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The final chapter

An interview with Michael Jackson biographer Ian Halperin.

An interview with Michael Jackson biographer Ian Halperin

The final years of singer Michael Jackson are the subject of a new book by Ian Halperin. ((Dave Hogan/Getty Images))

When celebrity biographer Ian Halperin announced in December 2008 that Michael Jackson was suffering from a rare genetic disorder that could prove fatal in six months, his claims barely caused a ripple. Everything changed when the King of Pop died on June 25, 2009 almost six months to the day of Halperin's prediction.

Upon Jacksons passing, Halperin and his Montreal publisher, Transit, quickly added a new chapter to an already completed biography. Soon after, Halperin found himself much in demand on the media circuit, and has since watched his book, Unmasked: The Final Years of Michael Jackson, climb to No. 1 on the New York Times Bestseller List.

Halperin spoke to CBCNews.ca about his prediction of Jacksons death, allegations about the singers homosexuality and why Jackson should never have agreed to do 50 concerts in London, England.

Q: You first conceived the book in 2005, shortly before Jackson was acquitted of child molestation charges. What was your impetus?

A: I was furious. I thought we had another O.J. getting off, and I said, "Thats it. Im going to make all these people look silly and Im going to get to the bottom of the case." I thought this was going to be the easiest case I ever had to crack! I thought, how difficult could this be to get three or four more kids to come out, because one thing: I did research. If you do one or two children, there have to be other children as well, who were at least approached, or abused, so I thought this would be a piece of cake. And as time went on, I kept realizing, "Wow, why are these people hiding out? Or am I doing a terrible job? Whats going on here? Why am I not getting to the bottom of this much quicker?" And in the end, I point to several things in the book that really changed my opinion.

Q: In 1993, Jackson settled with the family of Jordan Chandler, another boy who claimed to have been molested by the pop star. In your book, you suggest that Jordans dad, Evan, had given Jordan the drug sodium amytal, which is often associated with cases of false memory syndrome. Thats pretty damning.

A: Yes, absolutely awful, and his son giving that testimony... But I think it was more that insurance document, the court document, where clearly, in black and white, the document said that the insurance company forced Michael to settle, and he was livid: he maintained his innocence. Also, the description by Chandler of Michaels private parts did not match. He said [Michael]s circumcised. Hes not circumcised.

(Transit Publishing)

Q: Thats a glaring discrepancy.

A: One thing youve got to realize, the courts were out to get [Jackson]. He was going into the unknown. If he stepped into a courtroom weve seen it all in California. And it could have been a very smart move, too, on the other hand: avoid the public scrutiny, lets close it down. He says hes innocent, he cried about this. But why have to put himself up on a stand and be examined for charges he said 100 per cent he was innocent of? So theres a lot of different ways you can play it out.

In the 93 case, my personal opinion is that hes 100 per cent innocent, and that Chandler, it was an extortion attempt.

Q: What are your thoughts about the recent developments in the case? Im thinking specifically of the police raid on the home of Dr. Conrad Murray, who is thought to have administered an anesthetic that ended up killing Jackson.

A: I knew about the raid coming up. I didnt go out with that, because if it didnt happen, Id be toast. Im very careful on what I release; it has to be 110 per cent accurate or Im not going out with it. So I came out with the story, and three days later, the raids went on and the police said for the first time that manslaughter charges are on the table.

Q: Do you have strong opinions about whether Jacksons death was murder or an accident?

A: I do commend the police for doing the investigation the way theyre doing it. They havent rushed to charge anyone. You have about 20 doctors and at least 50 Jackson handlers right now, and employees, former employees, friends shaking in their boots and perspiring. And the police, they have to make sure that they get this case right. If you look at the history of the LAPD with high-profile celebrity cases, it is tenuous. People are asking me, "How do you think he died?" Im not a coroner, Im not a cop. I will reserve judgment until the police reports are made, and until the autopsy and the toxicology report comes out. And then well see.

Q: You state in the book that you believe Michael Jackson was homosexual. How did you arrive at that conclusion?

