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Nanny reveals tragic secret life of Jackson

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quintal

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Jun 28, 2009, 1:13:45 PM6/28/09
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http://preview.tinyurl.com/mna36m
http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/music/
article6591237.ece

June 28, 2009
Nanny reveals tragic secret life of Jackson
Michael Jackson's nanny Grace Rwarmba seen with Michael and his
children, Los Angeles, 2005.
Maurice Chittenden and John Harlow Los Angeles

What the nanny saw | Jackson family: Our darkest moment | Calls for
second autopsy | Mother won't fight for Jackson children | Genius or
child abuser? | Singer's psychopathic drive | Opinion: Jackson tweets |
Inmates' Thriller tribute | Unfinished songs to make millions |

THE nanny who became ?mother? to Michael Jackson?s three children has
told how she regularly had to pump his stomach to remove dangerous
cocktails of drugs.

Grace Rwaramba, 42, who flew from London to Los Angeles yesterday in the
hope of being reunited with his children, has given a graphic account of
the singer?s increasingly desperate final months. She was speaking
exclusively to top international interviewer Daphne Barak.

She paints a grim picture of Jackson, sometimes penniless but deluded
about his ?riches?, leading a nomadic life, moving from country to
country and hotel to hotel, before allegedly falling under the
increasing influence of the Nation of Islam, the extremist sect.
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Jackson is believed to have been taking up to eight different drugs a
day, including three narcotic painkillers. Rwaramba, who is expected to
be interviewed by detectives about whether she helped administer the
drugs, told Barak: ?I had to pump his stomach many times. He always
mixed so much of it.

?There was one period that it was so bad that I didn?t let the children
see him . . . He always ate too little and mixed too much.?

The nanny says she once called in the singer?s mother, Katherine, and
sister, Janet, to attempt an ?intervention?, trying to persuade the
singer to come to terms with his addiction. Instead Jackson turned on
her, accusing her of betraying him. ?He didn?t want to listen; that was
one of the times he let me go,? she told Barak.

Rwaramba, who is from Rwanda, worked for Jackson for more than a decade,
starting as an office assistant before becoming nanny to his children,
Michael Jr, known as Prince, aged 12; Paris, 11; and Prince Michael II,
7, nicknamed Blanket to distinguish him from his brother.

She was dismissed for a final time last December but still went back to
see the children. When she visited them in April she claims Jackson was
so hard up she had to buy ?happy birthday? balloons for Paris on her own
credit card.

On a previous occasion he had sent her to Florence to buy antiques for
$1m. ?We didn?t even have a home to live in. So we had to put the
antiques in storage,? she told Barak.

Yesterday an official with the Los Angeles police revealed the singer
had become ?heavily addicted? to the powerful painkiller OxyContin and
had received an injection of Demerol, another painkiller, an hour before
his death. It is now almost certain the police will begin a full
investigation into the singer?s death and that Rwaramba will be regarded
as a witness. Coroners in the case said yesterday there was no suspicion
of foul play but toxicology tests would take several weeks.

One theory is that Jackson was taking an increasing amount of drugs to
combat the stress of his forthcoming 50 concerts at the O2 in London.
The nanny told Barak: ?Fifty performances! I told him . . . what are you
doing? He said ?I signed only for 10?. He didn?t know what he was
signing. He never did.?

Detectives have made contact with Dr Conrad Robert Murray, a
cardiologist who was with Jackson at his rented mansion when he died,
and have made clear they want to interview him. Police denied a report
that they also want to talk to a second doctor.

Police will also want to know whether early CPR (cardiopulmonary
resuscitation) efforts to save the singer?s life were botched. On a tape
of conversations between the Jackson home and the ambulance service, one
of Jackson?s staff tells the dispatcher that Jackson is on the bed and
that a ?doctor is here?, meaning Murray.

Medical experts say it is usual for the patient to be on a hard surface
because it is difficult to compress the chest on a soft surface. The
operator told the caller to ?get him on the floor?. A car towed by
police from Jackson?s home is registered in the name of Murray?s sister
in Texas.

Rwaramba claims the Nation of Islam, the sect that had become
increasingly prominent in Jackson?s life, told him it cost $100,000
(£60,000) a month to rent the mansion, but she believes similar
properties were on the market for no more than $25,000 a month.

The sect has supplied bodyguards to the singer and allegedly intimidated
auction houses that were selling Jackson memorabilia.

?Michael had no idea about money,? Rwaramba said. ?He got a proposal to
make an appearance in Japan for $1m . . . By the time everyone took
their share, he ended up with $200,000.? At one stage Jackson and his
entourage flew economy class to Germany. One of the worst periods was
after Jackson was acquitted following a five-month trial in 2005 on
charges of sexually abusing a boy during sleepovers at his Neverland
ranch.

Jackson, Rwaramba and the children went to Bahrain as guests of Sheikh
Abdullah, a son of the king, who hoped to make a CD with the singer.

People there described yesterday how they sometimes saw Jackson walking
through a mall, his frail body draped in a woman?s abaya, or robe, which
covered part of the face. He drew a crowd since he did not walk like a
woman.

When the singer and the sheikh fell out, Jackson and his family moved to
Ireland to stay with friends of Rwaramba and then in a small house in
New Jersey where Jackson slept in a downstairs room while she and the
children shared a bedroom.

When Jackson did have money, he hid it in black rubbish sacks and under
the carpets at the Los Angeles house. Rwaramba says Katherine Jackson
rang her in London at 7am on Friday to ask where the money was, possibly
to stop it being stolen.

Sources close to the Jacksons yesterday told the TMZ entertainment
website, which broke the news of his death, that the children would stay
with their grandmother and grandfather Joe at the family home in Encino,
California.

They said: ?We?re told the family is 100% behind this - feeling that
Katherine and Joe Jackson are the only people who can help the children
understand who their father was, help them grieve, and teach them to
deal with life in the spotlight.?

================

full interview with the nanny :
http://preview.tinyurl.com/mz6wrd
http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/music/
article6591123.ece

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