations] once the facts come out and celebrity is proven guilty, but it takes an enormous amount to do that." Fans may be skeptical of the media because of the way news tends to be reported. Mere allegations, innuendo and leaks often provided by unidentified sources make front-page headlines, and the public may often confuse accusations and rumors with fact. "There's a suspicion in the way in which allegations tend to be passed off as fact," said Seth Clark Silberman, lecturer on African-American studies and lesbian and gay studies at Yale University. "Then you have the stigma associated with intergenerational sex combined with the passion for the celebrity such as Michael Jackson, you see why some people think he is being persecuted. But I do think it [fan trust in media] depends on the type of evidence leaked to the press." The Source of Jackson's Appeal Since his "Thriller" and "Bad" album heydays, Jackson's sales have been disappointing. His last studio album, 2001's "Invincible," sold just more than 2 million albums (8 million worldwide) — successful to most artists but a disappointment for the "King of Pop." Despite hitting the top of the music charts worldwide, Jackson hasn't had a No. 1 single in the United States since 1995's "You Are Not Alone." So why do so many people continue to love Michael Jackson? Older fans still remember the Jackson 5 lead singer who won legions of fans with songs such as "ABC" and "Ben." They may fondly recall how Jackson moonwalked for the first time across the stage at Motown's 25th anniversary special in 1983 and put MTV on the map with pioneering videos such a "Thriller," "Billie Jean" and "Beat It." Younger fans mainly familiar with the post-1993, scandal-haunted Jackson may admire his past hit songs and see his influence in chart-topping artists such as Usher and Justin Timberlake, who have said they grew up idolizing "The King of Pop." This is the Jackson who generated headlines primarily for his talent and whose musical legacy cannot be denied. "Michael has always been charismatic," Silberman said. "Michael Jackson was the first black artist to be played regularly across the board on radio stations, MTV; he was the first to have that kind of crossover appeal. Still, despite the scandals and bad press that he has had, he has always been fantastic as a performer. Michael's electrifying." Who's to Blame for Jackson's Bad Press? Fair or not, there has been an ongoing media fascination with Jackson's appearance and the multiple plastic surgeries he has allegedly undergone. It goes back to 1987, when, upon the release of his album "Bad," Jackson suddenly appeared to have much more feminine facial features. His complexion, once brown, was lighter. His once-flat nose was reshaped, his cheekbones were more defined and his hair — once a Jeri Curled Afro — had been straightened. Today, he hardly resembles the boy who fronted the Jackson 5 or even the artist who made "Off The Wall and "Thriller." He has denied having multiple surgeries and attributes his lightened complexion to the skin disease vitiligo. Perhaps the media are partly to blame for Jackson's inability to escape the cloud of the 1993 molestation scandal, where a 12-year-old boy made allegations similar to the criminal charges he faces today. Jackson was never criminally charged for the 1993 allegations and he has always denied wrongdoing in that case. Santa Barbara County, Calif., prosecutors decided not to pursue the case after they said the alleged victim refused to testify. But Jackson settled a civil suit filed by the boy's family for a reported $20 million, sparking questions that linger to this day. However, in some ways, Jackson himself may be responsible for some of his bad press. In 2002, he generated international headlines when he dangled one of his children, a then-infant Prince Michael II, over a balcony while greeting fans in Germany. And in "Living With Michael Jackson," he raised eyebrows when he talked about his fondness of having innocent sleepovers with children at Neverland. While holding hands with his accuser in his criminal case, he said, "Why can't you share your bed? The most loving thing to do is to share your bed with someone." Arguably, Jackson could have been more public relations-savvy. But some Jackson fans say they have never cringed at some of Jackson's actions or comments. Jackson's words in "Living With Michael Jackson" were taken out of context, his supporters say, and the media focused on the more sexual, sinister innuendo of his statements. Dannelly said her love for Jackson is rooted in his attempts to help children and the impoverished around the world, not just his music. Dannelly said her love for Jackson is rooted in his attempts to help children and the impoverished around the world, not just his music. "What he [Michael] said [in the documentary] is the reason I am moved by him," Dannelly said. "It's his message: We have to love the people of the world. We are never going to solve the problems of the world if we don't love our children. We've got to love the children." Jackson's fans will continue to show their support as jury selection continues and throughout his trial. Dannelly said The Michael Jackson Fan Club will hold a four-day rally in his support in Santa Maria, Calif., starting Feb. 26. Dannelly, who is a legal secretary, stresses that she and other Jackson devotees are not "absent-minded airheads." They are professors, doctors, lawyers and professionals who can decipher fact from fiction, she says. They are asking others to keep an open mind and allow a fair trial for Jackson. "At the end of the day, at the end of the trial, everyone is assured that they will be going home. Everyone except Michael," Dannelly said. "And I don't think anyone, including the media, should have that kind of power over someone's life."

