Murray Trial - All media reports/articles - Merged - No discussion

Re: murray trial september 28th day two. news articles only. no discussion

mccartneyAP Anthony McCartney
After lunch, cross continues on Michael Amir Williams (Jackson ass't.). Then expect some of MJ's bodyguards to testify.

CEThomson Charles Thomson
The stream is showing Williams back in court on HLN, but not OnTheRedCarpet.
 
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Re: murray trial september 28th day two. news articles only. no discussion

People vs. Dr. Conrad Murray
MJ's Bodyguard Testifies
Faheem Muhammad -- Michael Jackson's Bodyguard Testifies
Updated 9/28/11 at 2:05 PM

0928-faheem-muhammad-trial3.jpg
Michael Jackson
's head of security Faheem Muhammad just got called to the stand.

* Muhammad said he saw Murray's silver 645 BMW parked at MJ's house every night but did not know what Murray was treating him for.
* Muhammad was on his way to the bank when he got the call from Michael's assistant that he was having a bad reaction. He immediately called Derrick Cleveland, the security guard on duty -- to check up on MJ, then rushed back to the house.
* When he walked in he saw bodyguard Alberto Alvarez in the room. He could see MJ's feet and Murray -- who appeared to be giving MJ CPR.
* Once Muhammad walked around the bed he could see MJ who appeared to be dead.
* He then noticed Paris and Prince at the doorway. He said "Paris was balled up crying" and "Prince was shocked slowly crying."
* Muhammad quickly moved the kids away.
* Murray says that's when he heard Murray asking if anyone knew CPR. Alvarez came to his aid.
* Once they arrived at the hospital, Prince, Paris and Blanket were put into a room.
* Once MJ was pronounced dead, MJ's assistant relayed Murray's request to go back and retrieve the "cream."

http://www.tmz.com/2011/09/28/peopl...ckson-manslaughter-bodyguard-faheem-muhammad/
 
L.A. NOW
Southern California -- this just in

Conrad Murray trial:
‘Another day of sadness,’ La Toya tweets

September 28, 2011 | 1:36 pm

La Toya Jackson said it is "excruciating" to sit through the trial of Dr. Conrad Murray, listening to the details of her brother Michael Jackson's death.

In a series of tweets from the courthouse on Tuesday and Wednesday, La Toya Jackson provided a glimpse of the family's experience.

"Just arrived at court. Another day of sadness," La Toya Jackson tweeted Wednesday morning.

Live video: Full coverage of Conrad Murray's trial

Then, during a lunch break -– Chinese food in a private room -– she said, "It's so excruciating to relive the moments when Mike [passed]. It's even hard to pretend to be strong for my brother."

Wednesday's testimony included Michael Jackson's personal assistant Michael Amir Williams, who recounted a panicked phone call from Murray after finding an unresponsive Jackson.

"I can't help but to wonder how one can be so … careless," La Toya Jackson tweeted.

On Tuesday, the first day of trial, prosecutors played a recording of what sounded like a heavily drugged Michael Jackson. That recording showed that Murray was aware of "Michael's state" as he continued to offer him drugs, Deputy Dist. Atty. David Walgren said.

As the recording played, Katherine Jackson bit her lip and wiped away tears as her daughter, La Toya Jackson, held her hand.

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lan...al-another-day-of-sadness-la-toya-tweets.html
 
Re: murray trial september 28th day two. news articles only. no discussion

InSession In Session
Muhammad says #MichaelJackson's daughter Paris was balled up on the floor crying after she saw her dad lying on the floor of his bedroom.

CEThomson Charles Thomson
Dr Murray asked "Does anyone know CPR?" says bodyguard.


mccartneyAP Anthony McCartney
Jackson security chief Faheem Muhammad on stand. Recounted seeing Jackson's children standing outside dad's bedroom. Paris was in a ball ...

mccartneyAP Anthony McCartney
Muhammad also recounted how guards shielded Jackson's body, children as they were taken into hospital.
 
Re: murray trial september 28th day two. news articles only. no discussion

Jackson's Kids Witnessed Doctor's CPR Effort


1:58am UK, Thursday September 29, 2011
A former bodyguard has told a court in LA how Michael Jackson's children looked on in shock as Dr Conrad Murray attempted to resuscitate him.


Bodyguard Faheem Muhammad saw Jackson's eyes and mouth 'still open


Faheem Muhammad described how Paris Jackson, 11 at the time, was on the floor "balled up crying" while her brother Prince, a year older, stood and wept "slowly".
Murray, who stands accused of involuntary manslaughter, was said by Mr Muhammad to be "sweating" as he attempted to revive the singer on the bedroom floor.
Jackson's mouth and eyes were still open, the bodyguard also recalled.
He also confirmed that he had seen an IV stand in the room - equipment the prosecution alleges was used to administer propofol to Jackson.
Mr Muhammad had been instructed to go to the bedroom by Jackson's personal assistant, Michael Amir Williams, who also gave evidence on Wednesday.



A video clip showing Mr Williams replaying a voicemail message left by Murray moments after Jackson suffered a cardiac arrest was played out to the court.
In it, Murray can be heard saying: "Call me right away, please. Please call me right away. Thank you."
Mr Williams went on: "It was real frantic [that day]. I got there when the gurney [carrying Jackson's body] was coming down."
He said the doctor never told him to call 911 or described Jackson's condition.
Mr Williams also told the court about what he described as an "odd" conversation with Murray at the hospital.


The court was shown a video or Mr Williams replaying the Murray voicemail message


"I was in a hallway. We were making small talk about how horrible this is."
Mr Williams continued: "He said that there's some cream in Michael's room that he wouldn't want the world to know about.
"And he requested that I or someone give him a ride back to the house to get it."
Mr Williams refused the request, saying he pretended that he did not have his car keys.
"I was emotional. There was a lot going on. That was the last thing I really was thinking about



Pre-trial hearings heard evidence that Murray asked for other medicine and equipment - reportedly including bottles of propofol - to be removed from the room before police arrived.
Prior to Mr Williams and Mr Muhammad taking the stand, further concerns over the medical stability of Jackson in the months prior to his death were described by Kathy Jorrie, a lawyer for tour promoter AEG Live.
She detailed intricate negotiations with Murray, in which he had requested the purchase of a CPR machine be factored into his contract, as well as provisions to hire an additional nurse in London if needed.
"He wanted to make sure that there was somebody else available to be of assistance," Ms Jorrie told the court.

She said Murray told her the CPR machine was necessary due to the nature of Jackson's performances and the state of his health.
Earlier on Wednesday, AEG's Paul Gongaware continued his testimony from the previous day.
He revealed the company is being sued by Jackson's mother Katherine for negligent supervision of Murray while he worked for the singer.
On Tuesday, the opening of the trial contained dramatic evidence including a recording of the singer talking while under the influence of drugs and a photo of Jackson's body.


Mr Gongaware said he was aware of discussions about the singer's health.
He told the court he had been on the look out for Jackson using drugs.
Mr Gongaware also told the court it was Jackson's idea to hire Murray to work on the This Is It tour.

http://news.sky.com/home/world-news/article/16079055
 
Murray Trial _ All daily media reports/articles - Merged - No discussion September 29th / Day 3

New thread for Press articles Thursday 29th Sept
 
Jackson bodyguard says doc told him to hide vials

ANTHONY McCARTNEY, AP Entertainment Writer
Updated 01:04 p.m., Thursday, September 29, 2011


LOS ANGELES (AP) — The first bodyguard to reach Michael Jackson's bedroom after the singer's doctor called for help has told jurors that he was told by the doctor to hide medicine vials before calling police.

Alberto Alvarez said in testimony Thursday that Dr. Conrad Murray grabbed the vials form a nightstand next to Jackson, who was still in his bed.

He testified that Murray only told him Jackson had a bad reaction.

When he entered the bedroom, Alvarez said he saw Jackson's eyes were open and was surprised to see that the singer was wearing a condom catheter.

Alvarez testified he stowed the vials before calling police dispatchers. He is the sixth witness to testify in Murray's involuntary manslaughter trial, which is in its third day.

Read more: http://www.timesunion.com/entertain...d-him-to-hide-vials-2194299.php#ixzz1ZMZqh6aM

Read more: http://www.timesunion.com/entertain...d-him-to-hide-vials-2194299.php#ixzz1ZMZmbi1l



Guard: Jackson doc collected vials before 911 call

By ANTHONY McCARTNEY
AP Entertainment Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The first bodyguard to reach Michael Jackson's bedroom after the singer's doctor called for help testified Thursday that he was told by the physician to gather medicine vials before calling 911.

Alberto Alvarez said Dr. Conrad Murray grabbed the vials from a nightstand next to Jackson, who was still in his bed.

"He said 'Here, put these in a bag.'" Alvarez said of Murray. Alvarez said at first he thought he was bagging the items in preparation for a trip to the hospital. He said he trusted Murray because he was a doctor.

"In my personal experience, I believed Dr. Murray had the best intentions for Mr. Jackson," Alvarez said. "I didn't question his authority."

Deputy District Attorney David Walgren showed Alvarez and jurors a vial of propofol while the bodyguard was on the stand at the third day of Murray's involuntary manslaughter trial. Murray has pleaded not guilty.

Jurors intently looked at the bottle, which appeared to still contain some liquid.

Prosecutors are calling key witnesses in an attempt to show Murray delayed calling authorities on the day the King of Pop was found lifeless and was intent on concealing indications that he had been giving the singer doses of the surgical anesthetic.

At times during Alvarez's testimony, he looked directly at Murray, who occasionally passed notes to his attorney.

When he entered the bedroom, Alvarez said, he saw Jackson's eyes were open and was surprised to see the singer was wearing a condom catheter, a medical device that allows one to urinate without having to get up.

Alvarez testified that Murray only told him Jackson had a bad reaction.

Walgren played Alvarez's 911 call for jurors. "He's pumping the chest, but he's not responding to anything, sir," Alvarez told the dispatcher, urging them to send an ambulance quickly.

He said, after hanging up with dispatchers, he performed chest compressions on Jackson while Murray gave the singer mouth-to-mouth resuscitation efforts. The doctor remarked it was his first time performing the procedure.

"'I have to,'" Alvarez recalled Murray telling him, "'this is my friend.'"

Earlier, Alvarez testified that Jackson was in good spirits at a rehearsal on the night before he died.

"He was very happy," Alvarez testified. "I do recall he was in very good spirits."

Prosecutors have been calling witnesses who were with Jackson and Murray the day the singer died.

Authorities accuse Murray of giving Jackson a lethal dose of the anesthetic propofol in the bedroom.

The jury has already gotten a glimpse into the entertainer's inner sanctum through photos and testimony.

Alvarez's testimony will likely be challenged by Murray's defense attorneys, who on Wednesday questioned Jackson's head of security and the singer's personal assistant about why they didn't reveal certain details about the day Jackson died to police for at least two months.

Defense lawyer Ed Chernoff asked Faheem Muhammad and Michael Amir Williams about whether they conferred with Alvarez before their interviews with detectives.

Williams, who was Jackson's personal assistant, said his interview with detectives had been delayed. He testified that he received an urgent phone call from Murray on the day of Jackson's death but wasn't told to call 911.

He called Muhammad, who then dispatched Alvarez to Jackson's bedroom on the second floor of the singer's rented mansion in the ritzy Holmby Hills neighborhood of Los Angeles.

The room was off-limits to Jackson's staff, and Muhammad paused before racing up the stairs after reaching the mansion just before paramedics arrived.

He described a heart-wrenching scene. By then, he said, Jackson had been removed from his bed and was on the floor, where Murray, sweaty and frantic, was performing CPR.

Alvarez was pacing nervously, Muhammad told the jury. When he saw Jackson up close, he understood why.

"What did you observe about his face," prosecutor David Walgren asked

"That his eyes were open," Muhammad said. "That his mouth was slightly open."

"Did he appear to be dead," Walgren asked.

"Yes."

The bodyguard soon noticed that Jackson's children, Prince and Paris, had gathered by the doorway.

"Paris was on the ground, balled up crying," Muhammad said. He ushered the children out of the room, and then into a sport utility vehicle so they could follow the ambulance to the hospital.

Some of the scenes recounted by Muhammad will likely be repeated Thursday as prosecutors work to fill in other details about Murray's behavior after finding Jackson unconscious.

Also expected to testify on Thursday are Kai Chase, a chef who spoke to Murray briefly on the morning of Jackson's death, and paramedics who also tried to revive the singer. The medics believed Jackson was already dead by the time they arrived, but Murray insisted the performer be taken to a hospital for additional resuscitation efforts.

Prosecutors contend Murray did not tell any of the bodyguards or emergency personnel that he had been giving Jackson propofol and other sedatives to help him sleep.

Chernoff claimed in opening statements that Jackson gave himself the lethal dose.

Much of the trial in later sessions will focus on the science of what killed Jackson, and dueling theories of Murray's role.

___

Associated Press writer Greg Risling contributed to this report.

http://www.cbs8.com/story/15575050/testimony-to-focus-on-scene-in-jacksons-bedroom



L.A. NOW
Southern California -- this just i

Guard testifies Conrad Murray stopped CPR to gather drug vials

September 29, 2011 | 10:44 am

Michael Jackson’s doctor tried to revive him with a substandard version of CPR, performing chest compressions intermittently with one hand while the singer lay on a mattress, a security guard testified Thursday.

