Hopkins student kills intruder with samurai sword – I think they should CUT him a deal!!!

September 15th, 2009
if any of you have anything else to say....now's the time!!

if any of you have anything else to say....now's the time!!

A Johns Hopkins University student armed with a samurai sword killed a man who broke into the garage of his off-campus residence early Tuesday, a Baltimore police spokesman said.

According to preliminary reports, a resident of the 300 block of E. University Parkway called police about a suspicious person, department spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said. An off-duty officer responded about 1:20 a.m. to the area with university security, according to Guglielmi. They heard shouts and screams from a neighboring house and found the suspected burglar suffering from a nearly severed hand and lacerations to his upper body, he said.

The suspect was pronounced dead at the scene.

The student told police that he heard a commotion in the house and went downstairs armed with a samurai sword, Guglielmi said. He saw the side door to the garage had been pried open and found a man inside, who lunged at the student. There was no indication that the suspected burglar was armed, however, according to Guglielmi.

Burglars had already stolen two laptops and a Sony PlayStation from the student’s home Monday, Guglielmi said.

Dennis O’Shea, a spokesman for Johns Hopkins, said all four residents of the house are undergraduate students at the university. Police had released three of the roommates by Tuesday afternoon, but the student who wielded the sword remained in custody while investigators worked to corroborate his story with evidence and witness statements. The city state’s attorney’s office will determine whether to press charges, Guglielmi said.

Police have not formally released the name of the suspected burglar, but a department source identified the man as Donald D. Rice, 49, of the 600 block of E. 26th St. in Baltimore. He had 29 prior convictions for crimes such as breaking and entering, according to Guglielmi, and had been released Saturday from the Baltimore County Detention Center after he was arrested by county police in August 2008 for stealing a car in Baltimore. Rice was found guilty in December on one count of unauthorized removal of property, and he was sentenced to 18 months in prison.

Michael Hughes of the 3400 block of University Place, about a block away from the scene, said he was working at his home when he heard screams shortly after 1 a.m.

“I could hear the fear in the voice, and I could tell someone was scared,” said Hughes, 43, who works for Johns Hopkins’ Bloomberg School of Public Health.

Hughes said he called police and could hear sirens as he was on the phone. He walked over to the crime scene shortly after.

“The body was near the garage. And I watched them carry the sword out. The whole thing was surreal and totally bizarre,” Hughes said.

By Tuesday afternoon, two pools of blood remained on the ground a few feet away from the door to the garage, which is not connected to the home. A door to a wooden fence surrounding the back yard was broken, allowing the scene to be viewed from the sidewalk.

The three-story house has five bedrooms and two bathrooms, according to Diego Ardila, a junior at Hopkins. Ardila said he lived in the house during the summer and was a roommate of two of the people that currently live there.

Ardila, 19, said one of the roommates owned a samurai sword and generally kept it in his room. Ardila described the student as somewhat outgoing, although they did not speak frequently.

“He kept the sword on top of his cabinet,” Ardila said.

Five people lived at the house during the summer, according to Ardila, who now lives a few blocks away.

“You don’t expect to hear that someone you know killed a guy with a samurai sword. From what little I know of him, he wasn’t some guy going out to kill,” Ardila said.

Guglielmi said it is legal to possess a sword in Baltimore, and “individuals have a right to defend their person and their property.” But the police spokesman said he was not in a position to comment on whether it was appropriate to use a sword, baseball bat or other means of defense.

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Video: Maryland judge allegedly flattens tire of car parked in reserved spot – ENOUGH SAID!

August 13th, 2009

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Courtroom Yawner Jailed for Six Months

August 10th, 2009
(Aug. 10) — As Clifton Williams sat in the courtroom in Joliet, Ill., awaiting his cousin’s sentencing on drug charges, little did he know he would soon be the one in jail.
 
As Judge Daniel Rozak sentenced Williams’ cousin to two years probation, Williams yawned, an act that earned him six months in jail on contempt charges, the Chicago Tribune reported.

A judge sentenced Clifton Williams to six months in jail on contempt-of-court charges after he yawned during his cousin’s trial. A spokesman for the court said Williams attempted to disrupt the proceedings with his yawn.
 
Williams’ father said he was “flabbergasted” by the sentence, the maximum issued for a contempt charge without a jury trial. “It seems to me like a yawn is an involuntary action,” Clifton Williams Sr. told the newspaper.
The court disagreed. While Rozak did not comment on the charges, a state’s attorney’s office spokesman, Chuck Pelkie, said Williams did not let out a “simple” yawn. “It was a loud and boisterous attempt to disrupt the proceedings,” he said.
 
