- Jackson's team would move the families further and further away from their sons' hotel rooms. Safechuck's mother says that on multiple stops during one of Jackson's tours, she was disturbed to discover that her hotel room would be on the opposite end of the hallway from her son's, which was always right next to Jackson's room. Eventually it got to the point where her room would be on an entirely different floor as the tour wore on.
- Robson and Safechuck's realization of what had happened to them didn't happen for decades. As is the case with many young victims of sexual assault, Robson and Safechuck didn't fully understand the severity of what had happened to them until years later. Jackson's alleged tactics of convincing the boys that they were loved made it difficult for them to define the acts as abuse. "I loved him and he loved me, and [sex] was something that happened between us," Robson explains. Safechuck says he told his mother of the molestation when the 2003 accusations against Jackson came out, though it took Robson much longer to accept it.
- Robson and Safechuck vouched for Jackson in court. Part two of the documentary dives into both cases against Jackson, and how he counted on the boys for their support. When Jackson was accused of sexual assault in the early '90s, Robson and his family spoke on TV in support of the singer. Robson said under oath that Jackson had never harmed him or touched him in a sexual context when he was subpoenaed during the 2004 trial, which he explains in the documentary, saying that he wasn't emotionally ready to confront what had actually happened to him.
If you or someone you know has experienced sexual violence, please call the RAINN Sexual Assault Hotline at 1-800-656-HOPE (4673) or visit online.rainn.org.