Jacko Death Bombshell: Singer Predicted His Own Murder In Secret Diaries!
March 8 2017, Updated 10:59 a.m. ET
In a chilling handwritten diary, King of Pop Michael Jackson not only predicted his own death, but he also wrote he was terrified his enemies were out to kill him! RadarOnline.com has obtained the late superstar's eerie journal and it proves his 18-year-old daughter, Paris Jackson, was right when she recently declared her father was murdered.
In a chilling handwritten diary, King of Pop Michael Jackson not only predicted his own death, but he also wrote he was terrified his enemies were out to kill him! RadarOnline.com has obtained the late superstar's eerie journal and it proves his 18-year-old daughter, Paris Jackson, was right when she recently declared her father was murdered.
"It's obvious! All arrows point to that," said Paris of her suspicions her dad was murdered. "All real fans and everybody in the family knows it. It was a set up."
"I'm afraid someone is trying to kill me," Michael wrote in a 2009 note obtained exclusively by Radar.
The petrified "Thriller" singer feared he was being targeted for his $750 million catalogue — ATV Music Publishing — and blamed his longtime entertainment lawyer, John Branca, for the murder plot. Jackson wrote in his diary: "Do not trust John Branca and Sony ... ATV is my catalogue. I'm not selling it."
The superstar also referenced former Sony Music chief Tommy Mottola, scribbling: "Evil people, everywhere ... They want to destroy me and take my publishing company. The system wants to kill me for my catalogue."
Shortly after writing those words, Jackson died suddenly at age 50 in June 2009. Although the coroner ruled his death a homicide due to "acute propofol intoxication," many still suspect foul play, and his personal doctor, Conrad Murray, was convicted of manslaughter in connection to Michael's death.
The "Beat It" star began keeping the diary in the 1990s, according to longtime pal Michael Jacobshagen, who was just 11 years old when he met the singer in 1995.
Jacobshagen, now a marketing manager, last saw the music legend in April 2009 in Las Vegas, where he found many of the pages from the diary. "Michael had them on the bedroom door, the side of the bed, the bathroom door, living room," said Jacobshagen, 35, who now lives in Munich, Germany, and Los Angeles. "He was so alone, he had nobody anymore — no friends, only his children."
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