A: If this was a Caucasian artist, nobody would be making any statements about the gay angle in the book. Its only two pages! Michael Jackson said he never came out because he feared racism. He said guys like George Michael, Boy George, Elton John can come out, their careers go through the roof. African-Americans cant, and I challenge everyone to read a book called Hiding in Hip Hop by Terrance Dean. He wrote a book about rap artists being unable to come out of the closet, because theyre African-American, and thats why I believe Michael in this. I dont care about his sexuality, but I had people come on the record [to say] that they had intimacy with Michael Jackson, and I had to run with that. They provided proof.

Q: What sort of proof?

A: They had photographs, documentation and witnesses who saw them together. Not in bed together nobody was ever in the bedroom. But these allegations were concrete, and these people will come out eventually.

Q: What were your thoughts at the moment you heard of Jacksons death?

A: I know when he died, I wasnt exactly shocked.

Q: Yes, well, you had predicted it.

A: Id predicted it, but I was saddened. And then I didnt sleep for the next five days. I wanted to write a good conclusion [to the book], so I dont know what I was really feeling. It was very rushed. No one pressured me. They pulled the book off the presses, it was being printed, and they said, "Do what you feel is right." And I said, "Ill try to find out a lot." You know, unfortunately, there was very little released about [Dr. Conrad] Murray at that time. I have a little bit about him and I wouldve liked to get more, but there was just no time.

Q: In obit pieces on television, people are talking about what a savvy person Michael was.

A: [Laughs.] Are they saying that? Oh my God! Thats the furthest thing from the truth! He made terrible decisions! Whoever said that? Au contraire. He let undesirables, he let everyone, into his household.

U.S. pop star Michael Jackson performs during his HIStory World Tour in 1996. ((Simon Kwong/Reuters))

Q: You think he was too trusting?

A: He was. Look at [Martin] Bashir [who interviewed Michael for a documentary in 2003]. [Michael] shouldve never agreed to that! He loved human beings. He trusted human beings, even after he got burned by them. And he made bad decisions. He was not shrewd, he was not some incredible business person. He let his handlers work with all the money, while he handled the creative, at his insistence. They were just throwing the money out the window, and he didnt even object.

Q: At the end of your book, you say that his handlers forced him into the 50 tour dates in London.

A: Vultures. They shouldve had him in a hospital, recuperating, getting proper medical attention not from these five doctors, who were home doctors, and giving him prescription drugs in a residential setting. He should have been in a real hospital, getting attention both physically and mentally. He was very depressed.

Q: When you went undercover, were you able to glean that immediately?

A: He was sad. Oh my gosh. But he was so smart. He could talk to you about the history of music, about Hollywood, he knew everything. But if you looked at the guy one on one, it was scary. He was so frail.

Q: Was that what led you to predict his death back in December?

A: No, it was because two people in his camp came to me and said, "Look, this guys dying. Nobodys listening. Were outnumbered." They questioned me, they said, "Dude, are you really doing this sympathetic [inquiry], or is this another Bashir-type investigation?" I guaranteed them I wasnt [doing the latter]. They still didnt trust me, but I was their only shot to get the story out properly, and then they started feeding me medical records, private information about Michael.

You know I didnt expectsix months to the day, thats crazy, but I did expect the people in his camp to wake up and get him into a hospital. And at least to say, "OK, Halperins wrong." But what do they do instead? They turn around and start positioning a 50-day residency

Q: And pimping him out, basically.

A: Exactly. And pimping him out when not even a top rock star in his twenties, whos healthy, would be able to handle that. Fifty dates? Cmon. And the problem with Michael was, he said he would not perform unless hes 100 per cent. Hes always said that. So his handlers thought, like some athlete, injured, pump him up with some drugs, put him out in the field, nobody notices. Jackson said that he would never rip off his fans.

Q: In the book, youre pretty tough on journalist Diane Dimond, whom you accuse of shoddy research in the Jackson case. How does your work differ from hers?

A: As far as Diane Dimond goes, one thing Ive gotta be clear about: Id never trash another journalist. I respect anyone who gets on the playing field and tries, 100 per cent. And Im not better than Diane Dimond. We have our own styles, but I will never trash. I do mark some inconsistencies, but as far as going public and dissing her, its just not fair. I only diss people who sit in their armchairs who say, "Hey, Halperin did a terrible job, this and that." Theyre eating potato chips, and what have they done? If they can do better than me, Ill tip my hat to them.

Unmasked: The Final Years of Michael Jackson is in stores now.

Lee Ferguson writes about the arts for CBCNews.ca.