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    SummaryMichael Jackson: The Verdict, a three-part Netflix docuseries directed by Nick Green, premieres June 3, revisiting the 2003-2005 trial that ended with Jackson's acquittal on all countsThe series features new interviews exclusively with eyewitnesses who were present in the courtroom, including jurors, media figures, and participants from both the prosecution and defenseBecause no cameras were permitted inside the courtroom at the time, the public's understanding of the trial was largely shaped by outside commentary rather than the proceedings themselves — a gap this documentary is built to addressNetflix has debuted the trailer for its upcoming documentary Michael Jackson: The Verdict, premiering on June 3. The three-part docuseries, directed by Nick Green, revisits the 2003-2005 trial that captivated millions and ended with Jackson's acquittal on all charges, reconstructing the case through new interviews with the people who were actually inside the courtroom when it happened.The documentary's central premise is also its most compelling editorial decision. No cameras were allowed inside the courtroom during the Michael Jackson trial, which means that everything the public absorbed about one of the most watched legal proceedings in modern American history arrived filtered: through commentary, through selective reporting, through the particular lenses of outlets that covered the case piecemeal over two years. The result was a trial that millions followed but almost no one actually understood in full. Twenty years later, the controversy generated by that incomplete picture is still unresolved.Nick Green and executive producer Fiona Stourton approached the project as a forensic historical account rather than a retrospective. The interview methodology reflects that: only eyewitnesses who played a direct role in the proceedings are featured, including jurors, media figures who were present in the courtroom, and participants from both the prosecution and the defense. The aim, as the filmmakers describe it, is to take the audience inside the proceedings as they actually unfolded, giving viewers something closer to a firsthand account than anything that has been available since the trial ended in 2005. "No cameras were allowed in court," the filmmakers note, "and so the public's view of the facts at the time were filtered by commentators and presented piecemeal. It was time to take a forensic look at the trial as a whole."The timing is deliberate in its own right. Michael Jackson's cultural presence has not diminished in the sixteen years since his death, and the questions surrounding his legacy have only grown more charged as further allegations, documentaries, and public debates have accumulated around his name. A series that commits to presenting only what was established in a courtroom, through the testimony of people who witnessed it directly, occupies a different position in that conversation than anything that has preceded it.Watch the trailer above. Michael Jackson: The Verdict premieres June 3 on Netflix.

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