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A Ugandan-born woman of Rwandese origin may be a key witness in attempts by American police to find the cause of death for Super Star Michael Jackson.
The London-based Sunday Times quoted Grace Rwaramba who has worked for Michael Jackson for the last 17 years as secretary and nanny, as having told Daphne Barak, an international interviewer that she knew what had killed the pop star. While the Los Angeles Police department has declared no official cause of death, Grace claimed that the super star had been addicted to drugs and that on several occasions she was forced to pump out drugs from Michael Jackson's body.
In what appears to be a stab in the body of an already dead man, Ms Rwaramba accused Jackson's Mum of calling her (Rwaramba) soon after Michael Jackson died to inquire where her son's money was. She claimed that while she, Michael and his three children were staying at a friend's house in Dubai, Katherine, Michael's mother wanted money from his son "He told me to give her my ATM card so that his mother would draw cash from my account." This was after Michaels Arab billionaire friend had deposited a million dollars on Grace's account for Michael.
Michael Jackson, loved by millions and hated by many for his success, died suddenly at the weekend after suffering a cardiac arrest soon after attending a rehearsal for a show he was due to hold in London in two weeks time. He was aged only 50. Grace claims that Michael Jackson was at one time so broke he had to sleep in a three bed-roomed house in Ireland because he had no money to rent a hotel. Sacked by Michael early this year, Grace insists she is the only one Michael Jackson's children want to live with.
The Ugandan-born woman originally from Rwanda says Michael could also have died from the stress of planning to do 50 shows in London. She claims she confronted Michael about this but that the singer ignored her worries but told her he had signed to do only ten shows not 50.
Meanwhile, the singer is set to pay off all his creditors while lying in a Los Angeles morgue. Fans have forced most of his records to get back into the top twenty and many record shops in London are reporting unprecedented high sales for any song by the pop star.
His children are also set to benefit from a £605 million trust that he left them to have from the 50% share from Sony/ATV Publishing who own the Beatles catalogues. They will also gain from a £7.2 million income from royalties that will keep pouring in for many years to come.
Michael's two boys and a girl he fathered through surrogacy may now have a chance to walk the streets of America without the veils their father insisted they wear and which they are said to have hated so much. But the battle for their custody may be a long one
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