Career Decline and Criminal Charges

Jackson’s musical career began to falter with the lukewarm reception of HIStory: Past, Present, and Future, Book I (1995). This double-disc album featured a greatest hits collection on one disc and new material on the other, including collaborations with Janet Jackson, The Notorious B.I.G., Shaquille O’Neal, and Slash. HIStory was regarded as Jackson’s most personal album, with songs that addressed his child abuse allegations and his anger toward the media’s treatment of him. The album produced two notable hits: “You Are Not Alone” and the duet with his sister Janet, “Scream.” The music video for “Scream,” which featured a spaceship theme, was the most expensive video ever produced at that time, costing a staggering $7 million. It won a Grammy Award for its innovative effects. However, another track from the album, “They Don’t Care About Us,” sparked controversy for using an anti-Semitic slur, drawing intense criticism from the public.
Jackson’s career continued to face challenges with the release of Invincible in 2001, his final studio album before his death. The album cost an enormous $30 million to produce, making it the most expensive album ever made at the time. Invincible covered topics such as isolation, social issues, and Jackson’s ongoing struggles with the media. Despite debuting at No. 1 on the Billboard charts, it received mixed reviews from critics. The album’s release coincided with Jackson’s escalating legal disputes with Sony over the rights to his master recordings, which were further inflamed when Jackson accused Sony Music Chairman Tommy Mottola of racism and exploitation of Black artists. By the early 2000s, Jackson was becoming known more for his eccentricities, including wearing a surgical mask in public. In 2002, he made headlines for seeming confused and disoriented while performing at the MTV Video Music Awards. That same year, he faced enormous criticism when he dangled his infant son Blanket over a hotel balcony while greeting fans in Berlin, Germany. Jackson later explained, “We were waiting for thousands of fans down below, and they were chanting they wanted to see my child, so I was kind enough to let them see. I was doing something out of innocence.”
In 2003, Jackson’s legal troubles deepened when he was arrested on charges related to his interactions with a 13-year-old boy. He faced 10 charges in total, including lewd conduct with a minor, conspiracy to commit child abduction, false imprisonment, and extortion. The resulting trial in 2005 turned into a media spectacle, with fans, critics, and camera crews swarming the courthouse. More than 130 people testified, and Jackson’s accuser described how he had been given wine and molested, via videotape. However, there were inconsistencies in his testimony, as well as in the testimony of his mother. On June 14, 2005, Jackson was found not guilty on all charges.
Wives and Children

In August 1994, Michael Jackson made headlines with the announcement that he had married Lisa Marie Presley, the daughter of legendary rock star Elvis Presley. However, their marriage was short-lived, and the couple divorced in 1996. There were rumors that the marriage might have been a publicity stunt aimed at improving Jackson's image in the wake of the child molestation allegations against him.
Later in 1996, Jackson married nurse Debbie Rowe. The couple had two children through artificial insemination: Michael Joseph Jackson Jr., born in 1997 and known as Prince Jackson, and Paris Michael Katherine Jackson, born in 1998. The marriage ended in divorce in 1999, with Jackson receiving full custody of their two children.
Jackson would later have a third child, Prince Michael Jackson II, nicknamed "Blanket" (now known as "Bigi"), in 2002. The identity of the surrogate who carried the child remains unknown.
Death and Aftermath

Michael Jackson passed away on June 25, 2009, at the age of 50, after suffering a cardiac arrest at his Los Angeles home. Despite attempts to revive him with CPR, Jackson was rushed to the hospital, where he was pronounced dead later that morning. An official coroner’s report released in February 2010 revealed that Jackson’s cause of death was acute propofol intoxication, a fatal overdose of a prescription drug cocktail that included sedatives such as midazolam, diazepam, and lidocaine.
Jackson had been using sedative medications, including propofol, to help him sleep, with the assistance of his personal physician, Dr. Conrad Murray. Murray stated that he believed Jackson had become particularly addicted to propofol, which the singer referred to as his "milk." According to Murray, he had been administering propofol in 50-milligram doses through an IV at night, and had been attempting to gradually wean Jackson off the drug in the days leading up to his death.
A police investigation uncovered that Dr. Murray was not licensed to prescribe many controlled substances in California, and it was revealed that the appropriate standards of care had not been followed during the administration of propofol. Evidence also indicated that the necessary equipment for monitoring Jackson’s condition, as well as for accurate dosing and resuscitation, was missing. Consequently, Jackson’s death was ruled a homicide. In November 2011, Murray was convicted of involuntary manslaughter and sentenced to four years in prison.
In 2013, the Jackson family filed a wrongful death lawsuit against AEG Live, the entertainment company that had been promoting Jackson’s planned comeback concerts in 2009. They accused the company of failing to adequately protect Jackson during his time under Murray’s care. The family’s legal team sought $1.5 billion in damages, based on the anticipated earnings Jackson could have made. However, in October 2013, a jury determined that AEG Live was not responsible for Jackson’s death.
Memorials and Legacy

