Le telefonate potrebbero scagionare Jackson

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sery84
00martedì 3 maggio 2005 19:08
Infatti la lista di telefonate portata ieri dall'accusa dimostrerebbe che Jackson non fosse a Neverland nel periodo in cui serebbero dovuti avvenire i fatti incriminati.

Le telefonate riguardano quasi interamente solo Amen Cascio e Shaffel e MJ non è coinvolto in queste.

Ma le telefonate di MJ provenivano dai telefoni di Hotels costosissimi, dove MJ alloggiava, e a quanto pare alloggiava proprio nel peiodo febbraio-marzo, ciò renderebbe impossibile l'ipotesi di sequestro e forse anche quelle di molestie. (ma sappiamo che Gavin può sbagliarsi per 500-600 volte la data ,no?)
Cmq se ciò fosse vero il periodo riguardante lemolestie si restringerebbe a pochissimi giorni. (troppo pochi...)



Ecco l'articolo da Fox News

District Attorney's Jacko Timeline Doesn't Jibe
Michael Jackson was not at his Neverland Ranch on March 6, 7 and 8 in 2003, and possibly not on March 9 either.

That was the news that the prosecution inadvertently admitted into evidence yesterday in the Jackson child molestation trial, while it was busy analyzing the phone records of all the case's main players.
And those three days, and also possibly Feb. 20, 2003, continue to narrow the time frame in which the prosecution asserts Jackson committed his crimes.

Thanks to the rather boring review of phone records, we did learn a couple of small things that may have great significance later.

While Jackson was away from Neverland, his teen accuser was at the ranch with his family. The boy, now 15, has said in his grand jury testimony and in court that his molestation took place "toward the end" of his stay at Neverland — on March 12, 2003.

Jackson, as we accidentally learned in court, was staying at the Beverly Hilton for several days at that time under the name "Kenneth Morgan." Phone records introduced by the prosecution show that he was there, calling his assistant Evvy Tavasci night and day.

The phone records from the hotel were entered as evidence by the prosecution. So were the room bills, which show that Jackson was in an $850-a-night suite.
Phone records also indicate Jackson may have been away from Neverland on Feb. 20, 2003. That's the day the district attorney said in his indictment that Jackson began his molestation and conspiracy.

The phone records show that Jackson may have been in Miami on that date, staying at Turnberry Isle Inn, the same place where he stayed earlier that month for $3,700 a night. And you wonder why he has no money.
Since the district attorney placed all of Jackson's indictable actions between Feb. 20 and March 10, 2003, it would seem that his alleged window of opportunity to have molested the boy is getting smaller and smaller.
It's already been established that the family was away from Neverland between Feb. 25 and March 2, 2003. Scratch that week off the schedule. Now cross off those three or four days in late March, plus Feb. 20 and possibly Feb. 21 and 22.

Other items in yesterday's testimony didn't jibe with what the jury has already heard.
For one thing, the accuser's mother, Janet Arvizo, was vehement during her own testimony that she'd missed celebrating Valentine's Day with her then-boyfriend because of Jackson and his associates.
But phone records show that she made seven calls on Feb. 14 to her friend, Azja Pryor, the fiancée of comedian Chris Tucker. She also had several phone conversations with Jackson associate Frank Tyson that day.
The last call of the day, placed by Arvizo to Pryor, was at 11:40 p.m. The defense could say that if she missed Valentine's Day, it was Arvizo's own fault.

Santa Barbara police detective Sgt. Craig Bonner — a nice enough fellow who'd worked on getting all the phone records together for all the parties to this case — conceded during cross-examination by Robert Sanger that he had omitted calls for Feb. 4, 2003, during his presentation under direct questioning.

He also said that the phone records hadn't been finalized until late Sunday night — after a run-up to the trial that lasted more than a year.

The Arvizos' records also included two calls to Chris Tucker's home on Feb. 4 within minutes of each other.

Under cross-examination during what seemed like a brutally dull day in court, the defense began to set the stage for a story we reported in this column exclusively last Friday.

That's the story that the Arvizos asked to be sent to Miami to see Michael Jackson on Feb. 6, 2003. I told you that sources say Chris Tucker will relate how the Miami trip was his idea, not Jackson's.

The calls to Tucker, the defense will argue if its case ever begins, are important. They will show that after the family was made an offer by British tabloid reporters for its story, the Arvizos picked up the phone and called Tucker for access to Jackson.

Tucker then flew the family to Miami on a plane he had rented, on his way to Orlando, Atlanta and the NBA All-Star Game.

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