Paris Jackson claims 'massive win' in legal battle as Michael Jackson estate executors ordered to return $625,000
Paris Jackson claims 'massive win' in legal battle as Michael Jackson estate executors ordered to return $625,000
Ryan ColemanThu, May 14, 2026 at 1:57 AM UTC
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Paris Jackson, Michael Jackson, and John Branca
Credit: Jesse Grant/WWD via Getty; Michael Ochs Archive/Getty; Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagicKey Points
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Paris Jackson scored a major win in her ongoing legal battle against the Michael Jackson estate.
Paris has been embroiled in years-long litigation with the executors of her father's sizable estate, whom she accused of making unauthorized payments to attorneys.
On May 11, a judge ruled the payments "arbitrary," ordering $625,000 be returned to the estate, which counts Paris as a benefactor.
Paris Jackson has secured a key victory in her ongoing battle against the executors of father Michael Jackson's estate.
The late King of Pop's eldest child has been in litigation against John Branca and John McClain, the executors of his sizable estate for years, over allegations that they made unauthorized bonus payments to their attorneys to the tune of several hundreds of thousands of dollars.
After a considerable setback in November, referee Mitchell L. Beckloff handed Paris a major win, ruling on Monday that the executors are henceforth forbidden from making bonus payments to attorneys "without the written consent of all beneficiaries or an order of the referee/court," per court documents obtained by Entertainment Weekly.
Additionally, a particular set of payments made in 2018 that "Mr. Branca determined was appropriate" was found "arbitrary," and has been "disallowed." A total of $625,000 of bonus payments "shall be returned to the estate."
Prince, Paris, Michael, and Bigi Jackson
Credit: Prince Jackson/Instagram
Beckloff did praise Branca and McClain for having "transformed" the Jackson estate "from teetering on the brink of bankruptcy in June of 2009 when Michael Jackson died to the financial powerhouse that it is today." But in his ruling, he ordered Branca and McClain to pay Paris' attorney fees, and granted Paris' request to secure a schedule for the executors to file new accountings in their ongoing petition to approve estate attorneys' fees from 2019-2024.
"Paris has always been focused on what's best for her family and this ruling is a massive win for them. After years of delay, the Jackson family will finally get the transparency and accountability measures Paris has fought for," a spokesperson Paris shared in a statement. "The Jackson Estate is supposed to be a prudent, fiscally responsible entity that supports the Jackson family — not a slush fund to help John Branca live out his Hollywood mogul fantasies. After months of engaging in sexist, scorched-earth tactics against a beneficiary, it's time for John Branca to acknowledge his many missteps and act in the best interest of the family he has a fiduciary duty to protect."
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When reached for comment, a representative for the Michael Jackson estate stated, "While the Court has previously approved several other bonuses to outside counsel over the years for their extraordinary services, and this was the first time they were the subject of objections, the Executors have always understood that legal fees are subject to court approval and have always required outside counsel to agree to return any funds to the estate if the payments were not approved. And, to be clear, none of the $625,000 in bonuses — which represent only a small fraction of the Estate’s expenses for the period in question — were paid to the Executors, and the court did not in any way say that the Executors had made any inappropriate payments to themselves. Ultimately, while we disagree with the decision, we fully respect it and plan to move forward accordingly."
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According to a 2024 court filing by Branca and McClain, Michael Jackson was over $500 million in debt at the time of his death in 2009. The executors have continually claimed they are working to unburden the estate from its debt, but Paris has contended that they're only further imperiling the estate valued at roughly $2 billion.
Paris claimed that the executors paid themselves over $10 million in 2021 alone, far more than any payout Paris claimed that either she or her siblings, Prince and Bigi, have ever received.
In April, the estate was sued by members of Michael's alleged "second family," who have accused the singer of sexual abuse and grooming.
on Entertainment Weekly
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