On July 7, 2009, a televised memorial service for Michael Jackson was held at the Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles. While 17,500 free tickets were distributed through a lottery system to fans, the memorial was watched by an estimated 1 billion viewers worldwide, either on television or online. Jackson’s death led to an overwhelming outpouring of grief and sympathy from his fans and the general public. Memorials were set up in his honor around the world, including one at the Staples Center and another at his childhood home in Gary, Indiana. On September 3, 2009, the Jackson family held a private funeral at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California. The ceremony was attended by close family members and 200 invited guests, including celebrity mourners like Jackson’s ex-wife, Lisa Marie Presley, and actress Elizabeth Taylor.
Throughout his career, Jackson received 38 Grammy Award nominations and 13 wins, including Album of the Year for Thriller, Record of the Year for “Beat It,” and Song of the Year for “We Are the World.” He won his first Grammy in 1980 for Best Male R&B Vocal Performance for the song “Don’t Stop ’Til You Get Enough.” In addition to his Grammy successes, Jackson was honored with the 1993 Grammy Legend Award, inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2001, and received the Lifetime Achievement Award from The Recording Academy. In October 2009, a documentary about Jackson's preparation for his final tour, titled This Is It, was released. The film, which included interviews, rehearsal footage, and behind-the-scenes moments, grossed $23 million in its opening weekend and ultimately earned $261 million globally.
Following Jackson's death, several posthumous albums were released. The first, Michael, debuted in December 2010, but controversy surrounded the authenticity of some of the tracks, with Jackson's brother Randy questioning whether the singer had actually recorded them. Despite this, the Jackson estate defended the album’s validity. The second posthumous album, Xscape (2014), included a track featuring R&B star and Jackson protege Usher, “Love Never Felt So Good.” The album debuted at No. 2 on the Billboard Top 200 Album chart. Since Jackson’s passing, he has been the subject of multiple biographies and has inspired the creation of two Cirque du Soleil shows. In 2018, he was posthumously honored with the Elizabeth Taylor AIDS Foundation Legacy Award for Humanitarian Service, with his children Paris and Prince Michael accepting the award on his behalf.
Thanks to his investment in the Sony/ATV Music catalog, which holds the publishing rights for songs by influential artists such as The Beatles, the Rolling Stones, and Taylor Swift, Jackson’s debts were cleared after his death. In 2016, the Jackson estate sold its share of Sony/ATV for $750 million, and in 2018, it received an additional $287.5 million for its stake in EMI Music Publishing. Jackson's earning power remained strong even after his death; in October 2017, Forbes reported that Jackson had topped the publication’s list of top-earning dead celebrities for the fifth consecutive year, bringing in $75 million.
In early 2019, allegations of sexual abuse against Jackson resurfaced with the airing of Leaving Neverland at the Sundance Film Festival, followed by its broadcast on HBO. The four-hour documentary presented the accounts of two men who described how Jackson allegedly lured them into his orbit as boys, gaining the trust of their families, before coercing them into sexual activities at his Neverland Ranch and in hotel rooms. The Jackson estate dismissed the accusers as “serial perjurers” and filed a $100 million lawsuit against HBO. As of December 2020, the lawsuit was still set to be resolved through arbitration.
Quotes
- "Being onstage is magic. There’s nothing like it. You feel the energy of everybody who’s out there. You feel it all over your body."
- "Being an entertainer, you just can’t tell who is your friend."
- "Being mobbed hurts. You feel like you’re spaghetti among thousands of hands. They’re just ripping you and pulling your hair. And you feel that any moment you’re gonna just break."
- "I hate to take credit for the songs I’ve written. I feel that somewhere, someplace, it’s been done, and I’m just a courier bringing it into the world. I really believe that."
- "I love what I do. I’m happy at what I do. It’s escapism."
- "Why can’t you share your bed? That’s the most loving thing to do, to share your bed with someone."
- "If you enter this world knowing you are loved and you leave this world knowing the same, then everything that happens in between can be dealt with."
- "I always want to know what makes good performers fall to pieces."
- "My father would rehearse with a belt in his hand. You couldn’t mess up."
- "What I’m asking is whether this is still a country where a peculiar person such as Michael Jackson can get a fair shake and be considered innocent until proven guilty... or is this just a 21st century American barnyard where we all feel free to turn on the moonwalking rooster... and peck it to death?"
- Paris Jackson Net Worth 2025: Inside Her $150M Fortune & Unpacking Her Complex Inheritance
