Alberto Alvarez, Jackson’s director of logistics, was the first staffer to enter the bedroom where Jackson lay lifeless on June 25, 2009.

He told jurors that Dr. Conrad Murray told him Jackson had “a bad reaction” and needed to get to a hospital, but then stopped CPR and directed him to gather up pill bottles.

Full coverage of Conrad Murray's trial

Alvarez said Murray grabbed a handful of vials and told him, “Here, put these in a bag.”

The doctor also asked him to remove an intravenous drip bag containing “a milky white substance” -- a description consistent with the surgical anesthetic propofol.

Only then did Murray request Alvarez call 911, the guard testified.

Investigators later found the bags in a cabinet in another bedroom in the house. They contained 10 bottles of propofol and an IV bag which held a 11th, empty bottle of the anesthetic. Walgren displayed the IV bag, covered in fingerprint dust, for jurors.
Deputy Dist. Atty. David Walgren asked why Alvarez had followed the doctor’s instructions.

He replied that he “believed Dr. Conrad Murray had the best intentions” and thought they were packing up medication for the hospital.

Alvarez, a beefy man with a black brushcut, appeared to choke up as he recalled the presence of Jackson’s children at the chaotic scene.

He said Murray told him, “Don’t let them see their dad like this.”

"Paris screamed out, 'Daddy!' " Alvarez said, his eyes wet.

He said he ushered her and her brother Prince out of the room with assurances that “everything will be OK.”

Jackson was pronounced dead two hours later at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center from what a coroner later determined was an overdose of propofol and sedatives.

Murray, charged with manslaughter in the case, claims Jackson administered fatal dose of the drugs himself.

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lan...=feed&utm_campaign=Feed:+lanowblog+(L.A.+Now)
 
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Aide: Jackson's Daughter Screamed 'Daddy'

By Alan DukeCNN
POSTED: 11:42 am CDT September 29, 2011
redditdigPrint ››UPDATED: 12:15 pm CDT September 29, 2011
LOS ANGELES (CNN) -- The man who called 911 to Michael Jackson's house began his testimony Thursday morning in the trial of Jackson's doctor and is expected to be followed by the two paramedics who responded with an ambulance.

Alberto Alvarez, who served as Jackson's logistics director, testified that Dr. Conrad Murray told him to gather up drug vials around Jackson's deathbed before he asked him to place the emergency call.

"He reached over and grabbed a handful of vials and he asked me to put them in a bag," Alvarez testified.

Prosecutors contend Murray was trying to gather up evidence of his criminal responsibility for Jackson's death, even before asking that someone call for an ambulance.

Alvarez described how Jackson's two oldest children, Prince and Paris, walked toward their father who was lying still on a bed with his eyes and mouth open, facing toward them.

"Paris screamed out 'Daddy!'" and she started crying, Alvarez said.

"Dr. Conrad Murray said 'Don't let them see their dad like this," Alvarez said. "I turned to the children and I told them 'Kids, don't worry, everything's going to be ok."

Thursday is the third day of testimony in Murray's involuntary manslaughter trial in connection with Jackson's June 25, 2009 death.

Lawyers for Murray must counter descriptions of their client as a cardiologist who couldn't perform basic cardiopulmonary resuscitation techniques and someone who was more concerned with hiding evidence than saving his patient.

Deputy District Attorney David Walgren blamed Murray for Jackson's death, saying he abandoned "all principles of medical care" when he used the surgical anesthetic propofol to put Jackson to sleep every night for more than two months.

The coroner ruled that Jackson's death was the result of "acute propofol intoxication" in combination with sedatives.

Defense lawyer Ed Chernoff contended that Jackson, desperate for sleep, caused his own death by taking a handful of sedatives and self-administering propofol while the doctor was out of the room.

One defense strategy is to point the finger at another doctor and Jackson as having a large role in his death, while arguing Murray was blind to what they were doing.

Jackson slurred his speech after visits to Beverly Hills dermatologist Dr. Arnold Klein, trips that became "very regular" for the pop star in the weeks before his death, Jackson's personal assistant testified Wednesday.

Murray's lawyers contend that Klein addicted the singer to Demerol during those visits, something Murray did not know about.

His withdrawal from that Demerol addiction was what kept Jackson awake despite Murray's efforts to put him to sleep with sedatives the morning he died, the defense contends, arguing that Klein is at least partly responsible for Jackson's death because of the Demerol.

When Michael Amir Williams, who was Jackson's personal assistant, testified Wednesday, Chernoff asked if he went to Klein's office with Jackson.

"At a certain point, it was very regular," Williams said.

Chernoff then asked Williams whether he'd ever heard Jackson talk slowly with slurred speech, as he did on an audio recording played in court Tuesday.

"Not that extreme, but I have heard him talk slow before," Williams said.

"And when he left Dr. Klein's office, have you observed him sometimes to talk slow?" Chernoff asked.

Sometimes, Williams replied, "he would talk slow like that. I never heard it that extreme, but I can definitely say he has come out, and he's a little slower."

Jackson chief security guard Faheem Muhammad, who often drove Jackson, followed Williams on the witness stand Wednesday afternoon.

"There were times he would go almost every day" to Klein's office, and Jackson often appear intoxicated when he left, Muhammad testified.

Jackson once told Muhammad that his frequent trips to the dermatologist were for treatment for a skin disease.

"My doctors tell me that I have to go, so I go," Muhammad said Jackson told him.

At the start of court proceedings Wednesday, Paul Gongaware, an executive with the company promoting Jackson's comeback concerts, said he noticed that Jackson had "a little bit of a slower speech pattern, just a slight slur in the speech" after a visit with Klein.

Medical records show that Klein gave Jackson numerous shots of Demerol in the weeks before his death, Chernoff told jurors Tuesday.

"Dr. Klein did not do anything that was medically inappropriate," Klein's lawyer, Garo Ghazarian, told HLN's "Issues with Jane Velez-Mitchell" Wednesday.

The last time Klein gave Jackson drugs was more than three days before his death, Ghazarian said.

Jackson's inability to sleep the morning he died was "one of the insidious effects" of Demerol addiction withdrawal, Chernoff said. Since Murray did not know about the Demerol, he could not understand why Jackson was unable to fall asleep that morning, Chernoff said.

Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor previously ruled that while the jury can see some of the records of Klein's treatment of Jackson, the doctor would not testify. Demerol was not found in Jackson's body during the autopsy, which makes Klein's testimony irrelevant, Pastor ruled.

Testimony from Williams and Muhammad included emotional details about the chaos in the Jackson home and at the hospital the day Jackson died.

Williams described Wednesday as a frantic series of phone calls that started at 12:13 p.m. June 25, 2009, the day the pop icon died.

"Call me right away, please, call me right away," Murray said in a voice message to Williams, which prosecutors played in court Wednesday.

"Get here right away; Mr. Jackson had a bad reaction," Williams said Murray told him when he called him back.

Williams then ordered a security guard to rush to the upstairs bedroom where Murray was working to resuscitate Jackson.

Muhammad, one of those ordered upstairs, described seeing Jackson on a bed with his eyes open and his mouth "slightly opened" as Murray tried to revive him.

"Did he appear to be dead?" Walgren asked.

"Yes," Muhammad replied.

Jackson's two oldest children were standing just outside the room, watching in shock, Muhammad said.

"Paris was on the ground, balled up, crying. And Prince, he was standing there, he just had a real shocked, you know, slowly crying, type of shocked look on his face," he said.

His description of Murray's efforts to revive Jackson raised questions about Murray's knowledge of how to perform CPR.

It was several minutes before Alvarez, the head of security. called for an ambulance.

Williams and Muhammad later rode with Jackson's three children to Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center, following the ambulance that carried their father.

Jackson family members slowly arrived at the emergency room and joined the children, who were kept in a private room with their nanny while doctors tried to revive their father, Williams said.

"Dr. Murray and the doctors walked out, and they closed the curtain and said, 'He's dead,'" he testified.

Williams described what he called an odd request by Murray at the hospital for a ride back to Jackson's home after Jackson was pronounced dead.

Murray told Williams he needed to go back to retrieve "some cream" from Michael's bedroom that Jackson "wouldn't want the world to know about."

The prosecution contends that Murray wanted to retrieve evidence of his medical misconduct that led to Jackson's death.

A lawyer hired by concert promoter AEG to draw up the contract with Murray testified that Murray requested a CPR machine and money to hire a second doctor to help him care for Jackson.

The additional doctor and the CPR equipment were never provided, since the contract was not signed before Jackson died, attorney Kathy Jorrie testified.

She told the court that it was her understanding that Murray did not want the CPR unit or the additional doctor until he arrived in London with Jackson in July 2009 for the "This Is It" concerts.

"I asked Dr Murray, why do we need a CPR machine?" Jorrie testified.

Murray told her he needed it since "given (Jackson's) age and the strenuous performance he would be putting on, that if something went wrong, he would have it," she said.

The second doctor would be necessary because "if (Murray) was tired or unavailable, he wanted to make sure there was someone else to be of assistance" to Jackson.

AEG is being sued by Jackson's mother, Katherine, based on her contention that the concert promoter hired and controlled Murray when he was caring for her son.

The prosecution contends that part of the negligence that makes Murray criminally liable for Jackson's death is the lack of monitoring and CPR equipment on hand when Jackson died.

The trial began Tuesday with prosecutors playing a stunning audio recording of an apparently drugged Jackson slurring his words weeks before his death. Prosecutors also showed jurors a photo of Jackson's corpse on a hospital gurney.

If convicted of involuntary manslaughter, Murray could spend four years in a California prison and lose his medical license.

http://www.ktbs.com/news/29339749/detail.html
 
Jackson Doctor Delayed Calling 911, Witness Says

By IAN LOVETT
Published: September 29, 2011

. LOS ANGELES — One of Michael Jackson’s staff members testified on Thursday that on the day of the singer’s death, he saw Jackson lying on a bed while his personal physician gave him chest compressions with one hand. He also said the doctor had asked him to hide various medical supplies before calling 911.

.Alberto Alvarez, Jackson’s director of logistics, said he had gone into Jackson’s bedroom in his rented Holmby Hills mansion once Jackson’s doctor, Conrad Murray, realized that the singer was incapacitated after the doctor had injected him with a potent medicine.

Dr. Murray, 58, who is on trial in Los Angeles County Superior Court on charges of involuntary manslaughter in the singer’s death, faces up to four years in prison if convicted.

Mr. Jackson, 50, died June 25, 2009, after Dr. Murray gave him a dose of propofol, a surgical anesthetic the singer took to relieve his insomnia.

Prosecutors argue that Dr. Murray was negligent, first in regularly dispensing propofol to Jackson and then by failing to monitor the singer’s vital signs and to immediately seek emergency help as he lay dying.

Dr. Murray’s lawyers, however, have said that Jackson caused his own death by taking propofol by himself when Dr. Murray was using a restroom at Jackson’s mansion. The doctor’s lawyer, Ed Chernoff, said Jackson had also taken sedatives earlier in the day, which the doctor was unaware of.

Mr. Chernoff said during his opening statement that propofol, which is not commonly used outside medical facilities, could be administered safely at low levels.

On Thursday, Mr. Alvarez said he saw Jackson lying on his back with his eyes and mouth open while Dr. Murray tried to revive him.

“When I came into the room, he said, ‘Alberto, hurry, we have to get him to a hospital, we have to get an ambulance,’ ” Mr. Alvarez said.

Mr. Alvarez said that when he asked what had happened, Dr. Murray told him, “He had a bad reaction.”

Mr. Alvarez called 911, he said, following Dr. Murray’s instructions.

But before making the 911 call, he said, Dr. Murray instructed him to place various medical supplies, including a handful of vials from Jackson’s nightstand, into a blue bag.

When prosecutors on Thursday showed Mr. Alvarez a saline bag and a vial of propofol that the authorities had removed from the Jackson mansion, Mr. Alvarez said they looked like the material the doctor had asked him to put in the blue bag.

The prosecution is seeking to establish that Dr. Murray delayed calling 911 and tried to conceal the drugs, including propofol, that he was giving Jackson.

On Wednesday, Michael Amir Williams, Jackson’s personal assistant, testified that after Jackson was pronounced dead at a hospital, Dr. Murray asked him to drive him to Jackson’s house so he could recover “some cream in Michael’s room or house that he wouldn’t want the world to know about.”

Mr. Williams said he refused that request, as well as a later request from Dr. Murray to take him to get something to eat.

Jackson’s head of security, Faheem Muhammad, testified that after Mr. Williams told him about his conversation with Dr. Murray, he decided not to allow Dr. Murray to re-enter the Jackson mansion.

Mr. Muhammad told the court that before Jackson was taken to the hospital, he walked into the singer’s bedroom to find Jackson incapacitated, his body lying on the floor, with Dr. Murray beside him. Mr. Muhammad said Dr. Murray, a cardiologist, had asked, “Does anyone know CPR?”

Mr. Muhammad said Jackson’s two older children — Prince and Paris — had been outside their father’s bedroom, crying. He said he took them to another room in the house.

Timothy Williams contributed reporting from New York.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/30/us/jackson-doctor-delayed-calling-911-witness-says.html?_r=1



Conrad Murray trial jurors hear security guard's 911 call

A witness testified that Michael Jackson's daughter screamed out "Daddy" as attempts were made to revive the pop star.
By Harriet Ryan

Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

3:23 p.m. EDT, September 29, 2011
Jurors at the trial of Michael Jackson's personal physician heard a 911 call Thursday that prosecutors allege was delayed by nearly half an hour by the doctor's attempts at a cover-up.

