Bitter rivalry between DA, Jackson reflected in latest case

Published: Friday, Nov. 21 2003 12:00 a.m. MST

LOS ANGELES — The bad blood between Michael Jackson and the prosecutor who filed child molestation charges against him goes back more than a decade.

It even spawned a song in which the pop star calls Santa Barbara County District Attorney Tom Sneddon a "cold man."

Ten years ago, Sneddon tried to build a child-molestation case against Jackson. But it fell apart when the singer's accuser reportedly accepted a multimillion-dollar civil settlement and refused to testify in any criminal case.

Sneddon "believed Jackson to be guilty of the first offense, and given Tom's personality, he would not let go of that," retired Superior Court Judge James Slater, who handled portions of the 1993 case, said Thursday. "He would certainly be thinking back on the last time when Mr. Jackson walked away from the judge."

On Wednesday, Sneddon said a new law that allows prosecutors to halt civil suits during related criminal cases should prevent a replay of the 1993 scenario. "I think there's a sense in the public that he did" buy his way out of that investigation, the district attorney said.

Some observers said Sneddon, a former boxer at Notre Dame who earned the nickname "Mad Dog" for his tenacious courtroom demeanor, had waited a long time for another shot at Jackson.

Sneddon, however, rejected suggestions that he had a vendetta against Jackson or timed the arrest to coincide with the release of Jackson's latest album, a greatest-hits collection.

"I can tell you it's B.S., but that isn't going to change people's observations," Sneddon said. Sarcastically, he said: "Like the sheriff and I are really into that kind of music."

When that 1993 case "went to bed ... it went out of my mind. I haven't given it a passing thought," Sneddon said.

Early this year, after Jackson revealed in a British documentary that he sometimes lets children sleep in his bed, Sneddon condemned the "media circus" around the documentary and said Jackson's admission was "much ado about nothing."

Still, some observers said Sneddon, a prosecutor for 34 years and D.A. for nearly 21 of those, appeared to be grandstanding at the news conference and seemed to take delight in announcing a warrant for Jackson's arrest had been issued.

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