Taj Jackson: "The scary thing about the catalogue, it was something that – no matter what Sony purchased, because they were the partner of it, my uncle collected on. So the catalogue just kept getting bigger and bigger. You know, he was a billionaire times over, because the catalogue was just growing bigger and bigger in that way. (…) This catalogue was humongous and span the garmut of certain things and then... It's hard talking about the catalogue because I know that my uncle basicly gave his life for it in a way... and it was something that he … it was symbolic to him. It wasn't the songs, you know, it was the fact that this is what he had worked for to be free and to pass on to his kids. That was the symbolicalness of it and that's what hurts me most about it, because he went through that whole 2005 trial holding on to that catalogue basically knowing that they're stabbing him all over to try and get it and he wouldn't let go. And that hurts me just knowing that.
I don't think he died of any natural way of dying... that's not even a question for us. When you have a person like my uncle was, in terms of who would warn us and tell us that 'they would try to kill me for my catalogue'... when someone says that and end up dying... I don't know the people involved, the players involved, … I'm very careful, if I don't know the players, I don't even want to throw out names because it's not fair to them in that way, I'm about facts. But I do believe that he was killed for his catalogue, and that's an understatement, I think his whole career was tarnished for that catalogue, and the allegations start happening...."
(Nicole's view interview)
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