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Child lover Michael Jackson has had a lawsuit alleging assault, false imprisonment and sexual battery thrown out of court in Los Angeles after the accuser failed to turn up for the start of the trial on yesterday. Daniel Kapon originally launched legal action against Jackson in January 2006 in Orange County, California, before refiling the suit in L.A. two months later. In the legal papers, 22-year-old Kapon claims the superstar singer had began molesting him when he was at the young age of two, continuing the alleged behaviour until he was 14. He also accused Jackson of forcing him to take drugs and drink alcohol, as well as making him undergo cosmetic surgery. And Kapon goes on to allege Jackson plagiarised, stealing song ideas from him for 10 years from 1987. But in December 2006, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Rold Treu rejected a number of Kapon’s accusations, leaving Jackson to defend himself against the remaining allegations of assault, battery, false imprisonment and a sexual battery cause of action. However, Treu dismissed the lawsuit altogether on Monday when Kapon didn’t show up for the trial. And Jackson’s attorney, Thomas C. Mundell, is glad the suit has been thrown out, having branded the allegations "the ravings of an unbalanced celebrity stalker". Speaking after the judge’s ruling on Monday, Mundell added, "I think the judge realized how crazy the lawsuit was." Jackson was acquitted of unrelated child molestation charges in 2005.
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