Posted in

Judge Melville Gave Him 60 Minutes — Why Michael Jackson Wore Pajamas to the 2005 Trial

The seat was empty at 8:34 in the morning. Judge Rodney Melville walked into the courtroom at Santa Barbara County Superior Court in Santa Maria, California, looked at the defense table, and saw nothing. No Michael Jackson. No explanation. Just his attorney, Thomas Mesereau, standing there with the particular stillness of a man trying very hard not to look as panicked as he felt.

"
"

It was March 10th, 2005, day nine of the trial. The accuser was scheduled to continue his testimony that morning, and the press had been camped outside since before dawn. More than a thousand media credentials had been issued for this case. Journalists from Japan, Australia, the United Kingdom, Switzerland. Every major American cable network had a camera position.

The infrastructure that had been built around this courthouse in Santa Maria was something closer to a small broadcast city than a press pool. Hundreds of people whose jobs depended on something happening here every single day were outside, waiting. The machine was running. The man at the center of it all was somewhere else.

Mesereau stood up. Your Honor, Mr. Jackson is at Cottage Hospital in Santa Ynez with a serious back problem. He does plan to come in. Melville looked at him. Then he asked whether Jackson’s doctor could be connected by phone. Mesereau said yes, he could arrange that. Melville said no. What happened next took less than three minutes.

The seat was empty at 8:34 in the morning. Judge Rodney Melville walked into the courtroom at Santa Barbara County Superior Court in Santa Maria, California, looked at the defense table, and saw nothing. No Michael Jackson. No explanation. Just his attorney, Thomas Mesereau, standing there with the particular stillness of a man trying very hard not to look as panicked as he felt.

It was March 10th, 2005, day nine of the trial. The accuser was scheduled to continue his testimony that morning, and the press had been camped outside since before dawn. More than a thousand media credentials had been issued for this case. Journalists from Japan, Australia, the United Kingdom, Switzerland. Every major American cable network had a camera position.

The infrastructure that had been built around this courthouse in Santa Maria was something closer to a small broadcast city than a press pool. Hundreds of people whose jobs depended on something happening here every single day were outside, waiting. The machine was running. The man at the center of it all was somewhere else.

At 8:37 a.m., Judge Melville issued a warrant for Michael Jackson’s arrest, ordered the forfeiture of his $3 million bail, and gave the attorney exactly one hour to produce him in court. His words, as they appear in the court record, “I’m issuing a warrant for his arrest. I’m forfeiting his bail. I will hold the order for one hour.” CNN went live.

MSNBC put a countdown clock on the screen. The question now being asked on television, in the parking lot outside the courthouse, and presumably in a hospital room 35 miles away, was the same one. Would Michael Jackson actually be handcuffed today? That morning had started badly before any of this.

Jackson had fallen while getting dressed at his rented house near Neverland, his back locked up. He was taken to Santa Ynez Valley Cottage Hospital sometime before court was scheduled to begin. His attorney, Brian Oxman, described it plainly. He tripped this morning and fell as he was getting dressed. His back is in terrible pain. His spokesperson, Raymone Bain, made the same point from a different angle.

He is not playing games. His back just gave out on him. Whether anyone in a position of authority chose to believe that on the morning of March 10th is a separate question. What mattered procedurally was this. Jackson had already been late to his own arraignment back in January 2004, and Melville had admonished him for it publicly, calling it an insult to the court.

Then, 3 weeks into this trial during jury selection, Jackson had gone to a hospital with flu symptoms and delayed proceedings for an entire week. Melville had accepted that reluctantly on a phone call with doctors. But he had made clear he was not going to keep accepting delays without consequences. This was the third time, and Melville had decided he was done.

At 8:45 a.m., a hospital spokeswoman confirmed that Jackson had been treated and released. He was on his way. The drive from Santa Ynez Valley Cottage Hospital to the Santa Maria Courthouse is 35 miles. Under normal conditions, that takes roughly 45 minutes. Jackson had been given 1 hour from 8:37. The math was tight and left almost no room for anything going wrong on the road.

Outside the courthouse, Mesereau was pacing the driveway with his phone pressed to his ear. Reporters watching him from behind the press barrier could read enough from his posture and movements to understand the calls weren’t going smoothly. Fan groups had gathered behind the security fencing with signs and candles, which was normal for any given morning of the trial.

The countdown clock on MSNBC kept moving. Inside the building, the gallery was full and the jury had not yet been brought in. Everyone was waiting for one of two outcomes. Jackson walking through the door or the judge calling the marshals. The motorcade pulled up at 9:58 a.m. 4 minutes after the deadline, a black SUV stopped at the entrance to the Santa Barbara County Courthouse.

The doors opened. Two bodyguards stepped out first, then Joe Jackson, Michael’s father. Then Michael. He was wearing purple paisley pajama bottoms, white socks, slippers, a white t-shirt with a dark blazer thrown over it. His hair was loose and uncombed. The bodyguards had their hands on his arms steadying him. He moved toward the entrance with the careful, deliberate steps of someone managing real physical pain.

Not performing anything, not making a statement, not playing to the cameras. Just moving forward because he had decided to move forward. There were hundreds of cameras waiting. Photographers lined both sides of the path from the car to the door. There was nowhere to look that wasn’t a lens pointed at him. He didn’t stop.

He didn’t slow down to look at anyone. He walked through the doors. A few minutes after he entered the building, a white ambulance pulled quietly into the courthouse parking lot. It parked. Nobody made much of it publicly at the time, but it was there. Inside the courtroom, Melville said nothing about the 4 minutes.

He noted that Jackson was present and resumed the session. The day continued. The accuser’s testimony went on for hours. At the end of the afternoon, Melville rescinded the arrest warrant. No statement, no acknowledgement, no explanation. Just dropped it. The matter was closed as far as the court was concerned.

Read More