AssetID: 53891718
Headline: UNCAPTIONED: Michael Jackson 'owed $500 million' when he died
Caption: Michael Jackson 'owed $500 million' when he died. The King of Pop owed money to over 65 creditors when he died in 2009, according to paperwork filed on 21 June. The legal documents include a petition from estate executors seeking back pay from 2018, which is related to the late singer's now $2 billion (£1.58 billion) estate. The Thriller singer had "more than half a dozen lawsuits pending worldwide" and more than "65 creditors' claims" were filed in the Estate, showed the documents. This led to "additional lawsuits, of which several resulted in litigation”. Estate executors are now seeking reimbursement of "legal, negotiating and various other operating expenses" over the last six years. ”The Executors were able to renegotiate and restructure financing arrangements that existed at the time of Michael's death, at substantially reduced interest rates, enabling the Estate to avoid the loss of any assets to the lenders and ultimately to satisfy the encumbrances that existed at the time of Michael's death." Estate Executors / Petition. The paperwork states that the executors managing the estate must seek court approval every six months to receive 30% of their compensation, while they retain the remaining 70%. Earlier this month, Jackson's estate agreed to sell its remaining stake in a music catalogue to Sony Corp for $750 million (£593 million). At the time of his death, the music catalogue was his most lucrative asset. THIS VIDEO MUST NOT BE EDITED FOR LENGTH TO COMBINE WITH OTHER CONTENT
Keywords: Michael Jackson,owed $500 million,65 creditors,died in 2009,legal documents,21 June,estate executors,back pay,2018,$2 billion estate,Thriller singer,lawsuits,worldwide,creditors' claims,additional lawsuits,litigation,reimbursement,legal expenses,negotiating expenses,operating expenses,executors,court approval,compensation,music catalogue,Sony Corp,$750 million,lucrative asset,cardiac arrest,sedatives,propofol,Conrad Murray,involuntary manslaughter
PersonInImage: