Jackson Accuser: We Saw E-Porn In His Bedroom

A day after his younger brother admitted to contradictory accounts involving alleged molestation and other matters involving the siblings and their family, the chief accuser of singer Michael Jackson said on the witness stand that, among other things, he and his brother saw adult Websites while spending time in Jackson's bedroom.

"We started looking at adult material sites" after a Jackson aide began bringing them up on a computer in the Jackson bedroom, the now-15 year old cancer survivor told the court in testimony March 9.

The boy also quoted Jackson, while he and the boys looked at the image of a woman lifting her shirt to expose her breasts, as saying, 'Got milk?'," before the singer went to his toddler son and said, according to the accuser, "Hey, Prince, you are missing a lot of p-u-s-s-y'."

The March 9 court session in Jackson's trial was the first time the singer had seen his chief accuser face to face since his arrest in the case.

Earlier, a stir was created in the trial after it turned out on cross examination that the boy's younger brother told sheriff's deputies one thing but the trial jury another thing regarding the alleged molestation by Jackson.

To the deputies, according to a transcript brought forth in the trial, the younger brother said he lay on a couch feigning sleep when witnessing the second of two alleged molestations—but to the jury, under cross, the boy said it was three and not two molestations and, when a Jackson attorney asked if the boy didn't get his facts right because he was nervous with the deputies, the boy said "yes."

The younger brother also gave differing details of the alleged molestation to a grand jury psychologist, according to a transcript produced at the Jackson trial earlier this week. As well, the defense challenged the prosecution's claim that the brothers and their family were held at Jackson's Neverland estate for almost a month against their will—the younger brother admitted the family left the estate three times.

The elder accuser also told the court he had been duped into cooperating with the television documentary—Living with Michael Jackson—which ended up leading to the probe that ended with Jackson's November 2003 arrest. He testified Jackson had told him it was nothing more than an audition tape that was never intended for public consumption or broadcast.

Jackson's defense is trying to prove the accuser and his family are "financial predators" with histories of faking stories for cash settlements. The singer is accused of ten charges, including child molestation and conspiracy to kidnap his accuser and the boy's family. If convicted, Jackson could go to prison for as long as twenty years.