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A Trying Time For the Media At Jackson Trial By Paul Farhi Washington Post SANTA MARIA, Calif. -- Of course Michael Jackson's trial on child-molestation charges will be a media circus. You can tell that just by looking at the satellite TV trucks lined up cheek-by-jowl and the spider's web of cable strung by the electronic media around the Lewellen Justice Center, the site of Jackson's trial, in this modest town on California's central coast. But in the annals of lurid, media-fueled trials, M.J.'s probably won't rank with O.J.'s. It may even turn out to be something less than Scott Peterson's. Unless Jackson intends to moonwalk on the roof of an SUV each day, the restrictions placed on news organizations by Judge Rodney S. Melville seem likely to suppress the media fireworks -- and the public's interest along with them. There's simply going to be a shortage of compelling pictures here, and TV can't survive long without that. What's more, as the Jackson trial resumed yesterday after a week-long delay, the nature of the case -- allegations by a then-13-year-old boy that Jackson served him alcohol and sexually abused him -- is already making TV producers nervous about what they'll permit their correspondents to say about the proceeding. At 46, Jackson is by far the most famous person in America, and perhaps the world, who has ever been put on trial on a felony charge (in his case, 10 of them). Though he's past his prime, Jackson's international fame, born of millions in album sales and years of pervasive weirdness, surpasses the renown of every accused miscreant in the past 10 years. That ever-expanding list includes O.J. Simpson, Peterson, record producer Phil Spector, Winona Ryder, Martha Stewart, Robert Blake, comedian Paula Poundstone, Kobe Bryant and Jayson Williams. As such, the media caravan kicked up a considerable dust cloud as it thundered into Santa Maria. All the American news networks are here, as are major broadcasters from Europe, Asia and Australia. Almost a thousand media passes have been issued by Santa Barbara County superior court (the vast majority, it appears, went to technicians and production people, not correspondents). The media have only seven reserved seats in the courtroom -- reporters rotate in and out on a set schedule -- so news people by the dozens sit all day on metal folding chairs in a large, wood-paneled trailer near the courtroom. They watch a closed-circuit feed of the trial on a single 36-inch RCA TV set. Camera positions in front of the courthouse, where Jackson alights from his motorcade each day, are at such a premium that court officials have marked off three-foot-wide parcels on the parking lot, assigning each news crew to its own mini-pad. "Entertainment Tonight" somehow snagged two slots, one-upping "Access Hollywood." The big boys have gone even further. CNN has built a camera platform next to the Salvation Army soup kitchen across the street from the courthouse. NBC has erected a multistory structure, dubbed "Peacock Tower," on an adjacent ball field. Fox, CBS and Court TV are building another tower of babble nearby. Surveying the setup the other day, Raul Marin, a freelance cameraman who has shot several celebrity trials, observed, "It looks like we're covering the Rose Parade." In a sense, they are. The daily arrival shot of Jackson's motorcade is vital because it may be the only glimpse of Jackson the TV cameras will get (a pool camera may show him walking through the building's metal detector as well). Unlike O.J. trial judge Lance Ito, Melville has banned cameras from his courtroom. Melville is so camera-shy that he declined to pose for generic (so-called "B-roll") footage of himself walking into the courtroom until media reps petitioned him. The absence of courtroom cameras means that Jackson's trial won't unfold to viewers like the daily dramatic series that was Simpson's criminal murder case. With no TV, there will be fewer "characters" and personalities around which to build interest. O.J. had a steady stream of them -- Ito, prosecutor Marcia Clark, defense attorney Johnnie Cochran, friend-of-the-defendant Kato Kaelin, rogue cop Mark Fuhrman, etc. Though Jackson's defense said last week that it might call such celebrities as Elizabeth Taylor and Stevie Wonder to the witness stand, the regular players -- his lawyers, the investigators and prosecutors and certainly Jackson's accuser -- aren't likely to become well known to the public. Melville's restrictions are even more draconian than those in the Peterson trial. Correspondents here won't be able to send real-time data from the courtroom or from the adjacent media observation room, as was permitted in Peterson's trial on charges of murdering his wife, Laci, and their unborn child. Melville has banned all electronic communications devices from the two buildings -- no cell phones, no laptops, no BlackBerrys. So if news breaks, reporters have to race from the building to their camera positions outside, with other reporters standing by to run inside to take their place. "It's going to be a tag-team event," said Tim Sullivan, who oversees Court TV's daytime programming. Behind the scenes of the Jackson legal drama, the news media are waging their own battle. A coalition of media companies, including The Washington Post and the New York Times, has formally objected to "media impact" fees of $7,500 per day that are being levied by Santa Barbara County officials. The county says the fees are necessary to recoup the costs of parking, additional security and the media "overflow" trailer to accommodate the extraordinary news coverage of the trial. In a letter sent last week to the Santa Barbara County Counsel, media-pool attorney Theodore Boutrous Jr. characterized the fees as excessive and unconstitutional, and asked that they