"I need an ambulance as soon as possible," a Jackson security guard, Alberto Alvarez, told an emergency operator in the recording played at Dr. Conrad Murray's manslaughter trial.

Alvarez, who took the stand for prosecutors Thursday, told the operator a 50-year-old man had stopped breathing.

Full coverage of Conrad Murray's trial

"We have a personal doctor here with him," Alvarez said, prompting the operator to ask whether the doctor knew what happened.

The security guard relayed the question to Murray, who responded by yelling for paramedics to hurry.

"He's not responding to anything, sir," Alvarez added.

The tape came in the middle of Alvarez's testimony, the most damning yet against the 58-year-old physician.

Murray looked stricken at the defense table as the security guard recounted the chaotic moments before he placed the call, a period in which the guard described the doctor as behaving with incompetence and later with what prosecutors contend was clear consciousness of guilt.

Alvarez, who carried the title of head of logistics, said that when he arrived at the star's bedroom, Murray was making a haphazard attempt at CPR.

Jackson was on a soft surface -- his mattress -- and Murray was using one hand and doing so only intermittently, he said.

At one point, he said, the cardiologist asked, "Does anybody know CPR?"

Alvarez said Murray told him the singer had "a bad reaction" and needed to get to a hospital.

But he followed those statements with instructions to gather up medical vials and pill bottles from the singer's bedside, saying, "Here, put these in a bag."

The doctor then asked him to remove an IV bag containing "a milky white substance" -- a description consistent with the surgical anesthetic propofol.

Only then did Murray ask him to call 911, he said.

Investigators later found bags Alvarez described in a cabinet in another bedroom in the house. They contained sedatives, 10 bottles of propofol and an IV bag which held an 11th, empty bottle of the anesthetic.

Deputy Dist. Atty. David Walgren displayed the IV bag, covered in fingerprint dust, and the propofol bottle for jurors.

Jackson died June 25, 2009, with a lethal amount of the anesthetic in his system.

Under questioning by prosecutors, the security guard said he never questioned Murray's actions because he believed the doctor "had the best intentions" and was packing for the hospital.

A burly man with a black brush cut and a serious demeanor, Alvarez choked up as he recalled how Jackson's two older children had witnessed the attempts to revive their father.

"Paris screamed out, 'Daddy,' " Alvarez said, his eyes wet. He said he ushered her and her brotherPrince out of the room with assurances that "everything will be OK."

Alvarez grew emotional again when the prosecutor asked whether anything positive had come out of his experiences the day Jackson died. No, he said, mentioning financial problems.

"I went from a great salary to hardly anything," he said.

Media outlets had offered him up to half a million dollars for interview, but despite having only sporadic work, he testified, "I said no."

On cross-examination, Alvarez acknowledged he was in a state of shock seeing his employer lifeless.

"Is it possible that you are confused about the timing of these events?" defense attorney Ed Chernoff asked.

"No, sir," Alvarez said.

Murray faces the probable loss of his medical license and a maximum of four years in prison if convicted.

http://www.fox8.com/entertainment/la-mew-conrad-murray-trial-29,0,5360538,full.story
 
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InSession In Session
Alvarez says #MichaelJackson's death has caused him "a lot of financial problems" and "he's totally wiped out financially" #MurrayTrial

InSession In Session
Alberto Alvarez says he's been offered 200 thousand dollars for an interview but he declined. #MichaelJackson #MurrayTrial

mccartneyAP Anthony McCartney
Chernoff pointing out Alvarez has drawn 2 pictures of IV bag - one for police and another recently (in April or May)

mccartneyAP Anthony McCartney
The more recent picture is the one shown by prosecutors. Chernoff is showing the original drawing, trying to point out differences


mccartneyAP Anthony McCartney
Chernoff asks whether Alvarez collected vials AFTER 911 call and paramedics left. Bodyguard says no.


johnNBCLA John Cádiz Klemack
by justice_4mj
Chernoff: "Is it possible you're confused?" Defense trying to plant reasonable doubt for the jury.



johnNBCLA John Cádiz Klemack
by justice_4mj
Is Chernoff using his drawing board to intimidate the witness or inform the jury?


johnNBCLA John Cádiz Klemack
by justice_4mj
Alvarez continues to correct Chernoff's description of what happened inside #MichaelJackson's bedroom as jury looks on

mccartneyAP Anthony McCartney
Potentially. Very imp to their case. @JohnMone: do you agree with LAT analysis saying Alvarez' testimony could be most damning?


mccartneyAP Anthony McCartney
.@JohnMone Defense isn't done cross-examining yet. Looking for holes. Depends on how he stands up overall.

HLNTV HLN News and Views
by InSession
HLN's Jean Casarez says Conrad Murray's mother is in court today, so is Katherine Jackson. #MurrayTrial
 
Last edited:
Re: Murray Tral News Articles Sept 29th

Jackson Trial: Murray's Lawyer Feels The Heat

11:57am UK, Thursday September 29, 2011

Greg Milam, US correspondent

Ed Chernoff said he promised Dr Conrad Murray he would find a "good, high profile highfalutin" LA lawyer to defend him against the charge of killing Michael Jackson.
Instead it is Mr Chernoff who finds himself at the centre of a trial attracting a global television audience of millions.

He has so far been the public face of Dr Murray's claim that he was not responsible for the death of the King of Pop.

Mr Chernoff is battling the prosecution's case that Murray was negligent in administering the surgical anaesthetic Propofol and is therefore guilty of involuntary manslaughter.

He told the jury in his opening statement: "The whole thing is tragic but the evidence is not that Dr Murray did it."

The lawyer from Houston in Texas, with no experience of celebrity cases, has been with Murray since the earliest days after Jackson died in June 2009 - and has attracted attention for carrying all of his case notes on an iPad.

So far in the trial he has struggled to match the slick presentation of prosecutor David Walgren.

But criminal defence attorney Lou Shapiro has praised Mr Chernoff's performance so far.

He told Sky News: "The first few days of trial are always difficult for the defence because the prosecution gets to present all their evidence first.

"Mr Chernoff has taken the bold position that Mr Jackson self-administered medication when the doctor wasn't looking.

"His strategy thus far is to expose to the jury the bias that the prosecution witnesses have against Dr Murray due to their allegiance and friendship to Mr Jackson.

"He is doing a good job of that by eliciting answers that reveal whose side they are on.


The prosecution used a photo of Jackson's body in its opening statement
"As we all know, two people can look at the same situation and perceive things very differently."

What is not clear at this stage is whether Mr Chernoff is planning to call Murray to the stand to give evidence in his defence.

Analysts say he may only take that decision if he feels the case is not going his way.

It is also clear the defence has to tread a fine line in drawing attention to Jackson's well-documented use of prescription drugs without appearing to engage in character assassination.

Many of the witnesses Mr Chernoff wanted to call, including other doctors and those who were in Jackson's inner circle, have been ruled irrelevant to the case by Judge Michael Pastor.

Mr Chernoff said this had "gutted" his case but he remains confident he can present enough reasonable doubt to see Murray cleared.

http://news.sky.com/home/world-news/article/16079219
 
Posted at 01:55 PM ET, 09/29/2011
The Michael Jackson death trial: Is it too upsetting to follow?

By Jen Chaney


It’s Day 3 of the involuntary manslaughter trial of Conrad Murray — or, as CNN is currently calling it, the Michael Jackson Death Trial — and already the details coming out during court proceedings are very personal, upsetting and sometimes both.

This morning, Alberto Alvarez, Jackson’s logistics director, testified about the medical equipment attached to Jackson at the time of his death (including a catheter) and how Jackson’s daughter Paris screamed for her daddy after his almost lifeless body was initially discovered. This all happened while the jury — and anyone watching on television or online — got to see dim photos of the bedroom suite where Jackson reportedly overdosed on propofol.

This comes on the heels of testimony from Day 2 that offered further descriptions of the Jackson children’s grief, and opening arguments that revealed a photograph of Jackson’s dead body and audio of the singer slurring his words and sounding overmedicated.

Based on images of the signs some fans are holding outside the L.A. courthouse (see below), some of the King of Pop’s many admirers feel this trial is necessary to finally get justice in his premature death. But pursuing all the details of the case in an open court of law has, inevitably, dredged up intimate details that the public probably does not need to know.



(Jason Redmond - AP)
Given all that, are you following the Conrad Murray/Michael Jackson trial? Will you only pay attention once a verdict is reached? Or are you shutting your eyes and ears to the entire case because his death remains too painful (and, at times, unseemly) to explore?

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs...9/29/gIQAzD5b7K_blog.html?wprss=celebritology
 
Michael Jackson's security guard, wooed by tabloids, finally speaks at trial

At the Conrad Murray trial Thursday, security guard Alberto Alvarez provided the most detailed public account yet of the frantic scene in the bedroom the day Michael Jackson died.


By Warren Richey, Staff writer / September 29, 2011


A member of Michael Jackson’s security staff testified on Thursday that Conrad Murray asked him to help gather up drug vials and remove a drip bag from an IV stand before a 911 call was made to summon emergency medical personnel.
Skip to next paragraph


At the time, Mr. Jackson was lying face up in bed with his eyes and mouth open, palms facing upward, and showing no visible signs of life, the witness said.
The new revelations came during dramatic testimony on the third day of the involuntary manslaughter trial of the pop legend’s personal physician at the Los Angeles County Superior Court.

The testimony is important because it suggests that Dr. Murray may have been more concerned with protecting himself than in acting quickly to do everything possible to try to save Jackson’s life.
Alberto Alvarez, the security guard, said he was called to the scene where he saw Murray performing chest compressions on Jackson, who was not breathing and was unresponsive.
“He was laying on his back with his hands extended out to his side with palms up,” Mr. Alvarez said. “His eyes were slightly open and his mouth was open.”
“When I came into the room, [Murray] said, ‘Alberto, hurry, we have to get him to a hospital, we have to get an ambulance,' ” Alvarez told the jury.
Almost immediately, two of Jackson’s children, daughter, Paris, and son, Prince, entered the room. “Paris screamed out, ‘Daddy,’ " and began crying, Alvarez said.
Murray told the security guard: “Don’t let them see their dad like this.”
The scene in Jackson's bedroom

The testimony provided the most detailed public account yet of the frantic scene in the bedroom of Jackson’s Los Angeles mansion on June 25, 2009, the day he died.
Authorities said he died from a lethal dose of the anesthetic propofol, which Jackson had apparently been using to try to treat his chronic insomnia.
The drug is usually administered in a surgical setting like a hospital or clinic with a full array of vital-sign monitors and emergency-resuscitation equipment. Murray was allegedly administering the anesthetic to Jackson in his bedroom through injections and intravenous drip bags.
Alvarez said after rushing the children out of the room, he asked Murray what happened. “He said he had a reaction, he had a bad reaction,” Alvarez told the jury.
The security guard said he did not see any equipment in the room that might help monitor Jackson’s vital signs or alert staff to a medical emergency.
Alvarez said he was shocked when he noticed a device called a condom catheter attached to Jackson’s penis. The device is used frequently in concert with an intravenous saline drip to allow medical patients to urinate while still in bed. He also saw clear plastic air tubes inserted into Jackson’s nose, and an intravenous tube inserted into Jackson’s leg.

http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Justic...ard-wooed-by-tabloids-finally-speaks-at-trial
 
*Yes It's the Sun, yes they are still referring to MJ that way, please don't shoot the messenger, this thread is here to give us information regarding how the trial is reported in the media. *

I watched doc rip IV tube from Jacko’s leg


Michael Jackson minder's deathbed account



Michael Jackson trial: Day 3 begins

THE third day of the trial of the doctor accused of killing Michael Jackson starts
  • The 58-year-old, who was Jacko's personal doctor, is accused of administering a lethal dose of propofol on June 25, 2009. He denies the charge but faces four years in jail if convicted.
    Alvarez said his first indication that something was wrong was at 12.18pm, when he had a call from Jacko's personal assistant, Michael Amir Williams.
    Alvarez told the court: "He said, 'I need you to get up. Don't cause too much commotion'." He found the front door locked, but the children's nanny let him in and he rushed upstairs.
    Alvarez said he saw Murray, who said: "Alberto, come, come, quick." He went on: "When I walked into the room I observed Conrad Murray giving chest compressions to Mr Jackson.
    Accused doctor ... Conrad Murray sits in court as witnesses are quizzed



    "He was in the bed. He was laying on his back with his hands extended out. His eyes were slightly open and his mouth was open. His face was slightly towards the left."
    Alvarez said Murray was administering one-handed chest compressions to Jackson on the bed. He recalled: "He said, 'Alberto hurry. We have to get him to hospital'."
    The 911 dispatcher told Alvarez to move Michael from the bed to the floor. Alvarez said: "We proceeded to move him down to the side of the bed." Medical experts have claimed CPR should not be given on a bed.
    Alvarez went on: "Dr Conrad Murray asked if anyone knew CPR. He instructed me to give chest compressions so I did.

    "Dr Murray was giving mouth to mouth. After a few breaths he said, 'This is the first time I do mouth to mouth but I have to, he's my friend'."
    Under cross-examination, Alvarez denied being confused about timings and insisted the scene was cleared before paramedics arrived.
    Jacko's chef Kai Chase told the court that during the drama Murray shouted to her: "Get help, get security, get Prince." She revealed the star's typical breakfast was granola with almond milk, beet juice, carrot and orange juice or a vegetable omelette.

