Siblings Detail Sexual Assault Lawsuit Against Michael Jackson Estate: “We Were Groomed”

Siblings Detail Sexual Assault Lawsuit Against Michael Jackson Estate: “We Were Groomed”
Entertainment

Note: This article contains references to sexual assault that readers may find disturbing.


In a new interview with The New York Times, five siblings who grew up with close ties to Michael Jackson have discussed their decision to sue the late singer’s estate for sexual assault. The Cascio siblings, who often described themselves as Jackson’s “second family,” opened up about their alleged experiences at the hands of the pop star and why they never spoke publicly about it before. “We were brainwashed, we were groomed,” said Eddie Cascio. “I felt like he took my manhood away.”

In the interview, conducted earlier this month, Dominic, Eddie, Marie-Nicole, and Aldo Cascio spoke in detail on their respective encounters with Jackson, which allegedly occurred in Mr. Jackson’s home, on tour stops, and during interstate and international trips. Aldo, who was the first to come forward with his allegations, said Jackson began molesting him at the age of 7, when, while Aldo played on a Game Boy in his bedroom, the late singer began performing oral sex on him. Marie-Nicole said Jackson first assaulted her at age 12, while he was staying in her family home after the September 11 attacks; for Dominic, the abuse allegedly began at age 8, during a trip to Euro Disney. A fifth sibling also told the Times he was abused, but that he is unable to join his siblings’ suit for legal reasons. The Cascio parents, Connie and Dominic (who shares a name with his son), declined to be interviewed by the Times through a lawyer.

The siblings said that, after watching Leaving Neverland in 2019, they recognized similarities between their experiences and those Wade Robson and James Safechuck, the two men who accused Jackson of abusing them as children in the documentary. Although some of the Cascio siblings said they knew early on what they were enduring was wrong, others told the Times it was Leaving Neverland that “deprogrammed” them and led them to see their relationships with Jackson as exploitative. “[Jackson] made us feel like he was everything: a friend, father, like every sort of emotional support,” Eddie shared in the interview. “And he was.”

The Cascio siblings sued the Jackson estate in February, alleging that the late singer abused and sexually trafficked them for periods that, collectively, spanned more than a decade. The lawsuit states that Jackson gave the children alcohol and hard drugs, using childlike language to describe the substances (“Jesus Juice” for wine, “Disney Juice” for hard liquor.) The filing further alleges that Jackson’s employees were complicit in his abuse, and often procured alcohol and drugs for him without knowing how he intended to use the substances. It also claims that Jackson stressed to the plaintiffs that they must keep their sexual acts a secret to ensure their family would not be ruined, and used various manipulation tactics—including isolating the siblings from each other, encouraging their homeschooling, and bringing them on international trips—to get closer to them.

Before filing that lawsuit, however, the Cascio siblings confronted Jackson’s estate about the alleged abuse. In 2020, both parties reached an agreement that granted the siblings roughly $16 million in payments made over five years. The accusations were kept under wraps as part of that deal. When the payments ended in 2025 and the siblings sought additional compensation, negotiations between the two parties reportedly became strained, causing the Cascio family to go public with the lawsuit and their new interview.

The Cascios’ relationship with Jackson began in the 1980s, when the singer met the elder Dominic Cascio during a stay at the Helmsley Palace in Manhattan, where Dominic was the general manager. As their friendship grew over the years, Jackson reportedly visited the Cascio family home often, brought them to his concerts and, beginning in 1993, hosted them at his Santa Barbara compound Neverland. As Frank noted in a 2011 memoir, My Friend Michael, the family rallied behind Jackson in the 1990s after he was accused of molesting a 13-year-old boy, in a civil lawsuit Jackson settled for roughly $23 million in 1994. Eddie, Frank, and their father even joined Jackson on a press tour in Tel Aviv at the time to show their support. When Dominic eventually had to return home, he allowed both boys to stay; at this point, Eddie now says, Jackson began molesting him.

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