Michael Jackson’s former bodyguard, Matt Fiddes, had previously maintained the King of Pop’s innocence amid accusations of sexual abuse aimed at the late Jackson by the HBO and Channel 4 documentary Leaving Neverland, per The Inquisitr. Now, Irish Mirror reports that he’s doubling down on this stance via a new Instagram post which reveals a clip from a new documentary, Michael Jackson: Chase The Truth. Fiddes claims this new documentary will “ruin” the career of Leaving Neverland director Dan Reed.

Fiddes claims that there is no way Jackson could have been left alone with children at his Neverland ranch amid the team of 100 security guards and 150 staff.

“Fans could not get past us and would go to extreme levels to meet Michael. And Michael was never alone when traveling with his friends/family/nannies in tow and many other members of the entourage!”

The fitness expert also says that Jackson’s secret room and the alarm outside of it — allegedly in place to alert him of anyone approaching — was actually a panic room that was part of Neverland before the pop star had even purchased the property.

The upcoming documentary also features Jackson biographer Mike Smallcombe, who claims that he has debunked allegations that the “Smooth Criminal” singer abused children in the Neverland train station.

Explosive Michael Jackson doc will 'ruin Leaving Neverland director's career' https://t.co/dwbVWqK9QK pic.twitter.com/TJuRmMfOZy — Mirror Celeb (@MirrorCeleb) May 22, 2019

But Reed claims that he conducted all of the appropriate research necessary to determine the validity of the accusations made by Wade Robson and James Safechuck, per Metro. The pair claim that Jackson abused them from the ages of 10 and 7, respectively.

“I listened very carefully to days and days and days of interview, then we went and did about 18 months of research and checked everything we could and tried to poke holes in Wade and James’ accounts.”

Reed said he also interviewed “police investigators and the sheriff’s department investigators” that were digging into Jackson’s background, and that “none of them had any doubts at all about his guilt.”

Although Reed said he was worried about the effect that Leaving Neverland would have on Jackson’s children — Paris reportedly tried to commit suicide in the wake of the documentary — he said that the allegations have a long history, and “won’t come as any surprise to the kids.”

PREVIEW: Michael Jackson - Chase The Truth pic.twitter.com/H3xuyagcbG — Entertain Me (@EntertainMeLTD) May 21, 2019

Before Reed’s documentary, back in 1993, Jackson was accused of child molestation. He was later tried on child molestation charges in 2005 but acquitted on every count.

Jackson’s children — Prince, Paris, and Prince Michael Jackson II — are in the process of investigating Robson and Safechuck to look for inconsistencies in their accounts of abuse. They are also trying to determine if Reed paid them for their participation in Leaving Neverland.