TRIGGER WARNING: The article contains references to rape and abuse.Michael Jackson’s estate has won a legal step in its fight with Frank Cascio and his siblings, as a Los Angeles court granted a motion to move part of the dispute into arbitration. The ruling centers on claims tied to Frank Cascio, while separate abuse allegations filed by four of his siblings in federal court remain active. The decision adds a new turn to a case that now includes court filings, public statements, and sharply different accounts from both sides.
Michael Jackson estate arbitration ruling
According to PEOPLE, attorney Marty Singer, who represents Jackson’s estate, said the court found “that there is a valid and binding arbitration provision” and “rejected” Frank and his four siblings’ argument that “the agreement was unconscionable.” They reported that the March 4 ruling, filed in Los Angeles Superior Court, said Frank claimed he faced “immense pressure” from his family to sign a settlement agreement with the estate. But the court found he was able to “negotiate a larger payment,” which undercut that claim. The filing said the court rejected each of Frank’s arguments to avoid arbitration.Singer welcomed the ruling and attacked the family’s claims. He said, “For decades, Frank Cascio and his siblings consistently and repeatedly insisted that Michael Jackson never harmed them or anyone else.” He also pointed to “their statements lauding Michael in a nationally televised interview with Oprah Winfrey.” Singer further alleged that the Cascios, through lawyers, threatened to go public unless they received USD 213 million. He called the case “a desperate money grab” and “a transparent forum-shopping tactic.”
Michael Jackson’s child trafficking allegations
The Cascio family’s lawyer, Howard King, pushed back in a statement to People. He said, “the only matter moving to arbitration is the Estate’s groundless claims against Frank Cascio that he attempted to extort the Estate.” He added, “The decision does not affect the Federal Court action brought against the Jackson companies by the other 4 Cascio children.”In the federal complaint filed on February 27, siblings Edward, Dominic, Marie-Nicole, and Aldo Cascio alleged that Jackson “groomed and brainwashed” them as minors. The suit claimed he used wealth, fame, and trusted employees to gain control, then isolated them, gave them drugs and alcohol, exposed them to pornography, and abused them. The 23-page complaint said Jackson “was a serial child predator who, over the course of more than a decade, drugged, raped and sexually assaulted each of the plaintiffs, beginning when some were as young as seven or eight.” The filing and the public statements from both sides now set up two parallel legal fights, with arbitration moving forward in one dispute while the federal court case filed by the other Cascio siblings continues separately.DISCLAIMER: If you or someone you know is struggling with abuse, please seek help. Numerous helplines and support resources are available.





