Michael Jackson's oldest son described the frantic efforts to revive
his father to a jury on Wednesday, a scene of tears and agony that ended
a dozen idyllic years being raised by one of pop music's superstars.
Michael
Joseph "Prince" Jackson Jr. told the panel how he knew there was
trouble in the singer's rented mansion when heard screaming upstairs and
went into his father's bedroom. His father was laying halfway off the
bed, eyes rolled up into the back of his head as his physician tried
CPR.
His sister, Paris, screamed for her father and Prince, now 16, told
jurors that he was crying. On the ride to a hospital, the teenager
recounted how he tried to calm the fears of his sister and younger
brother by telling them that angels were watching over their father and
everything would be fine.
It wasn't until his father's doctor,
Conrad Murray, came out of the emergency room and said he had died that
Prince knew his father was gone.
"Nothing will ever be the same,"
the teenager told jurors. He said while his younger brother doesn't
totally realize the loss, his sister has had the hardest time of them
all and he has had many sleepless nights since his father died four
years ago.
His voice wavered at times and tears appeared to form
in his eyes, but Prince remained composed as he publicly recounted for
the first time what he saw the day his father died.
The
re-telling of the scene in Jackson's bedroom came after nearly an hour
of Prince describing happier times, showing photos of him and his sister
when they were younger and a series of videos of the children filmed by
their father.
He testified in a lawsuit accusing concert promoter AEG
Live LLC of negligently hiring Murray, who was later convicted of
involuntary manslaughter for giving Jackson an overdose of the
anesthetic propofol.
AEG denies it hired the physician or bears any responsibility for the entertainer's death.
Wearing
a black suit with a dark grey tie and his long brown hair tucked behind
his ears, Prince testified that he saw AEG Live CEO Randy Phillips at
the family's rented mansion in a heated conversation with Murray in the
days before his father died. The teenager said Phillips grabbed Murray's
elbow.
Phillips "looked aggressive to me," Prince testified.
His father wasn't at home at the time and was probably rehearsing, he said.
He
said he saw his father cry after phone conversations with Phillips, and
wanted more time to rehearse and was unhappy with pressure to perform
his 50 scheduled comeback concerts titled "This Is It."
Murray's
attorney Valerie Wass and AEG defense attorney Marvin S. Putnam later
denied outside court that the meeting Prince described ever happened.
Putnam said Prince would be re-called to the witness stand during the defense case later in the trial.
"I
think as the testimony will show when he is called in our defense
that's not what happened," Putnam said. "He was a 12-year-old boy who
has had to endure this great tragedy."
The testimony began with the teenager showing jurors roughly 15 minutes of private family photos and home videos.
He
described growing up on Neverland Ranch and narrated videos of the
property's petting zoos, amusement park and other amenities. After his
father's acquittal of child molestation charges, Prince described living
in the Middle East, Ireland and Las Vegas.
Prince is the first
Jackson family member to testify during the trial, now in its ninth
week.
On Thursday his cousins, TJ and Taj Jackson, who are Tito
Jackson's sons, will take the witness stand.
Prince Jackson, his
sister Paris-Michael Katherine Jackson and brother Prince Michael
"Blanket" Jackson are plaintiffs in the case against AEG, which their
grandmother and primary caretaker filed in August 2010.
Another image showed Michael Jackson playing piano with his son while Prince was still a toddler.
Plaintiffs'
attorney Brian Panish asked Prince whether he was interested in
pursuing a career in music.
"I can never play an instrument and I
definitely cannot sing," Prince said to laughter from the jury.
He said he wanted to study film or business when he goes to college.
His
testimony also included details that AEG's lawyers will likely point to
later in the case to bolster their contention that Jackson was
secretive about using propofol as a sleep aid.
Prince said none
of the household staff were allowed upstairs at the mansion, and the
singer kept his bedroom locked while receiving treatments from Murray.
During
cross-examination, Putnam played a clip from a deposition of Prince in
which the teen said he discovered the bedroom was locked when he and his
siblings were playing hide-and-seek and couldn't get inside.
Prince also said his father gave him and his sister Paris a stack of
$100 bills on a few occasions to give to Murray. He said his father told
him that Murray wouldn't take the money from him, and the doctor
wouldn't take the full amount from the children.
The teenager said his understanding was that the money was meant to tide Murray over until he got paid by AEG Live.
He never saw or knew how Murray was treating his doctor.
"I was 12. To my understanding he was supposed to make sure my dad stayed healthy," Prince testified.
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