Jacko sued for $48m
From correspondents in New York
July 13, 2005
From: Reuters
A FINANCIAL firm has sued Michael Jackson for $US48 million ($64.27 million) in fees it says the singer owes for help in refinancing bank debts and claiming a larger stake in a library of Beatles songs.
Prescient Acquisition Group, also know as Prescient Capital Corp, filed the lawsuit against Jackson in US District Court in Manhattan late yesterday. Lawyers for Jackson were not immediately available for comment.
The suit said Prescient was employed in November, 2004, by Jackson's MJ Publishing Trust to help him secure refinancing of $US537.5 million ($719.64 million) through another company. At the time, Jackson was facing trial on child sex-abuse charges. He was acquitted by a California jury in June.
The money allowed Jackson to pay off $US272.5 million ($364.84 million) in bank debt and buy the other half of The Beatles library of songs he did not already own, the lawsuit said. Prescient said Jackson and MJ Publishing Trust broke a deal which promised the firm fees worth nine per cent of any completed financing.
news.com.au
From correspondents in New York
July 13, 2005
From: Reuters
A FINANCIAL firm has sued Michael Jackson for $US48 million ($64.27 million) in fees it says the singer owes for help in refinancing bank debts and claiming a larger stake in a library of Beatles songs.
Prescient Acquisition Group, also know as Prescient Capital Corp, filed the lawsuit against Jackson in US District Court in Manhattan late yesterday. Lawyers for Jackson were not immediately available for comment.
The suit said Prescient was employed in November, 2004, by Jackson's MJ Publishing Trust to help him secure refinancing of $US537.5 million ($719.64 million) through another company. At the time, Jackson was facing trial on child sex-abuse charges. He was acquitted by a California jury in June.
The money allowed Jackson to pay off $US272.5 million ($364.84 million) in bank debt and buy the other half of The Beatles library of songs he did not already own, the lawsuit said. Prescient said Jackson and MJ Publishing Trust broke a deal which promised the firm fees worth nine per cent of any completed financing.
news.com.au