According to the Tribune, Rozak is particularly fierce on courtroom decorum, issuing contempt-of-court charges at the highest rate of any judge in the county. The broad discretion of judges to control their courts has prompted Rozak to file contempt charges against people for everything from swearing to not silencing their cell phones.
However, some of the people Rozak assigned harsh sentences to were shown leniency if they apologized.

Good thing he didn't sneeze!

Good thing he didn't sneeze!

Williams will have to serve as least 21 days, the Tribune reported, and he has been locked up since July 23. In a letter to his family, Williams wrote, “I really can’t believe I’m in jail.”

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IT JUST KEEPS GETTING BETTER!!!

August 4th, 2009

Tennessee Police Officers Accused of Planting Drugs and Beating Suspect

A lawsuit was filed on Thursday accusing Cookeville, Tennessee police of “excessive use of force” and “planting contraband” during a domestic assault arrest last year.

One officer has been placed on leave because of the incident, and five others are named in the federal More..lawsuit.

Police car video from the Cookeville Police Department captured the incident that triggered the lawsuit.

On the night of June 4, 2007, Carlos Ferrell was stopped by police on a domestic assault warrant. According to the lawsuit, Ferrell’s ex-wife, Tiffany, saw Ferrell, called police and was involved in the initial chase.

Once Ferrell came to a stop, he was ordered out of the car by Cookeville Police Officer Chris Melton.

“Put your hands up, and get out of the car,” Melton is heard telling Ferrell on the tape.

Ferrell, 28, exits the car with his arms raised while Officer Jeff Johnson is holding the department’s police dog.

The video shows the dog bite Ferrell several times. Attorney Blair Durham is representing Ferrell.

“The dog is released. The dog then chews into Mr. Ferrell’s leg where, of course, he goes to the ground,” he said.

“Your dog just ate my leg off,” Ferrell said on the tape. Durham also accused Melton of planting drugs on Ferrell.

In the dash cam video, Melton is seen searching Ferrell’s pockets a number of times.

Then, Durham said, another officer appears to give a signal with his hand, at which point Melton then reaches into his right pocket and looks into the camera.

It’s at that point on the tape that Durham said Melton appears to put drugs in Ferrell’s pocket.

“Whoa, Carlos, weed? Now you got you another freaking charge, how about that?”

Melton told Ferrell in the video. Melton has been placed on administrative leave with pay. T

he night of the stop, Ferrell was charged with evading arrest and possession of marijuana.

“That’s a complete drug plant is what I’m alleging. It’s a complete unlawful search, first of all, and it’s a planting of paraphernalia,” Durham said.

Cookeville police said they are “completely cooperating with the TBI (Tennessee Bureau of Investigation).”

A representative said the department is not trying to hide anything and doesn’t want to look like it is.

Police took Ferrell to an area hospital for treatment of his injuries.

Durham said Ferrell is no choir boy but that he’s never been arrested on violent offenses.

According to his record, Ferrell has two DUIs and a previous drug possession charge

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Cops caught on dash cam trying to cover up their rear-end crash – ABSOLUTELY INSANE!!!

August 3rd, 2009

After a Hollywood police officer rear-ended a car in February and then arrested the driver on drunken driving charges, he and other officers talked about doctoring the report–it said a jumpy cat created a distraction–to cover up the crash.

The exchange was recorded by a dashboard camera in one of the patrol cars. The officers apparently didn’t realize it was on.

“I don’t want to make th More..ings up ever, because it’s wrong, but if I need to bend it a little bit to protect a cop, I’m gonna,” one of the officers can be heard saying. “We’ll do a little Walt Disney to protect the cop because it wouldn’t have mattered because she is drunk anyway.”

Alexandra Gabriela Torrensvilas, 23, of Hollywood, ended up charged with four counts of drunken driving and cited for improper lane change. On Tuesday, Hollywood police officials placed Officer Dewey Pressley, 42, Officer Joel Francisco, 36, Sgt. Andrew Diaz, 39; and civilian Community Service Officer Karim Thomas, age unavailable; on administrative duty pending an internal affairs investigation and a review by the Broward State Attorney’s Office, said spokesman Lt. Scott Pardon.

