Michael Jackson Trial: Leno Denies Family Asked Him For Money

On the stand in the Michael Jackson trial yesterday, Jay Leno — the penultimate defense witness, preceding actor Chris Tucker — contradicted previous defense assertions that Jackson's accuser and his family had asked him for money when the boy was suffering from cancer and receiving chemotherapy treatment in 2000.

"I was not asked for any money nor did I send any," Mr. Leno said. "No one asked me for money."

Jackson's lawyers, led by Thomas Mesereau Jr., have sought to portray the mother of Jackson's accuser as an unstable but calculating grifter who plied celebrities for money out of sympathy for her son's condition, and who likely coached her son to lie about the molestation charges against Jackson.

They have certainly succeeded in portraying the woman in an unfavorable light: The mother's former sister-in-law testified that when she held blood drives for the boy, the mother told her "that she didn't need my [expletive] blood, [but] that she needed money."

Leno did confirm that the boy called and left messages for him several times and praised him effusively enough to make Leno "suspicious" — Leno said in court "I'm a comedian in his mid-50's - I'm not Batman" — but also contradicted defense statments that Leno called the police with his suspicions. Leno said the police in fact contacted him. When leaving the stand Leno leaned into the microphone and said, "We have Renee Zellweger on the show tonight."

Following Leno, Tucker testified that he met Jackson's accuser, Gavin Arviso, at a benefit for the boy in 2000. He said the boy's father had introduced himself at the Laugh Factory comedy club in Hollywood and asked him to take part.

Tucker said that a few days after the benefit the boy told him it hadn't made any money, so he wired "probably $1,500 or more" to a foundation for the family. Mesereau asked Tucker if he believed the money was for medical expenses. "I was hoping it was for that," he said. Tucker said he also took the boy's family to an amusement park and on shopping trips to a mall. The actor will continue to testify today.

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Article comments

  • 1 - Eric Olsen

    May 25, 2005 at 12:14 pm

    someday Google news will stop listing all of our stories as "satire" - until then, this is not satire. Thanks.

  • 2 - jarboy

    May 25, 2005 at 3:15 pm

    how can google not list this site as satire, when the masthead reads, "A sinister cabal of superior bloggers on music, books, film, popular culture, technology, and politics." first get blogcrittics to change that heading.

  • 3 - Eric Olsen

    May 25, 2005 at 4:11 pm

    the motto is not the issue - it's the fact that they are completely automated and hae decided that any site tha has ANY satire must be all satire. It will be resolved, eventually

  • 4 - DrPat

    May 25, 2005 at 4:37 pm

    Google must be trying to differentiate itself from print media (newspapers), which can carry news, opinion (editorials), reviews and humor/satire (comic pages) without designating the whole as satire.

  • 5 - Eric Olsen

    May 25, 2005 at 5:00 pm

    we think we have the solution but are still waiting to hear back from Google News, which seems to be on about an 8-day mail reply cycle

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