    Jacko's parents Joe and Katherine, sisters La Toya and Janet, and his brother Randy watched yesterday's court proceedings.
    Jacko had been rehearsing for a 50-date This Is It comeback residency at London's O2 Arena when he died.
    Murray does not deny administering propofol — used as a hospital anaesthetic — to help Jackson sleep.
    His defence claim Jacko killed himself by taking more of the drug, along with another sedative lorazepam, after Murray left the room. The trial continues.
    AP

    http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepag...-watched-doc-rip-IV-tube-from-Jackos-leg.html
 
Arnold Klein is 'not to blame' for Jacko OD

By PETE SAMSON, US Editor JACKO'S dermatologist Arnold Klein was not responsible for the superstar's death, his lawyer insisted yesterday. Klein, 66, has been blamed by Dr Conrad Murray's defence team for allegedly getting Jackson addicted to the painkiller demerol — which they claim contributed to his death. Murray's lawyers have pointed to Jacko's regular trips to Klein's office. They think the singer was having three or four procedures on his face in the weeks before his death, sources close to the defence claim.

But Klein's lawyer Garo Ghazarian said: "It seems to me that it's the 'soddi' defence — the 'some other dude did it' defence.

"But we can't point to Arnold Klein because the only person caring for Michael Jackson was Dr Murray." The defence are also expected to claim the star was on demerol, not the sedative propofol, when Murray recorded him slurring on May 10.

But Ghazarian said: "The records will show the last time he came to my client's was four days before."
Sources also claim the defence will allege Jacko "played possum" — pretending to be asleep until Murray left the room. Respected medical expert Sanjay Gupta, who was contacted by a defence team source, said: "They say he then got up and took eight 2mg tablets of lorazapem and also injected more propofol. That's what they are laying out."

http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepag...-watched-doc-rip-IV-tube-from-Jackos-leg.html
 
Re: Murray Trial_ All media reports/articles - Merged - No discussion September 29th

Michael Jackson 'flatlined' at home, paramedic set to testify

By Alan Duke, CNN
September 30, 2011 -- Updated 0911 GMT (1711 HKT)

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Two paramedics set to testify Friday in Day 4 of the Conrad Murray trial
  • Murray told paramedics he was treating Jackson for dehydration, paramedic says
  • Jackson's chef defends not alerting security after Murray called for help
(CNN) -- Two Los Angeles County paramedics who responded to the delayed 911 call from Michael Jackson's home the day that pop icon died are expected to testify Friday that what Dr. Conrad Murray told them about Jackson "didn't add up."

Prosecutors contend Murray, who is on trial for involuntary manslaughter in Jackson's death, misled the paramedics by not telling them he had given his patient the surgical anesthestic propofol before realizing he was not breathing.

Paramedic Richard Senneff testified at the preliminary hearing in January that Murray told them he had only given Jackson a dose of lorazepam to help him sleep and that he was treating him for dehydration.

No pulse was ever detected with Jackson and paramedics' heart monitor showed Jackson had "flatlined" as he lay on his bedroom floor, Senneff previously said.

When Senneff asked Murray "how long the patient was down," the doctor responded "'It just happened,'" he said. The paramedic, however, said "it didn't add up."

Paramedic Martin Blount will likely also be called as a witness Friday, the fourth day of Murray's Los Angeles County, California, trial.

Prosecutors argue Murray's medical care as Jackson's personal physician was so reckless that he should be held criminally responsible for his June 25, 2009 death.

Deputy District Attorney David Walgren said Murray abandoned "all principles of medical care" when he used a makeshift intravenous drip to administer the surgical anesthetic propofol to put Jackson to sleep.

Murray acknowledged in a police interview to giving Jackson propofol almost every night for two months as the singer prepared for comeback concerts that were set to start in London in July 2009.

The coroner ruled that Jackson's June 25, 2009, death was the result of "acute propofol intoxication" in combination with sedatives.

Michael Jackson's chef Thursday defended her decision not to alert a security guard that Murray needed help in Jackson's bedroom after Murray frantically asked her to do so.

It wasn't until about 10 minutes later that a guard in a trailer a few feet away from chef Kai Chase's kitchen was ordered upstairs to the bedroom where Murray was trying to revive Jackson, according to trial testimony.

Murray "was very nervous, and frantic and he was shouting," when he ran down a staircase near the kitchen where Chase was preparing Jackson's lunch, Chase testified Thursday afternoon.
"Get help, get security, get Prince," Chase said Murray screamed.

The chef's response was to walk into the nearby dining room where Jackson's oldest son, Prince, was playing with his sister and brother, she said.

"I said 'Hurry, Dr. Murray needs you. There may be something wrong with your father," Chase said she told Prince Jackson.

She then returned to the kitchen to continue lunch preparation, she said.

"He's asking for help, he's asking for security," defense lawyer Michael Flanagan said during cross-examination. "Did you think that a 12-year-old child was going to be able to assist this doctor with a problem with Michael?"

"I did what I was told and I went to get Prince," Chase answered.

Murray's lawyers are laying the groundwork to argue that Murray should not be blamed for the delay in calling for help because he relied on the chef to alert security, who then could call for an ambulance.

The prosecution, meanwhile, contends that a delay in calling 911 for an ambulance was Murray's fault and one of the negligent acts that make him criminally responsible for Jackson's death.

The Jackson employee who called 911, at least 10 minutes after Murray's plea to the chef for help, testified earlier Thursday that Murray told him to help gather up drug vials around Jackson's deathbed before he asked him to place the emergency call.

Alberto Alvarez, who served as Jackson's logistics director, showed the court Thursday how he saw an empty vial of propofol inside a torn IV bag that was hanging on a stand.

During questioning by the defense, however, Alvarez indicated it was another IV bag with a clear saline solution, not propofol, that was attached by a tube to Jackson's leg.

Alvarez testified that when he first rushed into the bedroom where Murray was trying to revive Jackson, the doctor asked him to help put drug vials into bags.

"He reached over and grabbed a handful of vials, and he asked me to put them in a bag," Alvarez testified.

Prosecutors contend that Murray was trying to gather up evidence of his criminal responsibility for Jackson's death, even before asking that someone call for an ambulance.

Under cross-examination, defense lawyer Ed Chernoff led Alvarez slowly through his steps during a half-minute period, apparently trying to show that his memory is wrong about the sequence of events.

When Chernoff asked him whether all of the events he described could have happened in the 30 seconds, Alvarez answered, "I'm very efficient, sir."

Chernoff also hinted that the defense would argue that Alvarez altered his account of events two months later after conferring with other witnesses.

Alvarez described how Jackson's two oldest children, Prince and Paris, walked toward their father, who was lying still on a bed with his eyes and mouth open, facing toward them.
"Paris screamed out 'Daddy!' " and she started crying, Alvarez said.

"Dr. Conrad Murray said, 'Don't let them see their dad like this,' " Alvarez said. "I turned to the children, and I told them, 'Kids, don't worry, everything's going to be OK.'
"
After helping Murray place the vials in bags, the doctor asked him to call 911. The recording of the call was played in court Thursday.

"He's pumping his chest, but he's not responding to anything," Alvarez told the emergency dispatcher.

Murray appeared not to know proper CPR techniques and attempted it on the bed and not the floor, as recommended by practitioners. Alvarez said he took over while Murray began mouth-to-mouth resuscitation on Jackson.

"After a few breaths, (Murray) said, 'This is the first time I do mouth-to-mouth, but I have to because he's my friend,' " Alvarez said.

Alvarez said he's been offered up to $500,000 for interviews about Jackson's death. He's turned them all down, despite financial problems and the lack of employment, Alvarez said.

Jackson's personal assistant and his security chief gave their own emotional details about the chaos in the Jackson home and at the hospital with their testimony Wednesday.

Michael Amir Williams, who was Jackson's personal assistant, described a frantic series of phone calls that started at 12:13 p.m. the day the pop icon died.

"Call me right away, please; call me right away," Murray said in a voice message to Williams, which prosecutors played in court Wednesday.

"Get here right away; Mr. Jackson had a bad reaction," Williams said Murray told him when he called him back.

Williams then ordered Alvarez to rush to the upstairs bedroom where Murray was working to resuscitate Jackson.

Security chief Faheem Muhammad, who followed Alvarez upstairs, described seeing Jackson on a bed with his eyes open and his mouth "slightly opened" as Murray tried to revive him.

"Did he appear to be dead?" Walgren asked.

"Yes," Muhammad replied.

Muhammad gave details about how Jackson's two oldest children watched in shock.

"Paris was on the ground, balled up, crying. And Prince, he was standing there, he just had a real shocked, you know, slowly crying, type of shocked look on his face," he said.

Chernoff contended that Jackson, desperate for sleep, caused his own death by taking a handful of sedatives and self-administering propofol while the doctor was out of the room.

One defense strategy is to point the finger at another doctor and Jackson as having a large role in his death, while arguing that Murray was blind to what they were doing.

They contend that dermatologist Dr. Arnold Klein got the singer addicted to Demerol during those frequent visits to his Beverly Hills office in the weeks before his death, something Murray did not know about.

His withdrawal from that Demerol addiction was what kept Jackson awake despite Murray's efforts to put him to sleep with sedatives the morning he died, the defense contends, arguing that Klein is at least partly responsible for Jackson's death because of the Demerol.

Chernoff asked Williams, Jackson's personal assistant, if he went to Klein's office with Jackson.
"At a certain point, it was very regular," Williams said.

Chernoff then asked Williams whether he'd ever heard Jackson talk slowly with slurred speech, as he did on an audio recording played in court Tuesday.

"Not that extreme, but I have heard him talk slow before," Williams said.

"And when he left Dr. Klein's office, have you observed him sometimes to talk slow?" Chernoff asked.

Sometimes, Williams replied, "he would talk slow like that. I never heard it that extreme, but I can definitely say he has come out, and he's a little slower."

Chief security guard Muhammad, who often drove Jackson, testified that "There were times he would go almost every day" to Klein's office. Jackson often appeared intoxicated when he left, Muhammad testified.

Jackson once told Muhammad that his frequent trips to the dermatologist were for treatment for a skin disease.

"My doctors tell me that I have to go, so I go," Muhammad said Jackson told him.

At the start of court proceedings Wednesday, Paul Gongaware, an executive with the company promoting Jackson's comeback concerts, said he noticed that Jackson had "a little bit of a slower speech pattern, just a slight slur in the speech" after a visit with Klein.

Medical records show that Klein gave Jackson numerous shots of Demerol in the weeks before his death, Chernoff told jurors Tuesday.

"Dr. Klein did not do anything that was medically inappropriate," Klein's lawyer, Garo Ghazarian, told HLN's "Issues with Jane Velez-Mitchell" Wednesday.

The last time Klein gave Jackson drugs was more than three days before his death, Ghazarian said.

Jackson's inability to sleep the morning he died was "one of the insidious effects" of Demerol addiction withdrawal, Chernoff said. Since Murray did not know about the Demerol, he could not understand why Jackson was unable to fall asleep that morning, Chernoff said.

Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor previously ruled that while the jury can see some of the records of Klein's treatment of Jackson, the doctor would not testify. Demerol was not found in Jackson's body during the autopsy, which makes Klein's testimony irrelevant, Pastor ruled.

The trial began Tuesday with prosecutors playing a stunning audio recording of an apparently drugged Jackson slurring his words weeks before his death. Prosecutors also showed jurors a photo of Jackson's corpse on a hospital gurney.

If convicted of involuntary manslaughter, Murray could spend four years in a California prison and lose his medical license.
http://edition.cnn.com/2011/09/30/j...ad-murray-trial/index.html?section=cnn_latest
 
Paramedics up next in trial of Jackson's doctor
APBy GREG RISLING - Associated Press | AP – 2 hrs 30 mins ago

http://news.yahoo.com/paramedics-next-tria...-071943348.html

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Paramedics who responded to Michael Jackson's mansion the day he died were expected to testify Friday in the trial of the pop star's doctor who has been charged with involuntary manslaughter.

Martin Blount and Richard Senneff had previously testified at a preliminary hearing that Dr. Conrad Murray never mentioned giving Jackson the powerful anesthetic propofol and told them the singer lost consciousness moments before an ambulance was called. Both men believed the singer had died by the time they arrived in June 2009, but Murray insisted the performer be taken to a hospital for more resuscitation efforts.

The prosecution witnesses will likely provide jurors more insight into Jackson's final moments as futile attempts were made to revive the unresponsive superstar as the trial enters its fourth day.

On Thursday, a pair of Jackson staffers described the chaotic scene at the rented mansion. Personal chef Kai Chase said she was preparing a spinach Cobb salad for Jackson when a panicked and flustered Murray came down a spiral staircase shouting for her to get security and the singer's son, Prince.

"His energy was very nervous and frantic," said Chase, who added she ran to get Jackson's son in a nearby room. "I said, 'Hurry, Dr. Murray needs you. Something may be wrong with your father."

Chase said later she saw paramedics and security running upstairs to Jackson's bedroom where he lay and some of the house staff were crying, unsure of what was happening.

"The children were crying and screaming," she said. "We started hugging. We came together, held hands and we began to pray."

