| 1. | on Page 240: |
| "... Bowman's two-year-old daughter obtained by peering through her window, and material that some believe was supplied to Butterfield by Anthony Pellicano, a private investigator who was hired by celebrities and reportedly worked for the Kennedys. The article caused a furor, both ..." | |
| 2. | on Page 272: |
| "... 17 p.r. muscle Private Investigator Anthony Pellicano was on the Dangerous tour in Bangkok with Michael Jackson when he got the call: police had raided Neverland, the ..." | |
| 3. | on Page 273: |
| "... guys will act like humans, which is real difficult for you all ..." Weitzman then introduced Jackson's "security consultant," Anthony Pellicano. A slight, well-groomed man with receding wavy hair and hound-dog eyes stepped up to the mike. There is no truth, ..." | |
| 4. | on Page 275: |
| "... breed of aggressive private detectives usually billed as "security consultants." The best-known of these operators worked in and around Hollywood. Pellicano's key competitor was probably Gavin de Becker, who for years was on the William Morris payroll and whose clients included ..." | |
| 5. | on Page 276: |
| "... bunch of guys are talking into their cufflinks, you know de Becker is on the job," said a tabloid reporter. Pellicano couldn't stand de Becker. He referred to his biggest competitor as a "fucking wimp." Pellicano was of the tough-talking Philip ..." | |
| 6. | on Page 277: |
| "... P.R. MUSCLE 277 some scattered branches and leaves, and produced a plastic bag containing Todd's remains. Pellicano insisted that "underworld sources" had told him the body's whereabouts, but rivals snickered that the private detective had staged the ..." | |
| 7. | on Page 278: |
| "... have involved mutilated dolls, threatening letters, and bizarre tales of Woods's penis stuck to his thigh with Krazy Glue-Woods hired Pellicano. The private detective also worked on the William Kennedy Smith rape trial. He is said to be the one who ..." | |
| 8. | on Page 279: |
| "... MUSCLE 279 problem was, until the denial, Nathanson hadn't been publicly linked to Fleiss. The denial prompted Variety to give Pellicano the PR Boner Award. Then there was the Roseanne case. The comedienne paid Pellicano $25,000 to locate a daughter she'd ..." | |
| 9. | on Page 280: |
| "... 280 diSh was $500 an hour; Jackson paid Pellicano a retainer of $100,000 a month. The singer, according to Pellicano, was the victim of twenty-five to thirty extortion attempts ..." | |
| 10. | on Page 282: |
| "... of those tabloid things. It was completely made up. It's a complete lie." For the first few days after the Pellicano press conference, the Michael Jackson story was reported largely as the private detective had spun it: an extortion attempt gone ..." |
| 1. | on Page 283: |
| "... "You have had a first-hand crash course in dealing with the media. I'm sure it has not been easy.... Anthony Pellicano and the Jackson people have been trying to tip the balance of the media coverage in their favor by making ..." | |
| 12. | on Page 284: |
| "... to talk to the media and discrediting those who did. Reporters who tracked down potential sources were constantly told, "Mr. Pellicano has told us not to say anything." Four former security guards who filed suit against Jackson, alleging that they were ..." | |
| 13. | on Page 286: |
| "... came from irate Michael Jackson fans-a gang of them once physically attacked her. More often, she said, it was from Pellicano and his team. "For months, the Michael Jackson story consumed every waking moment of my life. At every turn, Anthony ..." | |
| 14. | on Page 287: |
| "... with her husband. One morning at 9 A.M., Dimond's husband called her at her office: "How's that special on Anthony Pellicano coming?" he asked. "Oh, it's great," Dimond replied. "We've got all sorts of things on him. We're going to expose ..." | |
| 15. | on Page 288: |
| "... 288 diSh fend O. J. Simpson. The following month, the case was settled for a reported $27 million. Pellicano claimed he was dead set against paying any money. "There was no way that Bert Fields and I would have ..." | |
| 16. | on Page 289: |
| "... for $1.3 million.' Although no formal charges were ever brought against Michael Jackson, the scandal effectively ruined his career. Anthony Pellicano loudly and repeatedly said that he was opposed to settling , and the perception in some Hollywood circles was that ..." | |
| 17. | on Page 290: |
| "... on a tabloid TV show and claimed that she had evidence that Steven Seagal beat his wife, Seagal hired Anthony Pellicano. Shuman claimed she was harassed and followed and once was beaten so badly that she ended up in the emergency ..." | |
| 18. | from Back Matter: |
| "... the Michael Jackson story as well as interviews with a number of people who have dealt with Jackson or Anthony Pellicano, including Diane Dimond, John Connolly, and Maureen Orth. Hundreds of articles were consulted for this section. Among the most useful ..." | |
| 19. | from Back Matter: |
| "... for Tabloid Media." Los Angeles Times, 13 October 1995. Conant, Jennet. "The Professional." Vanity Fair, June 1996. Connolly, John. "The Pellicano Brief." Los Angeles Magazine, February 1994. Cook, Anthony. "The Man Who Bugged Marilyn Monroe." GQ, October 1990. Corkery, P. J. ..." | |
| 20. | from Back Matter: |
| "... Angeles Times, 12 March 1981. O'Neil, Paul. "The Little Queen That Hollywood Deserved." Life, 4 June 1965. Oney, Steve. "Anthony Pellicano: The Private Eye Who Dogged the Delorean and Belushi Cases Talks About the Tools of His Trade: Guts, Guns and ..." |
| 21. | from Index: |
| "... Louella, 12, 66-70 Parton, Dolly, 171 Patric, Jason, 260 Paul, Maury, 58, 59 Pearl Harbor, 43 Pearson, Drew, 33-35, 95 Pellicano, Anthony, 240, 272, 273-280, 283-284, 286-290, 331 People, 112-131, 163, 167-168, 181, 194, 259, 263-264, 323-324, 330 Perel, David, 292, ..." |