An inmate convicted of stalking Madonna and threatening to …
US singer Michael Jackson is shown at a press conference in London.
US singer Michael Jackson is shown at a press conference in London.
Mills spoke under oath at Lord Justice Brian Leveson's inquiry …
Updated: Friday, 20 Aug 2010, 5:32 AM MDT
Published : Friday, 20 Aug 2010, 5:32 AM MDT
NEW YORK (AP) - A federal judge on Thursday dismissed a multimillion-dollar lawsuit by a concert promoter against the late Michael Jackson over a failed reunion concert.
U.S. District Judge Harold Baer Jr. granted a motion by lawyers for Jackson's estate to dismiss the case, citing a lack of evidence that the late King of Pop or his family were under a binding agreement to perform at a reunion concert.
AllGood Entertainment Inc., a company started in Morristown, N.J., sued Jackson for $40 million on June 10, 2009, roughly two weeks before the singer's death in Los Angeles at age 50. It claimed Jackson and his then-manager broke a contract for a Jackson reunion show.
AllGood later filed a creditor's claim with Jackson's estate, claiming the potential value of the lawsuit was at least $300 million.
Baer determined that there was a letter of intent between Jackson's then-manager, Frank DiLeo, and AllGood, but never an enforceable contract. He noted that neither Jackson nor any other members of the family who were to be involved in the show ever signed a contract.
Attorneys for Jackson's estate and DiLeo contended that if there was a breach in the contract, AllGood broke the agreement first because it did not issue a payment to Jackson before a required deadline. Baer wrote that there was no evidence that AllGood suffered substantial economic damage because of the failed concert.
"This case never had any merit and the claim was frivolous from day one," Jackson estate attorney Howard Weitzman said in a statement. "Michael Jackson never agreed to participate in a concert promoted by AllGood as the judge clearly found in his opinion."
An after-hours phone message left for AllGood's attorney, Ira Meyerowitz, was not immediately returned.
Enter each day for your chance to win ticket's to Lobo Women's Basketball game.
Enter the weekly contest for your chance to win a Larry Barker t-shirt!
Edward John Maher, once dubbed "Fast Eddie" in news reports after the 1993 …
Enter each day for your chance to win ticket's to Lobo Women's Basketball game.
A woman who snatched a newborn baby from a New York City hospital in 1987, then …