Francisco was driving the car in the crash; Pressley wrote the report and made the arrest. Pressley’s report detailing the Feb. 17 midnight crash in the 2800 block of Sheridan Street said “a large gray stray cat” that had been sitting on Torrensvila’s lap jumped out of her car window and distracted her, causing her to veer into Francisco’s lane, where she abruptly braked, and he hit her.

“I will do the narrative for you,” one of the officers says on the tape. “I know how I am going to word this, the cat gets him off the hook.”

Torrensvilas’ attorney, Larry Meltzer, said this is a disturbing “abuse of power.” “Actually seeing it transpire on video in front of you, it really kind of sickens you,” he said. “It’s really nauseating to sit there and watch your client’s rights go out the window.”

Torrensvilas’ four DUI charges carry a maximum penalty of nearly three years in jail, Meltzer said. He declined to say what will become of her case: “In my opinion, as of this time, it’s being handled appropriately.” A spokesman for the Broward State Attorney’s Office declined to comment on the case or how it will proceed. Pressley, a 21-year veteran with the agency, wrote that when Francisco approached Torrensvilas’ car after the crash, she blurted: “It just jumped out.” The “it” was “a large, gray stray cat” that had been sitting on her lap while she drove, the report said. Francisco, who has been with the agency for nearly 11 years, smelled “a strong odor of an alcoholic beverage.”

Public Defender Howard Finkelstein on Tuesday sent a letter to Hollywood Police Chief Chadwick Wagner calling for answers and accountability. “Not only did these officers make a conscious decision to shift the blame to this young woman, but they made a concerted effort to write a narrative to fit ‘their facts,’ ”

Finkelstein wrote. He said his office has at least 27 pending cases in which these four officers are listed as material state witnesses. Pardon, the police department’s spokesman, declined to respond to the allegations. “We’ll see where the investigation goes,” he said.

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Couple Files Lawsuit After Raid On Home

July 28th, 2009
Couple Says Police Raided Wrong House!!

Couple Says Police Raided Wrong House!!

COLUMBIA, Md. — A Columbia couple filed a $5 million lawsuit Monday against the Howard County Police Department stemming from a raid at their home in 2008.

 

Lisa and Kevin Henderson accused the county’s SWAT team of excessive force and malicious prosecution after they raided the couple’s home in January 2008.

“I hear the door opening, and my husband says, ‘Who’s walking in my door and not announcing themselves?’ So, he’s looking, and all of a sudden we see red beams and flashing lights on myself and friend sitting on the couch,” said Lisa Henderson.

The couple said they’re still rattled by the raid on their townhouse.

“I kneeled down and put my hands behind me. Someone grabbed me and handcuffed me. My husband was screaming. I was saying, ‘Please don’t hurt him. He’s disabled.’ And I still didn’t know it was police,” Lisa Henderson told 11 News.

The couple’s attorney said the police had the wrong house.

According to court papers, the Howard County police SWAT team entered the home unannounced through the front door, which was unlocked. When Grunt the family dog started barking, court documents indicated one of the officers enticed the dog to coming running and shot him point blank.

“I lost my best friend. He helped me when I needed him to help without being told or trained,” said Kevin Henderson.

The couple said when Kevin Henderson tried to explain to police he was disabled and unable to move quickly, they responded by stepping on his feet and legs. He told the officers he couldn’t put his arms behind his back because of surgery he had on his left shoulder, but they cuffed him anyway.

Kevin and Lisa Henderson

Lisa Henderson said police pointed a gun to her face and threatened to blow her head off, then picked her up by her shirt and pushed her into a chair so hard that she bit the inside of her mouth.

“I’m a taxpayer in this county. I don’t have a criminal record. I’ve never even had a parking ticket, so why are you treating me like I am a criminal?” Lisa Henderson questioned.

Police said they found five small jars of marijuana, a pipe and grinder on a visitor to the Henderson’s home. The guest admitted he owned the material and was arrested and tried on possession charges.

After the Hendersons filed a formal complaint, Howard County police charged them with drug possession.

“When my clients complained, they charged them and they were exonerated by a judge,” Bell said.

The Hendersons filed the lawsuit in federal court on Monday. A trial date is expected by next spring.

A Howard County police representative said the department has not been officially notified of the lawsuit.

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Casual Friday Post – GIRL ARRESTED FOR SWEARING ON 911 CALL – unbelievable!

July 17th, 2009

WOW! I HAVE NOW SEEN IT ALL!

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CASUAL FRIDAY POST – ONE LAST TRIBUTE! R.I.P.

July 3rd, 2009

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MONTGOMERY COUNTY POLICE CORRUPTION – bad stops/false tickets – something must be done! PLEASE COMMENT!

