Suspicious American silence after uncovering the gaps of Jackson's scandalous film!

A few weeks after the horrific film, which exposed the shocking allegations of molestation of the late Michael Jackson, children were sexually exposed, there were gaps in the plaintiffs' stories amid strange silence from the American media.
The four-hour documentary, "Leaving Neverland," directed by Dan Reid, received a lot of attention from the media when it was broadcast in America and Britain in March.
The two victims, Wade Robson and James Sivchak, soon became part of the "#MeToo" campaign generation, and only a few journalists questioned their stories.
But in late March, Jackson's biographer, Mike Smolkamp, ​​raised concerns about the "history of the president" in the documentary.
While Sivcak was alleged to have been sexually harassed at the train station on the Neverland Ranch, it turned out that the station had not been built until the end of 1993 and had not opened until 1994, two years after the victim declared sexual harassment ended when he reached 14 Of his age.
Other gaps have been identified in the stories, one of which concerns Svetchak's mother, who claimed to have celebrated Jackson's death four years before her son announced that he had been sexually harassed.Smolkamp published a Twitter tweak containing photographs of building permits for the train station, to prove his words. In response to his documentary, Reid acknowledged that the dates in his film were wrong, before he quickly retreated and insisted that "there is no problem with the dates."
A month after the publication of a major media storm due to "Leaving Neverland," the interest of the US media appears to be small with new information.
The British daily The Daily Mail, The Sun and Mirror, as well as multiple sites, have written about Smolkamp's concerns about the documentary.
The media in Australia and Canada also spoke of the contradictions in the documentary, but the US media showed an almost indistinguishable interest in the mysterious gaps.

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