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  <title>Michael Jackson's "Second Family" Just Turned on Him</title>
  <description>How does someone defend a man for twenty-five years — on Oprah, in a published memoir, at a criminal trial — and then file a federal lawsuit saying he assaulted every one of their children?

The Cascio family just went public with allegations against Michael Jackson's estate that are as disturbing as they are difficult to process. Four siblings filed a federal lawsuit. A fifth reportedly filed through separate arbitration. The complaint alleges Jackson targeted all of them beginning when some were as young as seven or eight — at Neverland, on tour, and inside the Cascios' own home while Jackson stayed there with his own children.

These aren't strangers looking for a payday. This is the family Jackson called his second family. Frank Cascio wrote a book defending him. They went on national television and said "never, never" when asked about misconduct. They went after Wade Robson on social media before Leaving Neverland even aired.

And then they say they watched that documentary and everything broke open. They claim all five siblings independently recognized what happened to them for the first time. The lawsuit followed. So did a reported sixteen million dollar settlement from the estate. When those payments stopped, the federal case was filed.

The Jackson estate calls it a desperate money grab and points to twenty-five years of public defense as proof. That's a fair argument. You don't defend someone that aggressively for that long if you believe they hurt you — unless the psychology of what happened to you won't let you see it clearly.

And that's the part that makes this case so hard to dismiss outright. Trauma experts describe exactly this pattern — victims who internalize their abuser's worldview, who protect the person who harmed them, who genuinely don't recognize what happened as abuse until something external shatters the framework. Robson testified under oath that Jackson never touched him, then said every word was a lie. Safechuck defended Jackson as a child, then alleged years of abuse as an adult. Both say therapy broke the seal. The Cascios say Leaving Neverland did.

Is that plausible? It's consistent with what researchers document. Is the timing also aligned with an enormous financial claim? It is. Both of those things are true simultaneously. And sitting with that is the whole point.

Michael Jackson was acquitted in 2005 and denied all allegations throughout his life. His estate continues to deny them. The courts will determine what the evidence supports.

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#MichaelJackson #CascioFamily #LeavingNeverland #WadeRobson #JamesSafechuck #JacksonEstate #Neverland #HiddenKillers #TrueCrime #MusicAndMonsters</description>
  <author-name>Michael Jackson: Music &amp; Monsters</author-name>
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