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Memo says Jacko was cleared of molestation ( 2003-12-10 16:52) (Agencies) Child welfare investigators earlier this year found there was no basis for allegations that Michael Jackson had abused the boy now accusing him of molestation, according to a confidential memo.
The memo from an administrator with the Los Angeles County Department of Children and Family Services was based on an investigation last February and was leaked to the Web site thesmokinggun.com, which posted it Tuesday. A source familiar with the document confirmed its authenticity to The Associated Press. The memo was dated Nov. 26, 2003 ¡ª a week after the Santa Barbara County district attorney announced child molestation allegations against Jackson. Both the boy and his brother told investigators Jackson had not sexually abused them, according to the memo. Their older sister said she had never witnessed anything sexually inappropriate between her brothers and the entertainer. The memo was sent from a regional administrator to medical director Charles Sophy and detailed a probe completed before Sophy joined the agency. Santa Barbara County District Attorney Thomas Sneddon (search) said in a statement that his office has been aware of the investigation and that it did not affect his decision to pursue charges. The report and the "totality of the investigation" were provided to the judge when the search and arrest warrants were issued for Jackson, Sneddon said. "Given what we know we do not consider the DCFS statement a significant factor," he said. Jackson's defense is certain to seize on the memo. The memo, which refers to Jackson as "the entertainer," said the department began a 13-day inquiry after a Los Angeles school district official called its hot line Feb. 14 out of concern for the boy and his brother. The investigation was conducted with the Los Angeles police. The school official suspected neglect by the boy's mother and sexual abuse by Jackson, according to the memo. But the department and the police concluded the allegations were "unfounded," the document said. Louise Grasmehr, a spokeswoman for the child welfare department, said the leak would probably be investigated because the memo was supposed to be confidential under state laws designed to protect children. Police spokeswoman Officer Sandra Escalante had no comment. Sgt. Catherine Plows, an LAPD spokeswoman, said the department had little involvement with the investigation. She said an officer went with a caseworker in February to check on the welfare of a child who had been featured in a Jackson documentary. The child and his family could not be located at the address, and there was no record of additional police involvement, Plows said. The school official called the hot line after the child, a cancer patient who had visited Jackson at his Neverland Ranch, appeared in a TV documentary in which the boy told an interviewer he had been a guest for sleepovers at Neverland. In the documentary, Jackson defended his habit of letting children sleep in his bed as "sweet" and non-sexual. The boy's mother told investigators in February that "she believed the media had taken everything out of context," the memo said. The mother said that the children were never left alone with Jackson and that her son slept in the same room with Jackson but never shared his bed. She said Jackson would sleep on the floor. A source close to the boy's family said the memo's description of the February investigation was accurate. But the source also said the Department of Children and Family Services later refused to investigate a psychologist's report that the boy said he had been molested. The source, who refused to be identified, said the boy's family went to an attorney around the time the documentary aired and that later the attorney referred them to a psychologist. In June, the psychologist alerted the department that the boy claimed to have been molested by Jackson, according to the source. The department declined to follow up on that report because the boy was not believed to be in imminent danger, the source said. Attorney Larry Feldman, who represents the family and accompanied the psychologist to the department's offices in June, has declined to comment on the case. Department spokesman Stuart Riskin declined to comment on the allegations that the department would not investigate the psychologist's report. Jackson was booked Nov. 20 on suspicion of child molestation. He has denied the allegations and was released on $3 million bail. Authorities said they expect to file formal charges next week.
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