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E.G GOES IN ON ROBERT KRAFT AND, MICHAEL JACKSON DOC SERIES !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! MUST HEAR (PART ONE)

E.G GOES IN ON ROBERT KRAFT AND, MICHAEL JACKSON DOC SERIES !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! MUST HEAR (PART ONE)

Kraft allegedly visited Orchids of Asia first on Jan. 19, a day after police — who had been inves...

Renegade Talk Radio · Renegade Talk Radio

March 1, 201928m 58sExplicit

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Show Notes

Kraft allegedly visited Orchids of Asia first on Jan. 19, a day after police — who had been investigating the joint for at least six months — had set up surveillance cameras inside the business, located 17 miles from the 77-year-old billionaire NFL owner’s Palm Beach apartment.

According to the affidavit, Kraft paid cash at the front desk and then went to another room, where he took off his clothes. He was accompanied by Wang and Mingbi, who allegedly massaged him lying face-down before turning him over and performing a sex act by hand.

Wang, identified by police as the manager of the massage parlor nicknamed “Lulu,” was arrested and faces charges of maintaining a house of ill fame and deriving profits from prostitution. Mingbi, an employee of the spa, has not been arrested or charged and is believed to be cooperating with authorities. Kraft was seen tipping them $100 each before leaving.

Kraft left the spa in a white Bentley owned by a friend who had driven him there and had waited outside. A Jupiter police officer then pulled the Bentley over on a traffic stop and asked Kraft — the front-seat passenger — for identification.

The billionaire handed over his Massachusetts driver’s license. Legal experts suggest this traffic stop could be illegal because it appears to have been done on the pretext of a traffic violation, but — as the affidavit states — was in fact carried out to identify Kraft, who wasn’t driving the car.

Kraft’s second visit was on the following day, Jan. 20, the morning of the AFC Championship Game, and he was allegedly seen on video with Lulu, who massaged him face-down before turning him over and appearing to put her face near his genitals, the affidavit states. He gave her a $100 bill and two other unidentified bills before leaving.

Despite the video evidence, which does not have audio, legal experts say the case against Kraft is “flawed.” Through his spokesman, the NFL team owner has denied having solicited prostitutes.

“Leaving Neverland” is not principally about Jackson, but rather the two boys, now men in their 30s, and the legacy of child abuse. Director Reed, quite rightly, spends a lot of time (a lot of time) examining how their adult lives were derailed by their traumatic childhoods. They are not, however, heroes: Both either testified or made statements on Jackson’s behalf in his 1993 trial, which ended in an out-of-court settlement; in the 2005 case, Mr. Robson gave what he now says was perjured testimony and helped get Jackson acquitted. The men have since filed lawsuits against the Jackson estate that were thrown out of court on technicalities.

But as the documentary quite plainly asks, who is above reproach? The media, the music industry and Jackson’s besotted fans did—and do—try to pretend that all was well in Neverland. One of the more useful points made by Mr. Reed is how freakishly strange that was, and is.



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michaeljackson robertkraftentertainmenthollywoodmusicnews&politicsrenegadetalkradio