Michael Jackson’s mother won temporary custody of the star’s children and estate on Monday as the first legal shots were fired in the fight arising from the icon’s death.
The court rulings came as the investigation intensified into what killed the King of Pop last week, with coroners collecting two bags of medication from Jackson’s home as evidence.
The Wall Street Journal, meanwhile, reported that a will drafted by Jackson in 2002 divides his estate among his mother, children and one or more charities.
PHOTO: AFP
But it is not believed to include his father, Joseph Jackson, with whom the singer is reported to have had a troubled relationship.
A Los Angeles Superior Court judge named the star’s 79-year-old mother, Katherine, temporary guardian of his three children and his estate, which includes the Neverland ranch and rights to songs by The Beatles. The judge, Mitchell Beckloff, set a July 6 hearing to make a final decision.
The family told the court that Jackson did not have a will, but at least one of the pop star’s many lawyers reportedly said there was a will under wraps.
The Journal said a lawyer for Jackson could present the 2002 will to the Los Angeles Superior Court as soon as tomorrow. It was unclear what custody arrangements are provided for the children in the will.
Family patriarch Joe Jackson applauded the court decision to make his wife the temporary guardian of their grandchildren, Prince Michael, 12, Paris, 11, and Prince Michael II, 7.
“This is where they belong,” Jackson told reporters. “We’re going to take care of them and give them the education they’re supposed to have.”
Jackson’s former wife of three years, Debbie Rowe, is the mother of the two eldest children, while the third was born in 2002 to a surrogate whose identity has never been made public.
Rowe, a dermatologist who met Jackson when he was under treatment, has kept a low profile since their divorce. But she appealed through her lawyers to let the children mourn their father in peace.
Rowe “requests that Michael’s family, and particularly the children, be spared such harmful, sensationalist speculation” about their status, lawyer Marta Almli said.
Another attorney expected Rowe to make a decision on her next step in the coming days.
Legal experts say that Rowe, as the biological mother, would have a strong chance to gain custody of her two children. A court battle could also unearth ugly details about Joe Jackson, who the pop singer said beat him as a child.
The father said that no funeral date would be set until results of a second autopsy on his son were complete.
Reports have said Jackson’s family is considering a series of simultaneous memorial services around the world for the singer, reflecting the huge global reach of an artist who sold more than 750 million records.
“It is the determination of the family to be careful and deliberate on how they plan his celebration of life, because we’re talking about a historic figure that really changed pop culture around the world,” family representative and prominent New York politician Al Sharpton said.
“This is not something you do carelessly and spontaneously. We must remember they are still grieving and in their grief, determined to uphold his legacy,” he said.
Deepak Chopra, an Indian-born new-age guru and friend of Jackson, said the singer was taking too much medication, but said no one should blame him.
“He was the victim of circumstances, he was the victim of his own body image, he was the victim of the media frenzy around him and he was the victim of enablers,” Chopra told CNN.
The Los Angeles Coroner’s office on Monday carried out two bags of medication from Jackson’s house. Craig Harvey, the coroner’s chief investigator, said only that it was “additional medical evidence” in the case.
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