Thursday, August 24, 2006

August 24th

Tuesday, August 24, 1993, found Michael Jackson straddled across the International Date Line, between today and yesterday. He may not have been awake that morning in his penthouse suite at the Oriental Hotel in Bangkok when the news broke with the L.A. evening news. KNBC scrambled for any information about a police raid at Neverland for the 4 p.m. broadcast. By 5 p.m., they showed officers hauling boxes marked "EVIDENCE" from Michael's condo in Century City. Los Angeles Police Department Commander David Gascon said little to explain the footage. He was "not disclosing any aspect of the investigation at this point."

The people who called
Hard Copy correspondent Diane Dimond would. The one who worked for California's Department of Children and Family Services urged Diane to meet the other. The voice insisted that "enough is enough. He's got to stop getting away with this." Just after 7:00 p.m., Diane and her producer Steve Doran met the go-between at an Italian restaurant in Santa Monica. Diane spent two hours taking shorthand by candlelight. Steve kept the conversation going with ice tea and appetizers. In Diane's hands was an "Emergency Response Referral" and notes from an interview with the reporting child and his father. At first glance, they looked legit. Diane's notes include the following sentence: "Minor says MJ and he got erections after rubbing each other."

Michael
had arrived in Thailand on the 21st without Jordan Chandler, his 13-year-old friend Diane Diamond calls "stunningly handsome." Instead, he landed with tour staging that takes three days to assemble. The media took longer to get a story straight. Unknown to most then, the L.A.P.D. ventured outside their jurisdiction only hours after Michael's jet took off. Santa Barbara District Attorney Tom Sneddon learned about the raid when the BBC called for comment. By the time Diane and Steve Doran paid the check, the sun was setting on the 23rd in LA. As they left the restaurant, it was also approaching noon on the 24th in Bangkok. That evening was the scheduled launch of the second leg of his Dangerous tour.

Soon Michael
would do his vocal exercises. His longtime voice coach Seth Riggs was always impressed with Michael's three-and-a-half octave range, "from basso low E up to G and A-flat above high C. A lot of people think it's falsetto, but it's ... all connected, which is remarkable." But when he traveled with the Bad tour, Riggs was perplexed by Michael's new addition to the routine. He was holding both a note and his arms up in the air while spinning about. Michael explained to him, "I may have to do it onstage, so I want to make sure it's possible."

Microphones were all around. "We don't want to feed any wild speculation on this matter," maintained Commander David Gascon. Michael's attorney Harold Weitzman explained the allegations the L.A.P.D. would not confirm: "What has transpired here is the result of a rejected demand made by the father of one of Michael's young friends."
Private detective Anthony Pellicano echoed that Michael was the subject of "extortion gone awry."

The
Dangerous show opens with the "O Fortuna" section from Carl Orff's Carmina Burana, those infamous driving strings used in The Omen, and so many of the horror films Michael loves. Michael has them open his Dangerous video collection, too. They provide the sound for mute, frenetic shots of fans screaming, crying, overcome. Michael catapults himself from underneath the stage for the sold-out crowd filling Bangkok's National Stadium, and stands, as if frozen. No music. Sure, Michael may be known for his moonwalk, and his crotch grabs, but that stare is as much a signature move. He watches us take him in. The crowd roars, but he waits, center stage. At roughly the same time in L.A., his voice comes through Howard Weitzman: "I am confident the Department will conduct a fair and thorough investigation, and its results will demonstrate that there was no wrong-doing on my part."

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