In an excerpt of the book obtained by Vanity Fair for its November issue, Sullivan reveals that mere hours after Michael’s death at his rented chateau in Los Angeles’ Holmby Hills, his older sister LaToya showed up with her boyfriend Jeffre Phillips and demanded to be allowed in. “We’re family and we should have access to the house,” they reportedly claimed.
Not long after the two were granted entry into Michael’s abode, which
he shared with his three children, his mother also showed up and called
Grace Rwaramba, the recently-fired nanny of Prince, 15, Paris, 14, and
Blanket, 10. According to Rwaramba, Katherine said, “Grace, the children
are crying. They are asking about you. They can’t believe their father
died.” Then, without missing a beat, she added, “Grace, you remember
Michael used to hide cash at the house? I’m here. Where can it be?”
Michael apparently used to put his money in black garbage bags, which
he then hid under the carpets at his home. Ronald Williams, who handled
security at the Holmby Hills residence, tells Sullivan that he saw
LaToya and her boyfriend stuffing black garbage bags into duffel bags at
the house, which LaToya denies (she says nearly all the money was gone
by the time she arrived at her brother’s mansion).
The next morning after Michael’s death, his younger sister Janet
showed up at his house, moving van in tow – and a few hours later, it
left with LaToya’s boyfriend behind the wheel. Katherine, Janet, and
LaToya “camped out for most of the week,” Williams tells Sullivan,
adding that the trio came and went “whenever they felt like it.”
When
it came time to bury their beloved cash cow, the scheming over money
did not cease. According to Sullivan’s book, Michael was not laid to
rest until September 2009 (he died on June 25) because Janet would not
allow it until his estate repaid her the $40,000 cemetery deposit that
she had ponied up to secure him a spot at Forest Lawn in Glendale,
California.
As for the July incident with Katherine, which left Michael’s three
children without supervision for about two weeks before a judge
appointed their cousin TJ as their new guardian, that too had to do with
money. Untouchable reveals that Janet arranged for her
82-year-old mother to be checked out by a physician before she traveled
to Albuquerque to watch her sons’ Unity Tour – but she lied to the
elderly woman and told her the unknown doctor was an associate of her
own … but he was actually Dr. Allen Metzger, who was a defense witness
at the trial of the man convicted of manslaughter in Michael’s death,
Dr. Conrad Murray.
Dr. Metzger told Katherine that
her blood pressure was a bit high and advised her not to make the road
trip to Albuquerque. Instead, she and her oldest daughter Rebbie headed
to the airport, where she soon realized she had been booked for a flight
to Tucson. When Katherine arrived at the Miraval Resort & Spa
there, Janet greeted her. According to the excerpt in Vanity Fair,
five of her children, including Janet, Rebbie, Jermaine, and Randy,
“were attempting to gain a conservatorship over her, possibly by
demonstrating her incompetence to serve as guardian of Michael’s
children. They hoped to gain control of their brother’s fortune, which
would follow Prince, Paris, and Blanket wherever they went.”
Although Katherine's representatives cooperated with Sullivan on his book, the rest of the Jackson family has yet to comment on his claims