Michael Jackson Said To Have Secretly Collected Nazi Films?
Michael Jackson The late King of Pop hunted out specialist video sellers who were able to discreetly sell him hard-to-find films and documentaries.
Alarmingly, given the child sex allegations against him, these included TV specials and dramas depicting troubled boys in dysfunctional families.
But most shockingly they also included a thirst for information depicting the horrific Nazi regime of Adolf Hitler.
Seller Norman Scherer says he helped Jacko form "a really good collection" and adds he provided him with titles like, 'Nazis: Of Pure Blood', 'Oasis of the Zombies' and 'Hitler's Children'.
He says Jackson then displayed the tapes along the walls of his video vault at the Neverland ranch.
"Michael Jackson was a very special client to me," insisted Scherer, who owned a videotape distribution company in the 1990s.
He says in 1995 that he was approached by a New Yorker looking to place big orders for a "famous" client. He was told the deal could only work if he vowed to be discreet.
Jackson's former personal assistant, Scott Schaffer, had hunted him down and acted as the go-between.
"I knew what [Jackson] wanted," Schaffer said.
Asked about the Hitler videos, Scherer says he assumed that the singer just loved the military uniforms, and the lockstep marching.