June 30th, 2009

WHAT’S GOING ON AROUND HERE?? Tow Truck Driver Wrote Tickets Using Montgomery County Police Officer’s Book

 

While parking spaces reserved for guests sit empty, residents of the Fenshire Farms Town home community in Gaithersburg have to park a half mile away to avoid being ticketed or towed.

Cliff Rehder’s stepdad was nabbed.

“He had to go bail out his car and pay a couple hundred dollars for parking across the street from his house,” Rehder says.

Residents say they feel like a local towing company is stalking them, lying in wait to catch unsuspecting residents.

“They are always waiting across the street, searching every 15 minutes, ” Muzoffgur Nay says. It cost him $300 to get his towed car back.

Montgomery County Police have confirmed that one of their officers, Jennifer Phoenix, gave her ticket book to a tow truck operator at G and G towing in Rockville. That driver wrote $50 dollar tickets and the company also towed several cars.

Police Spokesman Lt. Paul Starks says Phoenix wasn’t authorized to give her ticket book to anyone.

“No, she wasn’t,” Starks says. “Internal Affairs looked into it and has taken action. We can’t discuss details since it’s a personnel matter. But she is an officer in good standing in this department. She has not resigned.”

Officer Phoenix has only been on the force four years, but this isn’t the first time she’s been accused of wrongdoing. She’s one of four Montgomery County police officers being sued by a local woman who says she was beaten and tasered while handcuffed.”

“I’ve lost so much. I’ll never been the same,” Melissa Dents told 9NEWS NOW.

In pictures taken the day after the October 2006 incident, Dent has swollen eyes, and 13 taser marks on her back and body.Her lawyer, Dennis Ettlin says they’ve filed a $6.4 million dollar civil suit against Officer Phoenix and three others.

The owner of G & G Towing, Glen Caid would not talk with 9News.

We tried to find out what happened to the tow truck driver– his boss wouldn’t talk to us.

“It’s kind of scary,” resident Amanda Mettler says. I assume people are paying those tickets, since that’s what law abiding citizens do. They have to look into this.”

There is some good news. Police say anyone who paid one of the bogus tickets will get their money back.

 

County police apologize after officer lends ticket book to tow-truck driver

Tower issued tickets in Gaithersburg neighborhood

 

Montgomery County Police are voiding parking tickets and apologizing to residents of the Fernshire Farms neighborhood in Gaithersburg after a four-year officer gave her book of parking tickets to a tow-truck driver who issued them last month.

Residents who received tickets say the tow-truck driver identified himself as a police officer working on behalf of their homeowners association.

After a private meeting of the HOA, residents who attended said police told them the tow truck driver has been fired and the police officer has tendered her resignation.

A “limited number” of tickets were issued to vehicles in Fernshire Farms, a 342-townhome community near Quince Orchard Road and Great Seneca Highway, said Lt. Paul Starks, director of the department’s media division.

After an internal investigation, the officer and tow-truck driver are not expected to face criminal charges, he said. On Tuesday, police spokesman Cpl. Stephen Galloza confirmed that the officer was Jennifer Phoenix, a four-year county officer at the 6th District station in Gaithersburg. She could not be reached.

“This is a community where there are some legitimate parking issues,” Starks said. “This officer made some poor decisions. While we do encourage officers to work with the community, there was poor decision-making on the part of this officer … Whatever, if any, personnel action that would be taking place has taken place.”

An officer from the 6th District station apologized to residents at the Fernshire Farms HOA meeting Monday and confirmed that the man who issued the tickets has been fired from the towing company, said Larry Seeger, president of the Fernshire Farms Homeowners Association.

After The Gazette expressed interest in attending Monday’s meeting, the HOA board closed the meeting to non-homeowners on “advice from counsel and property management,” Seeger said.

Several residents leaving the meeting said that police told them that the officer had submitted her resignation, effective July 5. Galloza declined to discuss personnel matters Tuesday.

Phoenix is one of four county officers named in a $6.4 million civil lawsuit filed in federal court by a Montgomery Village woman, who alleges that the officers beat, kicked and stunned her with Tasers in her living room in 2006 after she had been handcuffed.

That lawsuit is in discovery stages in U.S. District Court in Greenbelt.

Two of the $50 parking tickets were issued to the Kawczynski family, residents of Beacon Hill Terrace for nearly 20 years.