Bodyguard Alberto Alvarez said he went to help Jackson after the singer's assistant called him on his cellphone. Shocked at seeing Jackson lying motionless in his bed, eyes slightly open, Alvarez barely had time to react when he heard the singer's daughter scream "Daddy!" from the doorway. He led her and Prince from the room, trying to comfort them.

Alvarez then said Murray told him to put vials of medicine he scooped from Jackson's nightstand into a bag. Alvarez complied and also placed an IV bag into another bag.

Alvarez's testimony was key for prosecutors who contend Murray, who has pleaded not guilty, was intent on concealing signs that he had been giving the singer doses of propofol as a sleep aid.

Alvarez said he thought Murray might be preparing to take the items to the hospital, but the bags never made it to the hospital and the bodyguard never questioned the doctor.

If convicted, Murray, 58, could face up to four years in prison and lose his medical license.

Defense attorney Ed Chernoff asked whether there was enough time for Alvarez to shield Jackson's children, survey the room and stow away the drugs in the brief period that phone records show he was in the home before calling emergency responders.

The bodyguard insisted there was, telling the attorney, "I'm very efficient, sir."

Chernoff was not convinced, questioning whether 30 seconds was enough time for the dramatic sequence to play out. Alvarez assured him there was.

The defense attorney also challenged Alvarez's recollection, asking whether the collection of the vials happened after paramedics had come and whisked Jackson to a nearby hospital. Alvarez denied it happened after he called 911.

Chernoff questioned why Alvarez didn't tell authorities about Murray's commands to bag up the medication immediately after Jackson died, but instead waited until two months after the singer's death. The bodyguard said he didn't realize its significance until seeing a news report in late June in which he recognized one of the bags detectives were carrying out of Jackson's mansion.

The burly Alvarez became emotional as the 911 call was played for jurors. Jackson's mother, Katherine, appeared distraught and her son, Randy, huddled next to her and put his arm around her.

"Was that difficult to hear?" prosecutor David Walgren asked.

"It is," Alvarez replied.

Alvarez's testimony allowed Walgren to present jurors directly with a bottle of propofol that they've heard much about throughout the previous two days of the trial.

Jurors intently looked at the bottle, which appeared to still contain some liquid.

Walgren asked whether anything good had happened to Alvarez as a result of his experience in Jackson's bedroom.

"No sir," Alvarez responded.

Media outlets reportedly offered him up to $500,000 for interviews, but Alvarez said he always refused. "It's caused a lot of financial problems," he said, starting to choke up. "I went from a great salary to hardly anything."

___

AP Entertainment Writer Anthony McCartney contributed to this report.
 
Witness: Device used on Jackson was inadequate

Executive says equipment found in singer's room was not meant for continuous monitoring
LOS ANGELES — An executive for the maker of a medical device used by Michael Jackson's doctor to monitor the singer told jurors on Friday that the equipment was not adequate for the continuous monitoring of patients.

The $275 fingertip device that monitors the pulse and blood oxygen levels was recovered after Jackson's death and was being used by Dr. Conrad Murray while he was giving the singer doses of the surgical anesthetic propofol.

Prosecutors called Nonin Medical executive Bob Johnson to try to show that Murray lacked enough equipment to care for the singer during the treatments. Propofol is normally administered in hospital settings.


..Johnson said the model that Murray used had no audible alarm and was not intended to be used for the continuous monitoring of patients.

Murray, 58, has pleaded not guilty to a charge of involuntary manslaughter. If convicted, Murray could face up to four years in prison and lose his medical license.

Jurors are expected Friday to hear from paramedics who responded to the singer's rented mansion and tried to revive him.

Martin Blount and Richard Senneff had previously testified at a preliminary hearing that Murray never mentioned giving Jackson the powerful anesthetic propofol and told them the singer lost consciousness moments before an ambulance was called.

.Both men believed the singer had died by the time they arrived, but Murray insisted Jackson be taken to a hospital for more resuscitation efforts.

The prosecution witnesses will likely provide jurors more insight into Jackson's final moments as futile attempts were made to revive the unresponsive superstar as the trial enters its fourth day.

On Thursday, a pair of Jackson staffers described the chaotic scene at the rented mansion.

Story: Jackson bodyguard: Doctor gathered vials, then called 911
Personal chef Kai Chase said she was preparing a spinach Cobb salad for Jackson when a panicked and flustered Murray came down a spiral staircase shouting for her to get security and the singer's son, Prince.

"His energy was very nervous and frantic," said Chase, who added she ran to get Jackson's son in a nearby room. "I said, 'Hurry, Dr. Murray needs you. Something may be wrong with your father."

Chase said later she saw paramedics and security running upstairs to Jackson's bedroom where he lay and some of the house staff were crying, unsure of what was happening.

"The children were crying and screaming," she said. "We started hugging. We came together, held hands and we began to pray."

Bodyguard Alberto Alvarez said he went to help Jackson after the singer's assistant called him on his cellphone.


Shocked at seeing Jackson lying motionless in his bed, eyes slightly open, Alvarez barely had time to react when he heard the singer's daughter scream "Daddy!" from the doorway. He led her and Prince from the room, trying to comfort them.

Alvarez then said Murray told him to put vials of medicine he scooped from Jackson's nightstand into a bag. Alvarez complied and also placed an IV bag into another bag.

Alvarez's testimony was key for prosecutors who contend Murray, who has pleaded not guilty, was intent on concealing signs that he had been giving the singer doses of propofol as a sleep aid.

Alvarez said he thought Murray might be preparing to take the items to the hospital, but the bags never made it to the hospital and the bodyguard never questioned the doctor.

.Defense attorney Ed Chernoff asked whether there was enough time for Alvarez to shield Jackson's children, survey the room and stow away the drugs in the brief period that phone records show he was in the home before calling emergency responders.

The bodyguard insisted there was, telling the attorney, "I'm very efficient, sir."

Chernoff was not convinced
questioning whether 30 seconds was enough time for the dramatic sequence to play out. Alvarez assured him there was.

The defense attorney also challenged Alvarez's recollection, asking whether the collection of the vials happened after paramedics had come and whisked Jackson to a nearby hospital. Alvarez denied it happened after he called 911.

Chernoff questioned why Alvarez didn't tell authorities about Murray's commands to bag up the medication immediately after Jackson died, but instead waited until two months after the singer's death. The bodyguard said he didn't realize its significance until seeing a news report in late June in which he recognized one of the bags detectives were carrying out of Jackson's mansion.

The burly Alvarez became emotional as the 911 call was played for jurors. Jackson's mother, Katherine, appeared distraught and her son, Randy, huddled next to her and put his arm around her.

"Was that difficult to hear?" prosecutor David Walgren asked.
"It is," Alvarez replied.
Alvarez's testimony allowed Walgren to present jurors directly with a bottle of propofol that they've heard much about throughout the previous two days of the trial.
Jurors intently looked at the bottle, which appeared to still contain some liquid.
Walgren asked whether anything good had happened to Alvarez as a result of his experience in Jackson's bedroom.
"No sir," Alvarez responded.
Media outlets reportedly offered him up to $500,000 for interviews, but Alvarez said he always refused. "It's caused a lot of financial problems," he said, starting to choke up. "I went from a great salary to hardly anything."

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/44732165/ns/today-entertainment/
 
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Re: Murray Trial_ All media reports/articles - Merged - No discussion September 30th

L.A. NOW
Southern California -- this just in

Conrad Murray case: Cheaper monitor may have meant 'life or death'
September 30, 2011 | 10:07 am

Dr. Conrad Murray used a cheaper model of a pulse-and-blood-oxygen monitor when another model, available for $40 a month, would have alerted him that something was wrong with Michael Jackson, a representative of the equipment manufacturer testified Friday.

Robert William Johnson, who works for the medical equipment company, Nonin Medical, said the $275 model used by Murray was "not labeled for constant monitoring" of a patient and should have only been used for spot checks.

Watch live: Full coverage of Conrad Murray's trial

The other model, a device that cost $750 and could have been leased at $40 a month, had a "loud and annoying" alarm that could have been heard outside the room, Johnson said.

In cross-examination, Murray's attorney, Michael Flanagan, asked if the "the only difference" between the models would be that the cheaper device would need to be continuously watched by the physician. Williams said yes.

Prosecutor David Walgren countered by asking: "That's a big difference, right? ... Between life and death potentially?"
"Yes," Johnson responded.

Johnson was the first witness to testify Friday in the trial of Murray, Jackson's personal physician who faces an involuntary-manslaughter charge. Murray is accused of administering a lethal dose of the surgical anesthetic propofol that led to Jackson's death.

Other witnesses expected to testify Friday include a patient of Murray's, and paramedics who testified at an earlier hearing that they arrived at the singer's Holmby Hills mansion to find Jackson lifeless and his doctor evasive.

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lan...eap-monitor-may-have-meant-life-or-death.html
 
L.A. NOW
Southern California -- this just in
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Michael Jackson fans from overseas gather at Conrad Murray trial
September 30, 2011 | 8:44 am

For Myra Julliette and two of her friends, the Conrad Murray trial served as a reason for an overseas reunion.

Julliette, Beatriz Moran and Natlalie Sorard were the first three Michael Jackson fans in line Friday for the fourth day of proceedings that will decide the fate of the late pop star's doctor.

The three friends are from three different countries -- Denmark, Spain and France -- but their shared love of Jackson brought them together at his international concerts over the years.

Full coverage of Conrad Murray's trial

Back in the day, they used snail mail to keep in touch, but this most recent reunion was planned through texting and Facebook.

"It was very hard for us to come for the first week of the trial because they kept changing the dates," Julliette said. "We kept booking flights and canceling. But for us it was not really a question of if we would go, it was a question of when."

Standing behind tall orange cones and yellow caution tape, each carried a laminated sign that fans from their home countries helped make.
With bright blue-and-red writing, the signs demonized the doctor, calling him names such as "Dr. Death."

Moran said they do not plan to go inside the courtroom, even though they arrived around 6:30 a.m.

"We just want to show our support," Julliette said. "It was a lot of money. It got rescheduled four times.

"But we were able to travel before for concerts, so there was no doubt in our minds that we should also be here for this."

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lan...m-overseas-gather-at-conrad-murray-trial.html





Conrad Murray trial: 16 seats given to public to watch proceedings live


There were 34 people in line on Friday morning in front of the Los Angeles courthouse to get a seat in the court proceedings of the Conrad Murray trial. With the crowds dwindling, there were 16 individuals who actually scored a seat and got to watch the proceedings for the day.

The chance to see the actual court case unfold live is a dream for some Michael Jackson fans. Hoping to hold on to the memory of the famous entertainer and get to be inches from the Jackson family, people are coming from around the world just to have the opportunity.

During the first few days of the trial, there were two fans from Europe who risked the cost of an airline ticket and hotel for the lottery of getting to see the trial in downtown Los Angeles. With smaller crowds in the morning, the opportunity to get a seat is becoming better and better. In fact, in betting odd, the chance for a free seat to watch would have been 2 to 1, which couldn’t be better for moment to watch history.


Jodi Jill, National Celebrity Headlines Examiner
September 30, 2011

http://www.examiner.com/celebrity-h...ats-given-to-public-to-watch-proceedings-live
 
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Re: Murray Trial_ All media reports/articles - Merged - No discussion September 30th

InSession In Session
As #ConradMurray's former patient left the witness stand and walked past Murray, Murray gestured w/his right hand over his heart to him
 
FRIDAY Sep 30, 2011 13:12 ET

Patient tells jury about Jackson doctor's care
By GREG RISLING, Associated Press

A former patient of the doctor charged in Michael Jackson's death told jurors the physician saved his life.

Robert Russell of Las Vegas lauded Dr. Conrad Murray's treatment of him, but testified Friday that his cardiologist became increasingly distant and hard to reach while working with Jackson.

Russell told jurors he couldn't get answers about his treatment from Murray's office on June 25, 2009 and demanded to speak to the doctor. The doctor left him a voicemail at 11:49 a.m.

Prosecutors are using records to show that Murray was on the phone in the moments before he realized Jackson was unconscious.

Russell told jurors Murray's message seemed odd because the doctor said he was going on sabbatical, despite telling the salesman and his wife months earlier that he was going to work for Jackson.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

An executive for the maker of a medical device used by Michael Jackson's doctor to monitor the singer told jurors on Friday that the equipment was not adequate for the continuous monitoring of patients.

The $275 fingertip device that monitors the pulse and blood oxygen levels was recovered after Jackson's death and was being used by Dr. Conrad Murray while he was giving the singer doses of the surgical anesthetic propofol.

Prosecutors called Nonin Medical executive Bob Johnson to try to show that Murray lacked enough equipment to care for the singer during the treatments. Propofol is normally administered in hospital settings.

Johnson said the model that Murray used had no audible alarm and was not intended to be used for the continuous monitoring of patients.

Murray, 58, has pleaded not guilty to a charge of involuntary manslaughter. If convicted, Murray could face up to four years in prison and lose his medical license.

Jurors are expected Friday to hear from paramedics who responded to the singer's rented mansion and tried to revive him.

Martin Blount and Richard Senneff had previously testified at a preliminary hearing that Murray never mentioned giving Jackson the powerful anesthetic propofol and told them the singer lost consciousness moments before an ambulance was called.

Both men believed the singer had died by the time they arrived, but Murray insisted Jackson be taken to a hospital for more resuscitation efforts.

