Michael Jackson- The Driver (as told by his Mother Katherine)

In Photos: Michael Jackson driving with his niece 

Michael usually drove himself to Kingdom Hall and his field-service 
routes. He’d finally gotten his driver’s license in 1981, at the age of twenty-
three. Initially he didn’t want to learn to drive. 

 “I’ll just get a chauffeur when I want to go out,” he said when I began 
nagging him about getting his license. 

 “But suppose you’re someplace and your chauffeur gets sick?” I reasoned. 

 Finally, he relented and took some lessons. 

 After he began driving, Michael decided that he enjoyed being behind the 
wheel, after all. The first time he took me for a ride, he ventured up to 
Mulholland Drive, a winding road in the Hollywood Hills. It was a hair-
raising experience. 

 “I’ve got a crook in my neck and my feet hurt,” LaToya, who was also in 
the car, complained afterward. “I was putting on the brakes’ with my feet and 
‘steering’ the car with my neck trying to keep it on the road. I was so scared!” 

 It was white-knuckle time for me, too. Michael drove fast. He also had the 
same habit that I have: driving right up to the car in front and stopping on a 
dime. 

 After that, Michael started going out by himself.

 “You shouldn’t go out alone,” I told him. “Get Bill Bray to go with you.” 

 But Michael wouldn’t hear of it. “I’m tired of having security with me 
every time I go someplace.” 


 When he began driving, Michael told me that he would never go on 
freeways; he thought they were too dangerous. So I was shocked one day 
when Michael suddenly drove us onto a freeway ramp. 

 “Wait a minute, Michael, what are you doing?” 

 “I can drive the freeways now!” he said, laughing. He had changed his 
mind about freeways when he saw just how long it took him to get around Los 
Angeles without using them.

 Michael’s first car was a Mercedes. Then he bought a black Rolls-Royce, 
which he later painted blue. 

 It was in the Rolls that he was stopped one day -- not for fans outside the 
gate, but by a Van Nuys policeman. 

 “This looks like a stolen car,” the officer said. He didn’t recognise 
Michael, who wasn’t wearing a disguise that day. 

 Michael explained politely that he did, indeed, own the car. But the officer 
went ahead and ran a check on the car, and found that Michael had a ticket 
outstanding. 

 The next thing Michael knew, he was sitting in the Van Nuys jail. 

 Bill Bray bailed him out. I didn’t even know what had happened until he 
came home. 

 “You should have asked the officer what a stolen car looks like,” I said 
after he related his adventure. Perhaps the cop had felt that a young black man 
didn’t belong behind the wheel of a Rolls. 

 But Michael was not only put out by the experience, he professed to be 
happy. 

 “I got to see how it felt to be in jail!” he exclaimed. 

source: Katherine Jackson's "My Family"