Mike Kasem |
Asked why Casey's widow, Jean Kasem (who prefers to be
called Jeannie), might be hiding his father's corpse in Montreal from his children, Mike Kasem tells The Hollywood Reporter that she's "demonstrated what we have known for 30
years: She's bat-shit crazy."
Mike Kasem also poses 10 questions regarding the sincerity
of his stepmother's love for his father:
- "If she loved him, then where was she at the end of his life when we reached out to have her by his side?
- Why would she leave his remains for weeks before making a move?
- Why would she recite scripture while hurling raw hamburger meat at my sister?
- Why would she cut him off from everyone he loves, friends included — are we all assholes?
- Why would she rip him out of a care facility at 2 a.m. against doctors' orders to take him on a road trip he is not equipped to handle?
- Why would she list their residence on the death certificate for the last 18 years as 'Jerusalem, Israel'?
- Why would she play actress, fall to the floor in front of cameras outside the courtroom, screaming, 'They have blood on their hands,' and then go hang out with her boyfriend? Or tell a judge he's incompetent?
- Why would she call a nurse at the hospital a fat-ass?
- Why wouldn't she ask the doctors why we took him off life support? Because your husband was choking on his own fluids! Which you would have known if you had cared to be there or inquire! Pattern much?
- Would anyone care for some nuts? I've had too much over the last 30 years, no thanks."
Mike Kasem is a successful personality on 'Class95' in Singapore. He also was a VJ at MTV and hosted one
season of Americas Funniest Home Videos.
Mike's sister Kerri Kasem is pursuing an elder-abuse case against Jeannie Kasem for allegedly accelerating Casey's decline when she took him on what Mike's aunt Mary Kasem calls a "Mr. Toad's Wild Ride" from a Santa Monica hospital to Las Vegas to Arizona to Las Vegas to rural Washington State. She is also backing a bill to make it illegal to forbid adult children visitation rights with their aging or incapacitated parents.
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