Michael Jackson’s former private security guard, Melanie Bagnall, opened up about working at Neverland Ranch.
Bagnall, who worked for Jackson for almost three years, detailed spoke about her experience during an exclusive interview with Sunday Night’s Matt Doran.
Speaking to Doran, Bagnall recounted how she often saw young boys aged 10 to 12 years old visit Neverland.
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On many occasions, the young boys would sleep over, often staying in Jackson’s bedroom.
But there was one incident in particular that has left Bagnall feeling guilt-ridden for years.
“There was a child sitting on his lap and he had his hands close to his genitalia. Like, cupping his genitalia,” Bagnall said in the interview.
“It was… disturbing. It was… alarming. It was a confirmation in ways. I believe it’s time for the world to know.”
Bagnall believes this particular victim went on to be abused for months by Jackson.
Channel Seven’s Sunday Night also looked into the hidden passageways and secret rooms littered throughout Jackson’s house.
According to Bagnall, Jackson would often disappear to hidden areas of the house for hours on end with his young guests.
Watch the trailer for new Michael Jackson documentary Leaving Neverland here. Post continues below…
“Neverland was built for his pleasure. I think it was part of romancing kids,” she said.
In one of the rooms shown on Sunday Night, the space is filled with framed photos of children, including photos of child star Macaulay Culkin.
One day while Bagnall was working, Jackson’s secret rooms were searched by police while Jackson was forced to endure a full strip search.
“They [the police] are combing the place, absolutely combing the place and when I was taking the detective around, he said that ‘this is pedophile heaven’. I thought ‘Wow. This is not good’,” she said.
“He [Jackson] was just mortified. He was extremely upset.”
Last month, new Michael Jackson documentary Leaving Neverland was released, leaving movie critics feeling “sick to their stomachs”.
In the film, Wade Robson, who met Jackson during a dance competition when he was five years old, and James Safechuck, who featured in a Pepsi commercial with the late singer, are interviewed about the abuse they claim happened to them as pre-teens in the 1990s.
In the documentary, both Robson and Safechuck alleged that their individual friendships with the performer quickly transitioned into sexual abuse inside the amusement park-like Neverland Ranch.
They claim the heinous crimes spanned several years, and not only were they sworn to secrecy, there were coerced by their attacker to testify on his behalf against allegations from other young victims.
Since the documentary's release, the Michael Jackson estate has called the film "tabloid character assassination".
"The film takes uncorroborated allegations that supposedly happened 20 years ago and treats them as fact," the estate's statement read.
"These claims were the basis of lawsuits filed by these two admitted liars which were ultimately dismissed by a judge."
Read more on this topic:
Without us noticing, it looks like Michael Jackson groomed us for decades.
The signs Michael Jackson was grooming the children he was close to that so many missed.
"It wasn't going to mean anything": Why Michael Jackson married Lisa Marie Presley.
'Blanket' Jackson was just seven when his father died. This week he stopped talking.
The two boys who followed Wade Robson into Michael Jackson's bed insist they weren't abused.
Debbie Rowe says she gifted Michael Jackson two children because he was a 'wonderful man'.
Top Comments
Are you people serious? So she worked for him for 3 years seeing... things and now she comes with the allegations? How convenient.
As in the #metoo movement, it comes crashing down like a house of cards for abusers once victims have the courage and a safe environment in which to come forward. One comes forward, then the other, and the other...
It's not convenience. It would have been more "convenient" (ie profitable) to come forward earlier, when MJ was alive, if one's motivations were notoriety or money.
She came forward earlier. She wanted $16 million. It came crashing down like a house of cards for the false accuser in a court of law. It is ridiculous that tabloids still pay money for these made up stories.