Jackson prosecution, defense get in last digs

Final wrap-up is today before case goes to jury

Published: Friday, June 3 2005 12:20 a.m. MDT

Fans lean over a fence and scream in support of Michael Jackson as he arrives at the Santa Barbara County Courthouse Thursday.

Haraz Ghanbari, Associated Press

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SANTA MARIA, Calif. — A prosecutor told jurors during closing arguments of the Michael Jackson trial Thursday that the pop star targeted a vulnerable cancer survivor, brought the little boy "into the world of the forbidden" in his bedroom and molested him.

Defense attorney Thomas Mesereau countered that the accuser's family consisted of "con artists, actors and liars." He said prosecutors revealed the weakness of their case by attacking him during their closing argument.

"Whenever a prosecutor does that you know they're in trouble," Mesereau told the panel, which is expected to get the case today. "This is not a popularity contest between lawyers."

Mesereau was to conclude today and the prosecution was to deliver a rebuttal before the case goes to the jury. Jackson, who looked glum 24 hours earlier, said "I'm OK" as he left court Thursday.

Prosecutors, Mesereau said, engaged in a "nasty attempt, a barbaric attempt" to attack Jackson personally by bringing up his financial problems, collection of adult magazines and "sagging music career."

Mesereau also showed charts suggesting it was ridiculous to believe that during a time when Jackson was under international scrutiny he would choose to commit a sex crime.

In a methodical closing argument, Senior Deputy District attorney Ron Zonen berated Jackson and his attorneys, stood by the testimony of the accuser's mother, and used charts and graphics to show what he said was a pattern of criminal behavior.

Zonen argued for nearly two hours before he even brought up child molestation, focusing first on a complicated conspiracy alleging Jackson sought to hold the accuser's family against their will.

He said it was toward the end of a period in which the accuser and his family stayed at Jackson's Neverland ranch that "the behavior had turned to something terribly illegal."

Zonen said Jackson began giving the boy alcohol and even though his mother at that time was unaware of any molestation, she insisted that her family leave Neverland.

"For all her shortcomings, (the mother), after learning Michael Jackson was giving her son alcohol, in 36 hours she had her children out of there," Zonen said.

Mesereau said the real issue was "whether the accuser's family was credible," and he tore into the prosecutor's claim the boy's mother wasn't out for money, repeatedly returning to the refrain, "Was she asking for money?"

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