The godfather of Michael Jackson’s
children has come forward to say that the King Of Pop drank six bottles
of wine a day in the weeks leading up to his death.
His friend Mark Lester has claimed that the troubled star, who died of acute Propofol intoxication in 2009, used to get him to smuggle the alcohol into hotels past his strict security team in a desperate attempt to beat his insomnia.
Mark, who found fame as a child playing Oliver, also went on the claim that the Thriller singer was ‘paralytic’ at the press conference to announce his This Is It residency at London's The O2, which was scheduled to begin just weeks after he died in June 2009.
His friend Mark Lester has claimed that the troubled star, who died of acute Propofol intoxication in 2009, used to get him to smuggle the alcohol into hotels past his strict security team in a desperate attempt to beat his insomnia.
Mark, who found fame as a child playing Oliver, also went on the claim that the Thriller singer was ‘paralytic’ at the press conference to announce his This Is It residency at London's The O2, which was scheduled to begin just weeks after he died in June 2009.
Mark, who is godfather to the star's
three children, Prince, 16, Paris,15, and 10-year-old Blanket, told The
Sun newspaper: ‘Michael passed out on the hotel bed. His doctor said
he'd drunk two-thirds of a bottle of whisky and was paralytic.
He sobered up enough to struggle through the This Is It speech, which he just about got away with.’ Mark, 54, who was a close friend of Michael's right up until this death,
gave an interview to the News of the World in August 2009 claiming that
he could be the biological father of Paris Katherine Jackson, the late
singer's daughter.
Lester claimed to have been a sperm
donor for Jackson in 1996, and announced that he was willing to take a
paternity test to determine whether he was the father.
In
the same interview he claimed he had not been allowed contact with them
since Jackson's death: 'It's very, very upsetting not being able to see
all those children; they're my godchildren, and I love them dearly.'
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