The prosecution witnesses will likely provide jurors more insight into Jackson's final moments as futile attempts were made to revive the unresponsive superstar as the trial enters its fourth day.

http://www.salon.com/wires/entertainment/2011/09/30/D9Q2VGP01_us_michael_jackson_doctor/index.html



Jackson doctor on phone while singer under anesthesia

LOS ANGELES — Michael Jackson's doctor was on the phone to another patient minutes before discovering the singer stopped breathing, trial jurors were told on Friday, as prosecutors press their case that the physician's care was negligent.

..Jurors in the involuntary manslaughter trial of Dr. Conrad Murray heard a voicemail he left for one of his heart patients at 11:49 a.m. PDT (2:49 p.m. EDT/1849 GMT) on June 25, 2009 -- seven minutes before he says he found Jackson unresponsive in his bedroom.

The message came on the fourth day of Murray's involuntary manslaughter trial as prosecutors seek to prove he failed to properly monitor Jackson after giving him a dose of the surgical anesthetic propofol as a sleep aid.

They claim that instead of watching Jackson in the singer's bedroom, Murray was busy on his cellphone with the other patient before discovering at around 11:56 a.m. that the "Thriller" singer had stopped breathing.

Murray admits administering propofol but denies involuntary manslaughter. His lawyers have argued that Jackson caused his own death by giving himself an extra dose of propofol, mixed with prescription sedatives, without Murray's knowledge.

Murray faces up to four years in prison if convicted.

Las Vegas salesman Robert Russell testified on Friday that he had called Murray's office on June 25, because he was upset that a follow-up appointment from an earlier heart surgery performed on him by Murray had been canceled.

On the witness stand, Russell also credited Murray with saving his life in March 2009 after a heart attack and praised the doctor's close and attentive relationship with him afterward.

Another witness, who works for the company that made the heart and oxygen device that Jackson was wearing on his finger, testified on Friday that the equipment was not sophisticated enough for constant monitoring.

Witnesses earlier this week described frantic scenes at Jackson's house on the morning of his sudden death, when the 50 year-old singer was found lifeless in bed and hooked up to an IV machine, a urine collection device and an oxygen feed.

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters.

http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/39203468
 
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Re: Murray Trial_ All media reports/articles - Merged - No discussion September 30th

Prosecution witness: Michael Jackson's doctor 'saved my life'

By Alan Duke, CNN

Los Angeles (CNN) -- The device Dr. Conrad Murray used to monitor Michael Jackson's pulse and blood oxygen level while he used the surgical anesthetic propofol to put the pop icon to sleep was the focus of testimony as the fourth day of Murray's involuntary manslaughter trial began Friday.

An executive with the company that made the Nonin 9500 pulse oxymeter said it was "designed for spot checking of vital signs" and was "specifically labeled against continuous monitoring."

Prosecutors argue Murray's lack of professional monitoring equipment was reckless and is one reason the doctor should be held criminally responsible for Jackson's death.

A former patient of Dr. Murray's testified Friday that Murray saved his after a heart attack just months before his last patient, Michael Jackson, died under his care.

Although Robert Russell was called by the prosecution, his testimony possibly bolstered the defense contention that Murray is a caring and capable cardiologist.

"The advice he gave me saved my life," Russell said, describing how Murray not only put several stints in the arteries near his heart, but he also took time to help him change his unhealthy habits.

"He gave me advice on exercise, on eating, just how to live my life, doing away with pressure and stress that I believe I thrived on in the business world," said Russell, a sales manager for electrical distribution firm.

The prosecution called Russell as an example of how Murray left his patients without a doctor when he left to be Michael Jackson's personal physician in April 2009.

"I was dismayed, flabbergasted, left out," Russell said. "I did feel abandoned."

His testified, however, that he was still able to contact Murray over the phone for advice and his clinic staff supported his therapy.

Russell's new cardiologist recently checked the Murray's work on his heart and "He was very excited how my stints have held up," Russell testified.

A Los Angeles County paramedic who responded to the delayed 911 call from Jackson's home the day he died took the witness stand later Friday.

Prosecutors contend Murray misled the paramedics by not telling them he had given his patient the surgical anesthestic propofol before realizing he was not breathing.

Paramedic Richard Senneff testified at the preliminary hearing in January that Murray told them he had only given Jackson a dose of lorazepam to help him sleep and that he was treating him for dehydration.

No pulse was ever detected with Jackson and the paramedics' heart monitor showed Jackson had "flatlined" as he lay on his bedroom floor, Senneff previously said.

Jackson's chef describes frantic scene When Senneff asked Murray "how long the patient was down," the doctor responded "'It just happened,'" he said. The paramedic, however, said "it didn't add up."

Paramedic Martin Blount will likely also be called as a witness Friday, the fourth day of Murray's Los Angeles County, California, trial.

Prosecutors argue Murray's medical care as Jackson's personal physician was so reckless that he should be held criminally responsible for his June 25, 2009, death.

Deputy District Attorney David Walgren said Murray abandoned "all principles of medical care" when he used a makeshift intravenous drip to administer the surgical anesthetic propofol to put Jackson to sleep.

Murray acknowledged in a police interview to giving Jackson propofol almost every night for two months as the singer prepared for comeback concerts that were set to start in London in July 2009.

The coroner ruled that Jackson's June 25, 2009, death was the result of "acute propofol intoxication" in combination with sedatives.

Michael Jackson's chef Thursday defended her decision not to alert a security guard that Murray needed help in Jackson's bedroom after Murray frantically asked her to do so.
It wasn't until about 10 minutes later that a guard in a trailer a few feet away from chef Kai Chase's kitchen was ordered upstairs to the bedroom where Murray was trying to revive Jackson, according to trial testimony.
Murray "was very nervous, and frantic and he was shouting," when he ran down a staircase near the kitchen where Chase was preparing Jackson's lunch, Chase testified Thursday afternoon.
"Get help, get security, get Prince," Chase said Murray screamed.
The chef's response was to walk into the nearby dining room where Jackson's oldest son, Prince, was playing with his sister and brother, she said.
"I said 'Hurry, Dr. Murray needs you. There may be something wrong with your father," Chase said she told Prince Jackson.
She then returned to the kitchen to continue lunch preparation, she said.
"He's asking for help, he's asking for security," defense lawyer Michael Flanagan said during cross-examination. "Did you think that a 12-year-old child was going to be able to assist this doctor with a problem with Michael?"
"I did what I was told and I went to get Prince," Chase answered.

Murray's lawyers are laying the groundwork to argue that Murray should not be blamed for the delay in calling for help because he relied on the chef to alert security, who then could call for an ambulance.

The prosecution, meanwhile, contends that a delay in calling 911 for an ambulance was Murray's fault and one of the negligent acts that make him criminally responsible for Jackson's death.

The Jackson employee who called 911, at least 10 minutes after Murray's plea to the chef for help, testified earlier Thursday that Murray told him to help gather up drug vials around Jackson's deathbed before he asked him to place the emergency call.
Alberto Alvarez, who served as Jackson's logistics director, showed the court Thursday how he saw an empty vial of propofol inside a torn IV bag that was hanging on a stand.
During questioning by the defense, however, Alvarez indicated it was another IV bag with a clear saline solution, not propofol, that was attached by a tube to Jackson's leg.
Alvarez testified that when he first rushed into the bedroom where Murray was trying to revive Jackson, the doctor asked him to help put drug vials into bags.
"He reached over and grabbed a handful of vials, and he asked me to put them in a bag," Alvarez testified.
Prosecutors contend that Murray was trying to gather up evidence of his criminal responsibility for Jackson's death, even before asking that someone call for an ambulance.
Under cross-examination, defense lawyer Ed Chernoff led Alvarez slowly through his steps during a half-minute period, apparently trying to show that his memory is wrong about the sequence of events.
When Chernoff asked him whether all of the events he described could have happened in the 30 seconds, Alvarez answered, "I'm very efficient, sir."
Chernoff also hinted that the defense would argue that Alvarez altered his account of events two months later after conferring with other witnesses.
Alvarez described how Jackson's two oldest children, Prince and Paris, walked toward their father, who was lying still on a bed with his eyes and mouth open, facing toward them.
"Paris screamed out 'Daddy!' " and she started crying, Alvarez said.
"Dr. Conrad Murray said, 'Don't let them see their dad like this,' " Alvarez said. "I turned to the children, and I told them, 'Kids, don't worry, everything's going to be OK.' "
After helping Murray place the vials in bags, the doctor asked him to call 911. The recording of the call was played in court Thursday.
"He's pumping his chest, but he's not responding to anything," Alvarez told the emergency dispatcher.
Murray appeared not to know proper CPR techniques and attempted it on the bed and not the floor, as recommended by practitioners. Alvarez said he took over while Murray began mouth-to-mouth resuscitation on Jackson.
"After a few breaths, (Murray) said, 'This is the first time I do mouth-to-mouth, but I have to because he's my friend,' " Alvarez said.
Alvarez said he's been offered up to $500,000 for interviews about Jackson's death. He's turned them all down, despite financial problems and the lack of employment, Alvarez said.

Jackson's personal assistant and his security chief gave their own emotional details about the chaos in the Jackson home and at the hospital with their testimony Wednesday.
Michael Amir Williams, who was Jackson's personal assistant, described a frantic series of phone calls that started at 12:13 p.m. the day the pop icon died.
"Call me right away, please; call me right away," Murray said in a voice message to Williams, which prosecutors played in court Wednesday.
"Get here right away; Mr. Jackson had a bad reaction," Williams said Murray told him when he called him back.
Williams then ordered Alvarez to rush to the upstairs bedroom where Murray was working to resuscitate Jackson.

Security chief Faheem Muhammad, who followed Alvarez upstairs, described seeing Jackson on a bed with his eyes open and his mouth "slightly opened" as Murray tried to revive him.
"Did he appear to be dead?" Walgren asked.
"Yes," Muhammad replied.
Muhammad gave details about how Jackson's two oldest children watched in shock.
"Paris was on the ground, balled up, crying. And Prince, he was standing there, he just had a real shocked, you know, slowly crying, type of shocked look on his face," he said.

Chernoff contended that Jackson, desperate for sleep, caused his own death by taking a handful of sedatives and self-administering propofol while the doctor was out of the room.

One defense strategy is to point the finger at another doctor and Jackson as having a large role in his death, while arguing that Murray was blind to what they were doing.

They contend that dermatologist Dr. Arnold Klein got the singer addicted to Demerol during those frequent visits to his Beverly Hills office in the weeks before his death, something Murray did not know about.

His withdrawal from that Demerol addiction was what kept Jackson awake despite Murray's efforts to put him to sleep with sedatives the morning he died, the defense contends, arguing that Klein is at least partly responsible for Jackson's death because of the Demerol.

Chernoff asked Williams, Jackson's personal assistant, if he went to Klein's office with Jackson.
"At a certain point, it was very regular," Williams said.
Chernoff then asked Williams whether he'd ever heard Jackson talk slowly with slurred speech, as he did on an audio recording played in court Tuesday.
"Not that extreme, but I have heard him talk slow before," Williams said.
"And when he left Dr. Klein's office, have you observed him sometimes to talk slow?" Chernoff asked.
Sometimes, Williams replied, "he would talk slow like that. I never heard it that extreme, but I can definitely say he has come out, and he's a little slower."

Chief security guard Muhammad, who often drove Jackson, testified that "There were times he would go almost every day" to Klein's office. Jackson often appeared intoxicated when he left, Muhammad testified.
Jackson once told Muhammad that his frequent trips to the dermatologist were for treatment for a skin disease.
"My doctors tell me that I have to go, so I go," Muhammad said Jackson told him.

At the start of court proceedings Wednesday, Paul Gongaware, an executive with the company promoting Jackson's comeback concerts, said he noticed that Jackson had "a little bit of a slower speech pattern, just a slight slur in the speech" after a visit with Klein.

Medical records show that Klein gave Jackson numerous shots of Demerol in the weeks before his death, Chernoff told jurors Tuesday.

"Dr. Klein did not do anything that was medically inappropriate," Klein's lawyer, Garo Ghazarian, told HLN's "Issues with Jane Velez-Mitchell" Wednesday.
The last time Klein gave Jackson drugs was more than three days before his death, Ghazarian said.

Jackson's inability to sleep the morning he died was "one of the insidious effects" of Demerol addiction withdrawal, Chernoff said. Since Murray did not know about the Demerol, he could not understand why Jackson was unable to fall asleep that morning, Chernoff said.

Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor previously ruled that while the jury can see some of the records of Klein's treatment of Jackson, the doctor would not testify. Demerol was not found in Jackson's body during the autopsy, which makes Klein's testimony irrelevant, Pastor ruled.

The trial began Tuesday with prosecutors playing a stunning audio recording of an apparently drugged Jackson slurring his words weeks before his death. Prosecutors also showed jurors a photo of Jackson's corpse on a hospital gurney.
If convicted of involuntary manslaughter, Murray could spend four years in a California prison and lose his medical license.

http://edition.cnn.com/2011/09/30/j...ad-murray-trial/index.html?section=cnn_latest
 
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Re: Murray Trial_ All media reports/articles - Merged - No discussion September 30th

Conrad Murray Trial, Day 4: Paramedic Says Doctor's Story 'Did Not Add Up'
(Update)


Michael Senneff, a paramedic who answered the 911 call at Michael Jackson's home on the day of the singer's death, told the court during Conrad Murray's involuntary manslaughter trial Friday that the situation "did not seem normal" when he arrived at the scene.

