By Dan Whitcomb
LOS ANGELES — Michael Jackson’s famed
Neverland Valley Ranch in California will be foreclosed and sold
on March 19 unless the pop star pays a balance of nearly $25
million, property records showed on Tuesday.
FoxNews.com celebrity columnist Roger
Friedman reported on the Web site (www.foxnews.com) that Jackson
has been formally apprised of the foreclosure and that legal
documents have also been filed with the Santa Barbara County
Recorder’s office.
"You are in default of a deed of trust ...,"
Jackson was told in the five-page filing, according to a copy of
the document published by FoxNews.com. "Unless you take action
to protect your property it may be sold at a public sale."
According to the documents, if Jackson fails
to pay the outstanding balance, estimated at $24.5 million,
Neverland would be sold to the highest bidder at a public
auction on the courthouse steps.
The county recorder’s Web site shows that a
Notice of Trustees Sale was filed against Neverland Valley Ranch
on Monday but no further details were available and a
spokeswoman for the office declined to comment.
Jackson’s publicist, Raymone Bain, did not
return calls seeking comment on the foreclosure notice.
The onetime "King of Pop" has owned the
2,800-acre (1,133-ha) ranch in the rolling foothills above the
California coast since 1988, naming it after the whimsical
island where children never grow up in J.M. Barrie’s Peter Pan
stories.
Jackson, 49, famously outfitted the property
with a private zoo and amusement park and festooned it with
statues of Peter Pan characters.
But the reclusive, Grammy-winning singer has
spent little time at Neverland since his June, 2005 acquittal on
charges that he sexually molested a young boy there after plying
him with alcohol.
In 2006 state authorities ordered the
property shuttered and fined Jackson for failing to pay his
employees or maintain proper insurance, and the zoo animals have
since reportedly been removed.
Jackson, who proclaimed himself "King of Pop" in the 1980s
and scored one of the top-selling pop albums of all time in
"Thriller," has since seen his fame as an entertainer eclipsed
by the sometimes bizarre details of his personal life.–
Reuters