be reduced or eliminated. "We're not asking for a free ride," Boutrous said in an interview, "but none of these costs are related to anything that the media has requested or needs. It's part of the government's function to give the media access to a public trial. Charging the press for access amounts to a tax, and that's a violation of the First Amendment." County officials have said that without the fees, taxpayers will bear an additional burden in a trial that will likely last more than six months and cost millions of dollars. Besides, the county points out, media representatives agreed last May to pay for some services. Media fees -- and the controversy surrounding them -- have grown with each new high-profile trial. In Simpson's trial more than a decade ago, Los Angeles officials asked for and received "a reasonable fee" to rent a parking lot across from the criminal court building, said Jennifer Siebens, CBS News's West Coast bureau chief. During Peterson's 10-month trial on double murder charges, San Mateo County collected $75,000 from TV, radio and print outlets . The bill to the media for Jackson's trial already exceeds $82,500, says Boutrous, and could reach more than $1.1 million if the trial runs its expected length. It's not just the issues of media access and the logistics of getting images to broadcast that make Jackson's trial a bit of a bummer for news organizations. Journalists have another big problem: The revulsion factor. The trial is likely to elicit months and months of graphically detailed testimony about criminal sexual deviancy, not exactly the kind of fodder for Katie and Matt on your typical morning wake-up show. As with Bill Clinton's affair with Monica Lewinsky, reporting on Jackson could be another moment that defines where The Line is in reporting certain uncomfortable details. Some of those details may just be left out altogether. "Everyone is taking a real wait-and-see on this one because they're afraid of the story," said one network producer, who asked not to be identified because he's not authorized by his employer to speak to the press. "What's the worst [testimony] that you heard in Scott Peterson? That a headless torso washed up on the beach. With Michael Jackson, there are going to be witnesses testifying about masturbation and stains. At which point TV sets are going to be clicking off all across America." Said CBS's Siebens: "These are very painful allegations. We have to handle it with kid gloves." Court TV's Sullivan already knows people are squeamish. "If it were not for the celebrity of Michael Jackson, this would not be the kind of story that will cause a lot of talk about all day," he said. "Pedophilia is not a very attractive subject. People don't want to hear about it or talk about it." Sullivan says his correspondents will shy away from talking about the details of the testimony. They'll talk instead about legal strategy and tactics, such as whom the prosecution or defense might want on the jury, he says. This could make for some rather dull TV, no matter how famous the defendant. "I used to think this was going to be a really big deal and now I'm not so sure," Siebens said. "I think it's all so distasteful. And he's so over with a capital O. I don't think this is another trial of the century." True enough, certainly for now. Yesterday, the big news out of Southern California had nothing to do with Michael Jackson. It was about rain and mudslides.

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发表于 2005-2-23 00:00:00 | 显示全部楼层
115楼的是我的了```
梦里花落知多少,你爱谈天我爱笑
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 楼主| 发表于 2005-2-24 00:00:00 | 显示全部楼层
113楼?哪位要接?
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 楼主| 发表于 2005-2-24 00:00:00 | 显示全部楼层
Potential juror speaks her mind before being dismissed As juror number 240 stood to leave the courtroom, Michael Jackson threw anxious looks at his attorney and his jury consultant. Then the 46-year-old celebrity defendant put his head in his hands. Jackson hissed an inaudible one-word response. The woman had given him hope. The "prejudices" and "racial games" that were played there weren't played on the state level where she worked, she said. There are so few blacks in high county positions, she said. "Tokens," she called them. "Look around," she said, referring to the courtroom. Jackson sat enthralled at the defense table. "Woo," he said to no one in particular. The black woman talked about how prison officials had treated her husband. "He was always the one overlooked for promotions," she said. Jackson nodded his vigorous agreement. When the woman berated network television consultant and former county Sheriff Jim Thomas for publicly criticizing Jackson, Jackson seemed absolutely beside himself with excitement. The press must have been tipped about the Neverland search to get there as quickly as they did, she said. "Exactly," Jackson said loud enough to be heard. "I don't know if the man is guilty or innocent because I haven't seen yea or nay," she said. But how can Jackson receive a fair trial, she asked. "Just look around us," she said. A "jury of his peers" would include more "people of color" and of "mixed diversity." "How diverse does this jury look to you?" she asked. "Have some representation up here," she said. "And it doesn't have to be me. But she wasn't through. Police officers who have pulled her over for speeding with their guns drawn only backed off after seeing her prison work uniform, she said. Jackson's head went up and down in spirited agreement. "I've had this happen to me my whole life, but so what?" she said. "I think I've opened my mouth enough." Source: Santa Maria Times

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113没人接吗?那就是我的了!!总算可以归队了[em31]
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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