Senneff, of the Los Angeles Fire Department, detailed multiple red flags that he noticed on the June 25, 2009 call, including Murray's responses to his questions.

Senneff testified that, when he asked Murray what Jackson's underlying heath issue was, Murray failed to respond the first two times he asked, and eventually responded that there was no underlying issue.

"'Simply, that did not add up to me -- doctors in the house, IV pull , IV hooked up to the patient -- it simply did not seem normal" that there would be no underlying condition, Senneff testified.

As expected, Senneff also testified that, when he asked Murray what medications Jackson had been taking, he he didn't mention Propofol, which was found to contribute to the singer's death.

"He said, 'No he's not taking anything,' then he followed that up by saying, 'I just gave him a little bit of lorazepam to help him sleep," Senneff told the court.

Senneff also noted that, when he asked when Jackson went down, Murray told him that it had occurred just as he had placed the 911 call -- which gave Senneff the impression that" we had a good chance of saving" Jackson. However, when paramedics hooked up an EKG, he was flatlining, and the drugs paramedics gave Jackson in order to re-start his heart had no effect.

Previously...

The fourth day of the Conrad Murray involuntary manslaughter trial is expected to include testimony from a paramedic who tried to revive Michael Jackson before the singer's death.

CNN reports that paramedic Richard Senneff testified during a preliminary hearing in January that Murray failed to disclose that he had been treating Jackson with daily doses of the powerful surgery drug propofol for two months.

Senneff said Murray only admitted to giving Jackson lorazepam to help him sleep, and that he was treating the pop star for dehydration. At the time, Jackson was going through physically demanding rehearsals for a series of concert performances that he hoped would lead to a big career comeback.

Sennett said Jackson had "flatlined" by the time he showed up at Jackson's home. Sennett said he had asked Murray how long Jackson had been unresponsive, and Murray indicated "it just happened." Sennett said that timeline "didn't add up," and that could prove to be a key bit of testimony during today's courtroom session.

Murray contends only 10 minutes elapsed between the time he found Jackson unresponsive and the time 911 was called, but prosecutors insist Murray waited at least 25 minutes before instructing another Jackson employee, Alberto Alvarez, to call 911.

Read more: Conrad Murray Trial, Day 2: Assistant Says Doctor Tried to Get Back Into MJ's House (Live Feed)

During Wednesday's testimony, Jackson's chef, Kai Chase, testified that a "frantic" Murray had rushed into the kitchen after discovering Jackson in distress, but that he didn't ask her to call 911.
Murray's defense team is likely to use the fact that Chase didn't take the initiative to call 911 to cast the blame for Jackson's death away from Murray.

CNN reports that the defense team will also try to direct some of the responsibility for Jackson's overdose on another doctor, Dr. Arnold Klein, the Beverly Hills dermatologist who reportedly gave Jackson frequent doses of Demerol in the weeks leading up to his June 2009 death.

The defense claims Murray didn't know Jackson was taking Demerol at the same time Murray was treating him with propofol.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/09/30/idUS37104602420110930



Michael Jackson - Dr Conrad Murray Claims Questioned By Veteran Paramedic
30 September 2011 19:46

Dr Conrad Murray Claims Questioned By Veteran Paramedic
Dr Conrad Murray told the first paramedic to reach Michael Jackson 's bedroom that he was treating the singer for exhaustion and dehydration and that he had only administered one drug. The testimony contradicts the theory suggesting Murray accidently killed the singer with a dose of the powerful drug Propofol, reports the Associated Press.

Speaking in court on Friday (30th September 2011), Paramedic Richard Senneff says at the scene of Jackson's death, Dr Murray told him he had only given the singer the sedative lorazepam as he was suffering from exhaustion and dehydration. He was initially told by Murray that Jackson wasn't suffering from any condition, but later claimed he was treating him for exhaustion and dehydration. However, Mr Senneff says the doctor's responses to his questions didn't add up. The veteran paramedic said the singer was cool to the touch, with his eyes wide open and an IV in his leg. Senneff was one of four paramedics who unsuccessfully tried to revive the singer in June 2009. 58-year-old Murray has pleaded not guilty to involuntarily manslaughter. On Thursday, the jury heard how Jackson's eldest children were horrified after seeing their father dying on his bedroom floor. Questions have also been raised concerning the amount of time it took Dr Murray to phone the ambulance.

Bookmaker Paddy Power is offering odds as to the outcome of the high profile trial. It's odds on at 4/6 that Dr Murray will be found "not guilty" of the offense, while those who think he'll be sent to prison can have 11/10.


http://www.contactmusic.com/news/dr-conrad-murray-claims-questioned-by-veteran-paramedic_1247863


mccartneyAP Anthony McCartney
Strong finish by prosecution on Paramedic Senneff. He says Murray never mentioned propofol.

CEThomson Charles Thomson
Senneff was with MJ for approx 42mins. No signs of life in that time.
 
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Re: Murray Trial_ All media reports/articles - Merged - No discussion September 30th

Why Michael Jackson's Doctor May Wind Up In Jail
By Judge Jeanine Pirro

Published September 30, 2011
| FoxNews.com


Things are not looking good for Dr. Conrad Murray in that L.A. courtroom. The doctor of course, is on trial for the crime of involuntary manslaughter in the death of pop icon Michael Jackson.

Can the prosecution prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the doctor actually killed Michael Jackson? Should this medical malpractice even be a criminal case?

The answer to both is a resounding "yes"!

Involuntary manslaughter under California Penal Code section192 (b) requires the state to prove that Murray acted without due 'caution and circumspection'. In simple terms -- was Murray's conduct such a departure from the conduct of an ordinary prudent person under the same circumstances (in this case a physician) as to disregard either human life or the consequences of such an act. This criminal negligence requires that death was a reasonably foreseeable consequence of the reckless or negligent conduct.

Here's how prosecutors will meet their burden:

Dr. Murray was hired as a concierge doctor by Jackson to attend to his medical needs for $150,000 a month.

Murray secured propofol (an anaesthetic intended for hospital use only) to administer as a sleep aid for Jackson in his home.

Propofol must be administered by an anaesthesiologist with proper resuscitation equipment. No only was Murray was not an anesthesiologist, he also had no resuscitation equipment should it be needed. His request for such equipment for Jackson's planned tour indicates his knowledge of the need for such equipment when administering propofol.

Murray says he was out of Michael's room for only a short time to go to the bathroom, during which time he alleges Jackson self- administered the lethal dose of propofol.

Cell phone records will apparently show that Murray was out of the room for a longer period of time, talking on the phone with his girlfriend.

Murray's first phone call was not to 911, a doctor, an ambulance or a hospital, but instead to Jackson's assistant. He never asks that emergency medical help be called.

Here's what happened next: When the assistant, and then security arrives, the good doctor asks "if anyone knows CPR," while he (a cardiologist) feebly attempts to administer CPR with one hand while Jackson is lying on a bed -- eliminating the possibility of real chest compression!

When emergency personnel is finally called, Murray never explains Michael has propofol in his system to better assist them in their resuscitation efforts.

After Jackson is pronounced dead at UCLA Hospital, Murray wants to go return to the home and secure the "cream" (Jackson called propofol "milk') so he says, the world won't know about Jackson's use of the drug. This statement about the "cream" instead will be used as evidence later of Murray's "consciousness of guilt" -- his attempt to remove the incriminating evidence from the crime scene.

The improper administration of a powerful hospital anaesthetic; failure to have resuscitation equipment on the scene, failure to monitor a patient whose respiratory system was under duress; failure to call 911; failure to inform 911 of the presence of the anaesthetic in Jackson's system; lying about his bathroom visit as well as the amount of time spent outside the room will all point to substandard medical care.

Murray cannot be heard to argue he was "weaning Michael off his drug addiction" because he bought hundreds of bottles of propofol.

He cannot blame Dr. Klein for Jackson's dependency on demerol since Jackson died of acute propofol poisoning -- not demerol (although he will argue it in some way contributed to Jackson's death.)

He'll also have a hard time explaining how Jackson administered the drug to himself.

The bottom line question is whether the medical care Michael Jackson received was sub-standard and whether the doctor disregarded his life and consequently caused his death. Although they have no burden of proof, the defense has a lot of catching up to do. If convicted Murray faces four years in prison.

Judge Jeanine Pirro is the host of "Justice with Judge Jeanine" which airs Saturday evenings at 9 p.m. ET on Fox News Channel. She is a former County Court Judge and District Attorney of Westchester County, New York .

http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2011/09/30/why-michael-jacksons-doctor-may-wind-up-in-jail/

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2011...ons-doctor-may-wind-up-in-jail/#ixzz1ZStLVV4r
 
Re: Murray Trial_ All media reports/articles - Merged - No discussion September 30th

InSession In Session
Judge Pastor has issued a gag order in the #MurrayTrial.

mccartneyAP Anthony McCartney
Judge bans attorneys in Conrad Murray trial from commenting on case at all



Judge Issues Gag Order in Trial of Dr. Conrad Murray
Published September 30, 2011
| FoxNews.com

A Los Angeles judge has ordered under penalty of contempt and other sanctions that both lawyers and their employees connected to the manslaughter trial against Dr. Conrad Murray may not publicly discuss the case, Fox News has learned.

Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor said Friday that prosecutors and lawyers for Dr. Conrad Murray were ordered not to comment outside of their respective legal teams.
Pastor didn't specify the reason for his decision. However, he called Matt Alford, a Houston lawyer who is a partner with Murray's attorney, Ed Chernoff, to return Friday afternoon.
Alford appeared on NBC's "The Today Show" on Friday, in which he said the jury was smart enough to know prosecutors haven't proven their case.
Murray has pleaded not guilty to involuntary manslaughter in connection with Jackson's death in June 2009.

The Associated Press and Fox News' Lee Ross contributed to this report.
Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/entertainmen...rder-in-trial-dr-conrad-murray/#ixzz1ZTV0FT9X
Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/entertainmen...rder-in-trial-dr-conrad-murray/#ixzz1ZTUvfv4b


Contempt charge vs. Conrad Murray lawyer?

October 1, 2011 -- Updated 1103 GMT (1903 HKT)
CBS/AP) LOS ANGELES - The judge presiding over the involuntary manslaughter trial of Michael Jackson's physician at the time of his death, Dr. Conrad Murray, threatened Murray's lawyers with a contempt charge over a nationally-televised interview the law partner of lead defense counsel Ed Chernoff did Friday.

In the interview, attorney Matt Alford criticized a key prosecution witness, Jackson's bodyguard Alberto Alvarez.
Alvarez testified Thursday that Murray ordered him to place vials of medication in a bag before calling 911. Defense attorneys have repeatedly challenged his account.

Prosecutors complained, and Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor watched the interview during a break.
He told attorneys he was shocked and had watched the interview "with my mouth open." The interview was done hours after the judge warned attorneys not to comment about the case outside court.

Pastor ordered Alford to appear for a contempt hearing on Nov. 15 and described him as a witness after Chernoff told Pastor to hold him in contempt instead of his partner.
All the discussions about the interview were held outside the presence of jurors, who are under strict orders to avoid media coverage about the case.

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2011/10/01/earlyshow/saturday/main20114259.shtml
 
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Re: Murray Trial_ All media reports/articles - Merged - No discussion September 30th

Paramedic saw no signs of life in Michael Jackson

By Alan Duke, CNN
September 30, 2011 -- Updated 1936 GMT (0336 HKT)
Los Angeles (CNN) -- A Los Angeles County paramedic who responded to the delayed 911 call from Michael Jackson's home the day he died testified Friday in Dr. Conrad Murray's involuntary manslaughter trial that Jackson was "flatlined" and appeared dead when rescuers arrived.

Paramedic Richard Senneff said that at no time during the 42 minutes he was with Jackson did he see any signs of life in him.
Senneff testified that Murray told responders he had only given Jackson a dose of lorazepam to help him sleep and that he was treating him for dehydration and exhaustion, with no mention of the surgical anesthetic propofol.

Prosecutors contend one of the acts that makes Murray criminally responsible for Jackson's death was that he misled the paramedics by not telling them he had given his patient propofol before he stopped breathing.

The coroner ruled that Jackson's June 25, 2009, death was the result of "acute propofol intoxication" in combination with sedatives.

When Senneff asked Murray "how long the patient was down," the doctor responded "It just happened right when I called you," Senneff said. Earlier testimony indicated the emergency call was not placed for at least 15 minutes after Murray realized Jackson was not breathing.
"It meant to me that this was a patient we had a good chance of saving," since the paramedics arrived just five minutes after the 911 call, Senneff said.
The paramedic, however, said it "did not add up to me" because of Jackson appeared dead.
"When I first moved the patient, his skin was very cool to the touch, his eyes were open, they were dry and his pupils were dilated," Senneff said. "When I hooked up the EKG machine, it was flatlined."

At one point, Murray told paramedics he felt a pulse in Jackson's upper right leg, but their heart monitor showed no rhythm, Senneff said.
Jackson's chef describes frantic scene A doctor communicating by radio with the paramedics recommended at 12:57 p.m., a half hour after they arrived, that they cease efforts to revive Jackson and declare him dead, according to a recording of the radio traffic played in court.
Murray then took over responsibility for the effort and continued resuscitation efforts, Senneff said.