Mark Kawczynski got his ticket May 8. Four days later, his son Nick Kawczynski — who had parked over the curb while he loaded his Buick LeSabre for the drive back to the University of South Carolina — was cited shortly after 8 a.m. May 12.

In both cases, Mark and Nancy Kawczynski said, the man identified himself as a Montgomery County police officer.

Both times the man said he was “acting on behalf of the HOA,” they said. And both tickets that he issued are signed with the surname “Phoenix.”

County parking tickets say that the signature is made “under penalty of perjury.” Starks said that the internal investigation “did not rise to that” level.

The investigation also focused on the person who issued the tickets, whom residents said police later determined was a driver for G&G Towing of Rockville.

“That matter was looked into by our Internal Affairs. They’re not moving forward at this point with criminal charges,” Galloza said.

Glen Caid, G&G’s owner, did not return calls from The Gazette.

Fernshire Farm’s property manager, Sandra Ewing of Vanguard Management Associates Inc. of Germantown, had no comment.

The Kawczynskis and other Fernshire residents interviewed Monday night said the ticketing is a case of suburban cul-de-sac parking woes gone haywire.

They traced it back to the HOA’s decision four years ago to only allow guests to park in 21 spaces on Beacon Hill Terrace, one of dozens of cul-de-sacs near Quince Orchard High School.

“Who knows what the motive was. How ridiculous,” Nancy Kawczynski said.

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MILLIONS MOURN – INCLUDING ONE VERY SAD ASSOCIATE

June 26th, 2009

thekingLOS ANGELES – Michael Jackson, defined in equal parts as the world’s greatest entertainer and perhaps its most enigmatic figure, was about to attempt one of the greatest comebacks of all time. Then his life was cut shockingly — and so far, mysteriously — short.

The 50-year-old musical superstar died Thursday, just as he was preparing for what would be a series of 50 concerts starting July 13 at London’s famed 02 arena. Jackson had been spending hours and hours toiling with a team of dancers for a performance he and his fans hoped would restore his tarnished legacy to its proper place in pop.

An autopsy was planned for Friday, though results were not likely to be final until toxicology tests could be completed, a process that could take several days and sometimes weeks. However, if a cause can be determined by the autopsy, they will announce the results, said Los Angeles County Coroner Investigator Jerry McKibben.

Police said they were investigating, standard procedure in high-profile cases.

Jackson died at UCLA Medical Center after being stricken at his rented home in the posh Los Angeles neighborhood of Holmby Hills. Paramedics tried to resuscitate him at his home for nearly three-quarters of an hour, then rushed him to the hospital, where doctors continued to work on him.

“It is believed he suffered cardiac arrest in his home. However, the cause of his death is unknown until results of the autopsy are known,” his brother Jermaine said.

Cardiac arrest is an abnormal heart rhythm that stops the heart from pumping blood to the body. It can occur after a heart attack or be caused by other heart problems.

Jackson’s death brought a tragic end to a long, bizarre, sometimes farcical decline from his peak in the 1980s, when he was popular music’s premier all-around performer, a uniter of black and white music who shattered the race barrier on MTV, dominated the charts and dazzled even more on stage.

His 1982 album “Thriller” — which included the blockbuster hits “Beat It,” “Billie Jean” and “Thriller” — is the best-selling album of all time, with an estimated 50 million copies sold worldwide.

As word of his death spread, MTV switched its programming to play videos from Jackson’s heyday. Radio stations began playing marathons of his hits. Hundreds of people gathered outside the hospital. In New York’s Times Square, a low groan went up in the crowd when a screen flashed that Jackson had died, and people began relaying the news to friends by cell phone.

“No joke. King of Pop is no more. Wow,” Michael Harris, 36, of New York City, read from a text message a friend had sent him. “It’s like when Kennedy was assassinated. I will always remember being in Times Square when Michael Jackson died.”

The public first knew him as a boy in the late 1960s, when he was the precocious, spinning lead singer of theJackson 5, the singing group he formed with his four older brothers out of Gary, Ind. Among their No. 1 hits were “I Want You Back,” “ABC” and “I’ll Be There.”

He was perhaps the most exciting performer of his generation, known for his backward-gliding moonwalk, his feverish, crotch-grabbing dance moves and his high-pitched singing, punctuated with squeals and titters. His single sequined glove, tight, military-style jacket and aviator sunglasses were trademarks, as was his ever-changing, surgically altered appearance.

“For Michael to be taken away from us so suddenly at such a young age, I just don’t have the words,” saidQuincy Jones, who produced “Thriller.” “He was the consummate entertainer and his contributions and legacy will be felt upon the world forever. I’ve lost my little brother today, and part of my soul has gone with him.”

