LOS ANGELES, Aug. 9, 2005

Two Jackson Jurors Express Regrets

Say They Believe Pop Star Was Guilty; Both Jurors Have Book Deals

  • Play CBS Video Video In The Jurors' Own Words

    There's no better way to understand a verdict than to ask the jurors themselves how they reached a decision. Jurors Raymond Hultman, Tiffany Smith and Michael Stevens talked to The Early Show.

  • Michael Jackson exits the Santa Barbara County Superior Court in Santa Maria, Calif., with his attorney Thomas Mesereau Jr. after the verdict was read, Monday, June 13, 2005.

    Michael Jackson exits the Santa Barbara County Superior Court in Santa Maria, Calif., with his attorney Thomas Mesereau Jr. after the verdict was read, Monday, June 13, 2005.  (AP)

  • Interactive Michael Jackson Trial

    Reactions, juror profiles, testimony, photos and more.

  • Photo Essay The Verdict

    Friends, fans and foes react to Michael Jackson's acquittal.

(AP) 
Cosby asked Cook if the other jurors will be angry with her.

"They can be as angry as they want to. They ought to be ashamed. They're the ones that let a pedophile go," responded Cook, 79.

Hultman, 62, told Cosby he was upset with the way other jurors approached the case: "The thing that really got me the most was the fact that people just wouldn't take those blinders off long enough to really look at all the evidence that was there."

The New York Daily News first reported Aug. 4 that Hultman and Cook planned books and believed Jackson was guilty.

Hultman has said that when jurors took an anonymous poll early in their deliberations he was one of three jurors who voted for conviction.

On June 13, the jurors unanimously acquitted Jackson of all charges, which alleged that he molested a 13-year-old boy, plied the boy with wine and conspired to hold him and his family captive so they would make a video rebutting a damaging television documentary.

Cook told Cosby: "The air reeked of hatred and people were angry and I had never been in an atmosphere like that before."

In June, Hultman told the AP about the verdict: "That's not to say he's an innocent man. He's just not guilty of the crimes he's been charged with."

During an appearance on ABC's "Good Morning America" with five other jurors in June, Cook was one of three who raised their hands when asked if they thought Jackson may have molested other children but not the 13-year-old boy.

"We had our suspicions, but we couldn't judge on that because it wasn't what we were there to do," she said at the time.

Hultman's book will be called "The Deliberator" and Cook's is "Guilty as Sin, Free as a Bird," said Larry Garrison, a producer who is working with both on their separate books and a combined television movie. Part of the profits from their book sales will go to charity, he said.


©MMV The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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