Tuesday, May 12, 2026 - Four siblings who were part of Michael Jackson’s “secret family” have revealed in an interview how the late pop star allegedly gro0med and s£xually abused them as children.
The Cascio family sat down with “60 Minutes
Australia” on Sunday night to describe how Jackson allegedly s£xually
abused all of them as children and supplied them copious drugs and alcohol
after wooing their family with lavish gifts and fame.
The four siblings filed a lawsuit in February,
alleging Jackson was a serial child s£x predator who sexually abused victims at
the homes of Elizabeth Taylor and Elton John.
“He’s a monster, he’s evil, what he did was evil. And he’s
tricked the whole world to think he’s this innocent, perfect human being, and
he’s not,” Dominic Cascio told “60 Minutes.”
The Cascios’ father, Dominic Sr., met Jackson in the 1980s
while working at the Helmsley Palace Hotel in New York City. He quickly became
part of the singer’s inner circle, and his family would often spend holidays at
Neverland Ranch and travel the world with the King of Pop.
One of the siblings, Eddie, 43, recalled on the broadcast
that he met the “Thriller” singer when he was only 2, when Jackson began
visiting the family’s New York home on late nights unannounced.
Home videos shown by the outlet captured Jackson’s
chimpanzee, Bubbles, charming the children during one visit.
The star wooed the children; Eddie, Aldo, Dominic, and
Marie-Nicole — by taking them on lavish trips on his private jet, on tour with
him, and to meet world diplomats.
The superstar’s luxury gifts, however, were merely a facade
for the decades of alleged grooming and s£xual abuse that followed, the
siblings said.
“My parents were young. For them to have such a big
celebrity want to be friends with them… they definitely felt special, and so
did we,” Eddie said. “He made us feel like we were his family, his kids, his
everything.”
The four Cascio siblings claimed the campaign of abuse
occurred over 25 years, including at Jackson’s Neverland Ranch and during his
world tours.
“When you have the biggest superstar in the world in the 80s
that wants to be your friend, you’re vulnerable and easily manipulated,”
Dominic recalled.
Eddie claimed that Jackson started molesting him when he was
11 during the 1993 Dangerous tour — abusing him every night while the two
shared a bed and well into his adulthood.
“That’s when my world started to change,” he claimed.
“We were on tour, and that’s when Michael started to get
closer and started rubbing me on my legs. I was sitting on his lap, and that’s
when the first kiss happened, where he kissed me on the lips.”
Multiple of the siblings said Jackson also had them
participate in a disturbing game called the “booty rumble.”
“He would lay me on top of him with my genitals up against
his. While he would shake, he would kind of push up against me,” Dominic said
of the twisted game.
“He would [also] drink my urine and tell me, ‘This is how
much I love you.’ I’m maybe 12 years old at the time. Like, I’m a child who’s
seeing this man do this,” Dominic added.
“And I said, “Oh, I guess he really does love me. I mean, I
would never want to drink someone’s urine, so he must really love me.”‘
Marie-Nicole said Jackson would make her undress when she
was 12 and masturbate while looking at her.
Aldo, the youngest of the siblings, claimed that Jackson
began molesting him while the two lay in bed together and played video games.
“He just pulled down my shorts and started giving me oral
sex. And he’d [say] right away, ‘Doesn’t that feel good? See, I love you. I
love you,'” Aldo alleged.
The siblings added that Jackson supplied them with
prescription drugs and alcohol at a young age, including “Jesus juice,” which
was wine, and “Disney juice,” which was hard liquor.
“He gave me Xanax and Vicodin at 11 years old and told me
I’d be floating and I would love it,” Marie-Nicole claimed.
The Cascio siblings also alleged that the megastar instilled
fear in them by training them for interrogation by their police and parents,
causing the kids to be adamant that nothing abnormal was happening to them.
Marty Singer, a lawyer acting for Jackson’s estate, told “60
Minutes” in a statement that the Cascios’ allegations were merely a “money
grab.”
“Notably, these shakedown attempts come more than 15 years
after Jackson’s death, thus carrying no risk of being sued for defamation,”
Singer said.
“Sadly, in death just as in life, Jackson’s talents and
success continue to make him a target.”

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