Checkmite
Skepticifimisticalationist
Paying off nuisance law suits is actually a very common practice as defending them in court can often cost more than a pay off does. It is no more an admission of guilt than pleading the 5th.
You may be over-generalizing. Is paying off accusers of sexual abuse or misconduct, specifically, as "very common" as paying off other kinds of nuisance lawsuits? It seems to me that the public views a settlement in such a case very differently from how it views a settlement over say a slip and fall claim, or a patent dispute, and this surely has to have an effect on whether a person chooses to settle.
On the other hand, it's mentioned above by someone that one of the alleged victims was paid off specifically by Jackson's insurance company. Liability insurance companies aren't known for settling arbitrary "nuisance claims" in the hundreds-of-thousands to millions ballpark. Their whole business model is based on paying out only when they absolutely have to and they will fight claims in court that they perceive to be weak, flawed, or frivolous. I find it unlikely that an insurance company would've directly paid a claimant unless their own legal department determined a reasonable case could be made that damage occurred which was covered by the policy.
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