Jackson ranked alongside Elvis Presley and the Beatles as the biggest pop sensations of all time. He united two of music’s biggest names when he was briefly married to Presley’s daughter, Lisa Marie. Jackson’s sudden death immediately evoked comparisons to that of Presley himself, who died at age 42 in 1977.

“I am so very sad and confused with every emotion possible,” Lisa Marie Presley said in a statement. “I am heartbroken for his children who I know were everything to him and for his family. This is such a massive loss on so many levels, words fail me.”

As years went by, Jackson became an increasingly freakish figure — a middle-aged man-child weirdly out of touch with grown-up life. His skin became lighter, his nose narrower, and he spoke in a breathy, girlish voice. He often wore a germ mask while traveling, kept a pet chimpanzee named Bubbles as one of his closest companions and surrounded himself with children at his Neverland ranch, a storybook playland filled with toys, rides and animals. The tabloids dubbed him “Wacko Jacko.”

“It seemed to me that his internal essence was at war with the norms of the world. It’s as if he was trying to defy gravity,” said Michael Levine, a Hollywood publicist who represented Jackson in the early 1990s. He called Jackson a “disciple of P.T. Barnum” and said the star appeared fragile at the time but was “much more cunning and shrewd about the industry than anyone knew.”

Jackson caused a furor in 2002 when he playfully dangled his infant son, Prince Michael II, over a hotel balcony in Berlin while a throng of fans watched from below.

In 2005, he was cleared of charges that he molested a 13-year-old cancer survivor at Neverland in 2003. He had been accused of plying the boy with alcohol and groping him, and of engaging in strange and inappropriate behavior with other children.

The case followed years of rumors about Jackson and young boys. In a TV documentary, he acknowledged sharing his bed with children, a practice he described as sweet and not at all sexual.

Despite the acquittal, the lurid allegations that came out in court took a fearsome toll on his career and image, and he fell into serious financial trouble.

Michael Joseph Jackson was born Aug. 29, 1958, in Gary. He was 4 years old when he began singing with his brothers — Marlon, Jermaine, Jackie and Tito — in the Jackson 5. After his early success with bubblegum soul, he struck out on his own, generating innovative, explosive, unstoppable music.

The album “Thriller” alone mixed the dark, serpentine bass and drums and synthesizer approach of “Billie Jean,” the grinding Eddie Van Halen guitar solo on “Beat It,” and the hiccups and falsettos on “Wanna Be Startin’ Somethin‘.”

The peak may have come in 1983, when Motown celebrated its 25th anniversary with an all-star televised concert and Jackson moonwalked off with the show, joining his brothers for a medley of old hits and then leaving them behind with a pointing, crouching, high-kicking, splay-footed, crotch-grabbing run through “Billie Jean.”

The audience stood and roared. Jackson raised his fist.

During production of a 1984 Pepsi commercial, Jackson’s scalp sustains burns when an explosion sets his hair on fire.

He had strong follow-up albums with 1987’s “Bad” and 1991’s “Dangerous,” but his career began to collapse in 1993 after he was accused of molesting a boy who often stayed at his home. The singer denied any wrongdoing, reached a settlement with the boy’s family, reported to be $20 million, and criminal charges were never filed.

Jackson’s expressed anger over the allegations on the 1995 album “HIStory,” which sold more than 2.4 million copies, but by then, the popularity of Jackson’s music was clearly waning even as public fascination with his increasingly erratic behavior was growing.

Jackson married Lisa Marie Presley in 1994, and they divorced in 1996. Later that year, Jackson married Deborah Rowe, a former nurse for his dermatologist. They had two children together: Michael Joseph Jackson Jr., known as Prince Michael, now 12; and Paris Michael Katherine Jackson, 11. Rowe filed for divorce in 1999.

Jackson also had a third child, Prince Michael II. Now 7, Jackson said the boy nicknamed Blanket as a baby was his biological child born from a surrogate mother.

Billboard magazine editorial director Bill Werde said Jackson’s star power was unmatched. “The world just lost the biggest pop star in history, no matter how you cut it,” Werde said. “He’s literally the king of pop.”

Jackson’s 13 No. 1 one hits on the Billboard charts put him behind only Presley, the Beatles and Mariah Carey, Werde said.

“He was on the eve of potentially redeeming his career a little bit,” he said. “People might have started to think of him again in a different light.”

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