Paris Jackson Is Suing Her Fatherās Estate Over Secret Bonuses, a Biopic She Hates, and Millions in Murky Payments
Paris Jackson Is Suing Her Fatherās Estate Over Secret Bonuses, a Biopic She Hates, and Millions in Murky Payments
Michael Prieve Tue, March 24, 2026 at 11:41 PM UTC
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Summary -
Paris Jackson is locked in an escalating legal battle with Michael Jacksonās estate co-executors John Branca and John McClain, accusing them of financial mismanagement, unauthorized bonuses, and self-serving decisions tied to the upcoming biopic Michael.
The dispute centers on more than $600,000 in questionable payments, a controversial casting decision involving Miles Teller, and a fight over when the estate must release its 2025 financial accounts.
The estate is firing back hard, pointing to its transformation from $500 million in debt to a multi-billion-dollar empire, and accusing Parisās team of staging ātabloid press photo opsā rather than engaging in good faith.
Nearly 17 years after Michael Jacksonās death, the King of Popās multibillion-dollar estate remains a battlefield. And standing in the middle of it, paperwork in hand, burgundy blazer on point, is his 27-year-old daughter Paris Jackson ā who is quickly becoming the most formidable threat the estateās executives have ever faced.
This isnāt a passing grievance or a tabloid spat. With all the storms Michael Jacksonās reputation, legacy, and bank accounts have weathered through the years, it could be his outspoken and independent daughter who blows the whole house down.
At the center of the ongoing estate dispute is a combustible mix of money, power, and a whole lot of receipts. At the center of this dispute is more than $600,000 in bonuses, self-described āpremium payments,ā payouts to various law firms and individuals for largely unaccounted-for work, and an insistence on gifts such as cars and fancy watches that may or may not have come from MJ himself.
Paris Jackson at the Paris Fashion Week Womenswear Fall/Winter 2026-2027 Vivienne Westwood show on March 7, 2026. Photo Credit: Ivanka Voisin/Starface Photo/Cover Images
Paris, in a pre-hearing brief filed in mid-March, wasnāt exactly subtle about how she feels about co-executor John Branca ā the attorney her father fired multiple times while he was still alive. Her legal team described Branca by referencing the film A Few Good Men, writing that he testified āhe had neither the time nor the inclination to explain himself to his beneficiaries, and āwould rather that you just said thank you and went on your way.'ā
Colonel Jessup would be proud.
If the financial complaints werenāt enough, thereās also the matter of Michael ā the Antoine Fuqua-directed biopic starring Jaafar Jackson (yes, MJās nephew) and Colman Domingo, set to hit theaters on April 24, 2026. Paris has long described the film as āsugar-coatedā and ādishonestā based on a script she was provided.
Her latest legal filings take direct aim at how Branca handled his role as a producer on the project. Paris questioned the āpeculiar and presumably costlyā choice to cast A-list actor Miles Teller to play Branca himself, doubting whether such an expensive move would actually translate into higher box office returns.
Paris Jackson at the 82nd Venice International Film Festival amfAR gala on August 31, 2025. Photo Credit: IPA/INSTARimages
She also raised alarms about the estate allegedly being forced to spend tens of millions on reshoots ā a problem she argues stems from Brancaās inexperience in film production. Thereās also the matter of a 1994 deal. Paris and her lawyers want to bury Branca for not knowing about, or knowing the significance of, a $20 million-plus settlement with the family of then-underaged Jordan Chandler that forbade depiction of his relationship with Michael Jackson and the allegations of sexual abuse.
The estate, for its part, is not amused. āThe estate is extremely happy with the movie and expects it to be very profitable for the estate,ā an estate spokesperson told Deadline.
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The lawyers for Branca and the Jackson estate co-executor, John McClain, went full scorched earth in their response. They said Paris and her lawyers have āeither not been paying attention over the past several years or simply want to object for objectionsā sake.ā
They didnāt stop there. They added that Paris and her team āseem far more interested in playing media games by making headline-grabbing, yet false, accusations; raising specific āconcernsā over issues previously addressed and resolved, and staging tabloid press photo ops strutting into hearings with obvious props.ā
Paris Jackson at the āFrankensteinā Premiere during the 82nd Venice International Film Festival 2025 on August 30, 2025. Photo Credit: Anna Maria Tinghino/Future Image/Cover Images
Oof. (For the record, Paris showed up to a March courthouse appearance in a matching burgundy wide-leg trouser set and skyscraper heels, so if thatās a prop, itās a very chic one.)
The estateās defenders have a significant counterargument: the numbers. The estate carried $500 million in debt at the time of Michael Jacksonās death in 2009 and was facing the possibility of bankruptcy. Under Branca and McClainās management, it was rebuilt into a business generating billions in revenue.
They also note that Paris has already received approximately $65 million in benefits from the estate and stands to inherit many hundreds of millions more.
But Parisās court filings argue something more fundamental is broken. Her filing stressed that the estate has āmorphed into a private entertainment investment fund managed more for the benefit of executors and their counsel than its beneficiaries.ā
Photo Credit: Julien Reynaud/Abaca Press/INSTARimages
And sheās not doing this alone. Paris, Prince, and Bigi Jackson are legally demanding that the estate release the financial breakdown of their 2025 expenses, with a request for the report by September 15; however, the estate claims they need at least 16 months to finalize the reports.
Retired Judge Mitchell Beckloff ā who has presided over this case since Michael Jacksonās death in 2009 ā is overseeing the latest hearings. With Paris Jackson and her brothers, Prince and Bigi, now adults, it is hard to deny that the family could take control now.
No ruling is expected immediately, but the trajectory is clear: this dispute isnāt winding down. Itās just getting started. Whether youāre Team Paris or Team Estate, one thing is certain ā Michael Jacksonās legacy, financial and otherwise, is still very much up for grabs.
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Source: āAOL Entertainmentā