I've read many books about him, and one of them is called Michael Jackson Conspiracy. The author is investigative journalist and true-crime writer Aphrodite Jones, and she wrote it to cover the events of the 2005 trial. Many are initially dismissive toward the book because of its title, but Mrs. Jones openly admitted that while those events were actually happening, she condemned him like everyone else. It was only after he was acquitted, and she saw her colleagues immediately chasing the next story instead of reporting his innocence, that Aphrodite started on a different path. She approached judge Rodney Melville, and asked for permission to examine the evidence. He agreed, and as a result all the quotes in her book are lifted directly from the court transcripts. Among many things, she wrote about Wade Robson being the first witness to actually speak for the defense, and how Tom Sneddon brought Debbie Rowe in, thinking she would condemn Michael...only to be shocked when the reverse happened. Other celebrities are also mentioned who warned Michael about the Arvizo family, including George Lopez, Jay Leno, and Chris Tucker. Reading that book helped settle my own mind, because all the mass negativity in the press at the time had left me genuinely confused.
Thanks for the response. It's obviously difficult to try to refute a book I've never read, but I did try to at least look into it a bit after you mentioned it. From what I've been able to gather, the book suffers a lot in the credibility department. It is apparently very one-sided: the forward is written by the defence attorney, and she apparently never even talked to anyone on the prosecution side. She apparently openly deifies Jackson in a few different passages. As well, it appears she is unable to provide convincing proof of the "conspiracies" she presents, nor does she provide any solid motive as to why the alleged participants would engage in a conspiracy in the first place. And of course, as @EnderAKH mentioned, some testimony from that trial that helped her argument were later admitted to be lies.
The book is, however, seemingly very popular with throngs of Jackson fans who just willingly accept his innocence as a matter of faith. (Who apparently celebrate an annual "Vindication Day", that I was heretofore unaware of, and wish I still was.)
Oh, and as you mentioned, this book covered the 2005 trial only, but apparently Jones herself said in a 2014 interview that she doubted Jackson's innocence in the 1993 Chandler case.
I think that was more than I've looked into this subject at any time in my life. I feel like I need to go take a shower.