IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.

Jackson's ex-wife set to testify

Defense loses another attorney as Oxman leaves case
/ Source: The Associated Press

The same day the judge in the Michael Jackson molestation case ruled the pop star’s ex-wife can testify as a prosecution witness, word emerged that the defense has lost another member of the team.

Jackson’s attorneys told the judge and prosecutors in a notice released Monday that attorney Brian Oxman’s departure was effective last Thursday. The notice did not include a reason.After court Monday, several reporters watched as Oxman had an animated conversation with lead Jackson attorney Thomas Mesereau Jr. The two then embraced in a hug. Oxman did not return a call for comment Monday.

Oxman was taken from court last month and hospitalized with what turned out to be right lung pneumonia. Jackson and his mother welcomed him back with hugs when he returned.

Oxman is the fourth attorney to part ways with Jackson since the singer was charged in 2003. Jackson replaced attorneys Mark Geragos and Benjamin Braffman with Mesereau and Susan Yu in April. In October, Jackson announced that longtime attorney Steve Cochran was taking a temporary leave.

Immunity for travel agent
Jackson, 46, is accused of molesting a 13-year-old boy in February or March 2003, giving the boy alcohol and conspiring to hold the boy’s family captive to get them to rebut a TV documentary in which Jackson appeared with the boy and said he allowed children to sleep in his bed. Jackson called the sleeping arrangement non-sexual.

Prosecutors said their witnesses when court resumes Tuesday would include Cynthia Montgomery, a travel agent who was expected to testify about a plan by Jackson associates to send the family of his young accuser to Brazil.

The judge decided Monday to grant “use immunity” to Montgomery, who is under investigation by federal authorities looking into the alleged secret videotaping of conversations between Jackson and Geragos on a charter jet flight.

The immunity means Montgomery’s testimony cannot be used against her in any other proceeding. She had told the court last week she would refuse to testify about anything involving the charter jet flight.

Ex-wife set to take stand
The decision came as Judge Rodney S. Melville overruled defense objections and said he will allow Jackson’s ex-wife Debbie Rowe to testify as a prosecution witness.

Prosecutors want Rowe, the mother of two of his three children, to tell jurors that she was compelled to appear on a videotape praising Jackson as a good father and a humanitarian.

Prosecutors say Rowe did the interview under duress, having been told by Jackson associates that if she did not do it she would risk losing her visitation rights with her children, Paris and Prince Michael.

The defense objected on grounds that the testimony was part of a prosecution “desperation” tactic at the end of its case and had no relevance to the charges against Jackson.

Was Rowe’s interview scripted?
In addition, the defense said that if Rowe testified they would seek to present the entire three hours of her video interview with Jackson associates as well as a tape recording she made secretly.

Prosecutor Ron Zonen said Rowe would tell jurors that she engaged in a “highly scripted interview and that the incentive was to suggest she would have visitation with her children if she did this.”

Zonen said this would corroborate the testimony of the mother of the Jackson’s young accuser who testified she also was pressured to appear in a video and speak from a script.

Defense attorney Robert Sanger said there was no script, just questions that were written out. The defense also noted that Rowe had given up her parental rights to the children. Zonen said those rights had been recently restored and that she has a case under way in family court regarding visitation.

Prosecution witness blockedIn a blow to the prosecution, Melville ruled Monday that Zonen may not call a man who was to testify that his young son once disappeared at Neverland for 90 minutes until he was found in Jackson’s bedroom.

Melville ruled that Chris Carter, a former bodyguard for Jackson, could not testify, NBC News reported. Carter was recently arrested in Nevada for alleged robbery, and was instrumental to the case as one of a few people who claimed to have seen Jackson and his accuser together.

Sanger said the plan to call the man suggested “sort of a desperation” on the part of prosecutors. He also argued that the man’s son has denied that anything improper happened with Jackson.

NBC's Chip Bell contributed to this report.