The defense appeared to make one important point in their cross-examination of Senneff. The paramedic said when he first walked into bedroom he saw Murray and a security guard moving Jackson off the bed and onto the floor.

That contradicts Thursday's testimony by Alberto Alvarez, who worked for Jackson, who said he helped move Jackson from the bed while he was on the 911 phone call at least six minutes before the paramedics arrived.
The timing is important because it could call into question testimony by Alvarez about when Murray asked for his help in collecting drug vials from around the bed.

Senneff's partner, paramedic Martin Blount, also was likely to be called as a witness Friday, the fourth day of Murray's trial.

Prosecutors argue Murray's medical care as Jackson's personal physician was so reckless that he should be held criminally responsible for his death.
Deputy District Attorney David Walgren said Murray abandoned "all principles of medical care" when he used a makeshift intravenous drip to administer propofol to put Jackson to sleep.

Murray acknowledged in a police interview that he gave Jackson propofol almost every night for two months as the singer prepared for comeback concerts that were set to start in London in July 2009.
The device Murray used to monitor Jackson's pulse and blood oxygen level while he used propofol to put him to sleep was the focus of testimony by the first witness Friday.

An executive with the company that made the Nonin 9500 pulse oxymeter said it was "designed for spot checking of vital signs" and was "specifically labeled against continuous monitoring."
The $275 device did not have an audio alarm, requiring someone to constantly keep an eye on the tiny screen, Robert Johnson testified. Murray would have been better equipped with his company's table top version that would cost $1,200, Johnson said.
Prosecutors argue Murray's lack of professional monitoring equipment was reckless and is one reason the doctor should be held criminally responsible for Jackson's death.

One of Murray's former patients testified Friday that Murray saved his life after a heart attack just months before Jackson's death.
Although Robert Russell was called by the prosecution, his testimony possibly bolstered the defense contention that Murray is a caring and capable cardiologist.
"The advice he gave me saved my life," Russell said, describing how Murray not only put several stents in the arteries near his heart, but he also took time to help him change his unhealthy habits.
"He gave me advice on exercise, on eating, just how to live my life, doing away with pressure and stress that I believe I thrived on in the business world," said Russell, a sales manager for an electrical distribution firm.
The prosecution called Russell as an example of how Murray left his patients without a doctor when he went to be Michael Jackson's personal physician in April 2009.

"I was dismayed, flabbergasted, left out," Russell said. "I did feel abandoned."
His testified, however, that he was still able to contact Murray over the phone for advice and his clinic staff supported his therapy.
Russell's new cardiologist recently checked the Murray's work on his heart and "was very excited how my stents have held up," Russell testified.

In previous testimony, Jackson's chef Thursday defended her decision not to alert a security guard that Murray needed help in Jackson's bedroom after the doctor frantically asked her to do so.
It wasn't until about 10 minutes later that a guard in a trailer a few feet away from chef Kai Chase's kitchen was ordered upstairs to the bedroom where Murray was trying to revive Jackson, according to trial testimony.
Murray "was very nervous, and frantic and he was shouting," when he ran down a staircase near the kitchen where Chase was preparing Jackson's lunch, Chase testified Thursday afternoon.
Jackson I.V. contained 'milky substance' "Get help, get security, get Prince," Chase said Murray screamed.
The chef's response was to walk into the nearby dining room where Jackson's oldest son, Prince, was playing with his sister and brother, she said.
"I said 'Hurry, Dr. Murray needs you. There may be something wrong with your father," Chase said she told Prince Jackson.
She then returned to the kitchen to continue lunch preparation, she said.
"He's asking for help, he's asking for security," defense lawyer Michael Flanagan said during cross-examination. "Did you think that a 12-year-old child was going to be able to assist this doctor with a problem with Michael?"
"I did what I was told and I went to get Prince," Chase answered.

Murray's lawyers are laying the groundwork to argue that Murray should not be blamed for the delay in calling for help because he relied on the chef to alert security, who then could call for an ambulance.

The prosecution, meanwhile, contends that a delay in calling 911 for an ambulance was Murray's fault and one of the negligent acts that make him criminally responsible for Jackson's death.

Alvarez, the Jackson employee who called 911,at least 10 minutes after Murray's plea to the chef for help, testified earlier Thursday that Murray told him to help gather up drug vials around Jackson's deathbed before he asked him to place the emergency call.
Alvarez, who served as Jackson's logistics director, showed the court how he saw an empty vial of propofol inside a torn IV bag that was hanging on a stand.
During questioning by the defense, however, Alvarez indicated it was another IV bag with a clear saline solution, not propofol, that was attached by a tube to Jackson's leg.
Alvarez testified that when he first rushed into the bedroom where Murray was trying to revive Jackson, the doctor asked him to help put drug vials into bags.
"He reached over and grabbed a handful of vials, and he asked me to put them in a bag," Alvarez testified.
Prosecutors contend that Murray was trying to gather up evidence of his criminal responsibility for Jackson's death, even before asking that someone call for an ambulance.
Under cross-examination, defense lawyer Ed Chernoff led Alvarez slowly through his steps during a half-minute period, apparently trying to show that his memory is wrong about the sequence of events.
When Chernoff asked him whether all of the events he described could have happened in the 30 seconds, Alvarez answered, "I'm very efficient, sir."

Chernoff also hinted that the defense would argue that Alvarez altered his account of events two months later after conferring with other witnesses.

Alvarez described how Jackson's two oldest children, Prince and Paris, walked toward their father, who was lying still on a bed with his eyes and mouth open, facing toward them.
"Paris screamed out 'Daddy!'" and she started crying, Alvarez said.
"Dr. Conrad Murray said, 'Don't let them see their dad like this,' " Alvarez said. "I turned to the children, and I told them, 'Kids, don't worry, everything's going to be OK.'"
After helping Murray place the vials in bags, the doctor asked him to call 911. The recording of the call was played in court Thursday.
Alvarez said he's been offered up to $500,000 for interviews about Jackson's death. He's turned them all down, despite financial problems and the lack of employment, he said.
Jackson's personal assistant and his security chief gave their own emotional details about the chaos in the Jackson home and at the hospital with their testimony Wednesday.

Michael Amir Williams, who was Jackson's personal assistant, described a frantic series of phone calls that started at 12:13 p.m. the day the pop icon died.
"Call me right away, please; call me right away," Murray said in a voice message to Williams, which prosecutors played in court Wednesday.
"Get here right away; Mr. Jackson had a bad reaction," Williams said Murray told him when he called him back.
Williams then ordered Alvarez to rush to the upstairs bedroom where Murray was working to resuscitate Jackson.

Security chief Faheem Muhammad, who followed Alvarez upstairs, described seeing Jackson on a bed with his eyes open and his mouth "slightly opened" as Murray tried to revive him.
"Did he appear to be dead?" Walgren asked.
"Yes," Muhammad replied.
Muhammad gave details about how Jackson's two oldest children watched in shock.
"Paris was on the ground, balled up, crying. And Prince, he was standing there, he just had a real shocked, you know, slowly crying, type of shocked look on his face," he said.

Chernoff contended that Jackson, desperate for sleep, caused his own death by taking a handful of sedatives and self-administering propofol while the doctor was out of the room.

One defense strategy is to point the finger at another doctor and Jackson as having a large role in his death, while arguing that Murray was blind to what they were doing.
They contend that dermatologist Dr. Arnold Klein got the singer addicted to Demerol during those frequent visits to his Beverly Hills office in the weeks before his death, something Murray did not know about.
His withdrawal from that Demerol addiction was what kept Jackson awake despite Murray's efforts to put him to sleep with sedatives the morning he died, the defense contends, arguing that Klein is at least partly responsible for Jackson's death because of the Demerol.

Chernoff asked Williams, Jackson's personal assistant, if he went to Klein's office with Jackson.
"At a certain point, it was very regular," Williams said.
Chernoff then asked Williams whether he'd ever heard Jackson talk slowly with slurred speech, as he did on an audio recording played in court Tuesday.
"Not that extreme, but I have heard him talk slow before," Williams said.
"And when he left Dr. Klein's office, have you observed him sometimes to talk slow?" Chernoff asked.
Sometimes, Williams replied, "he would talk slow like that. I never heard it that extreme, but I can definitely say he has come out, and he's a little slower."

Chief security guard Muhammad, who often drove Jackson, testified that "There were times he would go almost every day" to Klein's office. Jackson often appeared intoxicated when he left, Muhammad testified.
Jackson once told Muhammad that his frequent trips to the dermatologist were for treatment for a skin disease.
"My doctors tell me that I have to go, so I go," Muhammad said Jackson told him.

At the start of court proceedings Wednesday, Paul Gongaware, an executive with the company promoting Jackson's comeback concerts, said he noticed that Jackson had "a little bit of a slower speech pattern, just a slight slur in the speech" after a visit with Klein.

Medical records show that Klein gave Jackson numerous shots of Demerol in the weeks before his death, Chernoff told jurors Tuesday.
"Dr. Klein did not do anything that was medically inappropriate," Klein's lawyer, Garo Ghazarian, told HLN's "Issues with Jane Velez-Mitchell" Wednesday.
The last time Klein gave Jackson drugs was more than three days before his death, Ghazarian said.
Jackson's inability to sleep the morning he died was "one of the insidious effects" of Demerol addiction withdrawal, Chernoff said. Since Murray did not know about the Demerol, he could not understand why Jackson was unable to fall asleep that morning, Chernoff said.
Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor previously ruled that while the jury can see some of the records of Klein's treatment of Jackson, the doctor would not testify. Demerol was not found in Jackson's body during the autopsy, which makes Klein's testimony irrelevant, Pastor ruled.

The trial began Tuesday with prosecutors playing a stunning audio recording of an apparently drugged Jackson slurring his words weeks before his death. Prosecutors also showed jurors a photo of Jackson's corpse on a hospital gurney.

If convicted of involuntary manslaughter, Murray could spend four years in a California prison and lose his medical license.

http://edition.cnn.com/2011/09/30/justice/california-conrad-murray-trial/index.html?eref=rss_crime
 
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Re: Murray Trial_ All media reports/articles - Merged - No discussion September 30th

Conrad Murray Trial, Day 4: Paramedic Describes Lidocaine Bottles in Jackson's Bedroom

(Live Feed)
Published: September 30, 2011 @ 8:08 am

Updated, 2:41 p.m.:

Los Angeles paramedic Martin Blount -- who was among the responders to the 9/11 call on the day of Michael Jackson's death -- testified at the involuntary manslaughter of Dr. Conrad Murray on Friday that there were three open vials of the anesthetic lidocaine in Michael Jackson's bedroom when they arrived at the scene.


Blount (pictured) described how the vials were scattered on the floor of the room. He also testified that, when asked by fellow paramedic Richard Senneff about drugs that he administered to Jackson, he made mo mention of lidocaine.

Blount also testified that he saw Murray scoop up three of the bottles and put them into a black bag as they prepared to transport to the hospital.

According to Blount's testimony, Murray was in a hectic state as emergency responders arrived in the bedroom.

"He was a little flustered; he was sweating profusely and he was agitated," Blount told the court.

According to Blount, Murray made a phone call in the ambulance as they transported Jackson to the hospital at UCLA.

"It's about Michael, and it doesn't look good," Blount recalled Murray saying.

Previously...

Richard Senneff, a paramedic who answered the 911 call at Michael Jackson's home on the day of the singer's death, told the court during Conrad Murray's involuntary manslaughter trial Friday that the situation "did not seem normal" when he arrived at the scene.
Senneff (pictured), of the Los Angeles Fire Department, detailed multiple red flags that he noticed on the June 25, 2009 call, including Murray's responses to his questions.
Senneff testified that, when he asked Murray what Jackson's underlying heath issue was, Murray failed to respond the first two times he asked, and eventually responded that there was no underlying issue.

"Simply, that did not add up to me -- doctors in the house, IV pole, IV hooked up to the patient -- it simply did not seem normal" that there would be no underlying condition, Senneff testified.
As expected, Senneff also testified that, when he asked Murray what medications Jackson had been taking, he he didn't mention Propofol, which was found to contribute to the singer's death.
"He said, 'No he's not taking anything,' then he followed that up by saying, 'I just gave him a little bit of Lorazepam to help him sleep," Senneff told the court.
Eventually, Murray told Senneff that he'd been treating Jackson for dehydration and exhaustion.
Senneff also noted that, when he asked when Jackson went down, Murray told him that it had occurred just as he had placed the 911 call -- which gave Senneff the impression that "we had a good chance of saving" Jackson. However, when paramedics hooked up an EKG, he was flatlining, and the drugs paramedics gave Jackson in order to re-start his heart had no effect.

http://www.mjjcommunity.com/forum/t...les-Merged-No-discussion-September-30th/page4
 
Re: Murray Trial_ All media reports/articles - Merged - No discussion September 30th

RT @InSession: Janet and Randy Jackson just left the courthouse to loud chants of "Justice for Michael".


abc7
Drama in the courtroom: judge is FURIOUS with partner Matt Alford in the firm of defense attorney Ed Chernoff for giving interview today.
 
Re: Murray Trial_ All media reports/articles - Merged - No discussion September 30th

http://m.apnews.mobi/ap/db_6776/contentdetail.htm?contentguid=aECEdD3x


LOS ANGELES (AP) - After just a few moments in Michael Jackson's bedroom, the paramedic dispatched to save the singer's life knew things weren't adding up.
There was the skinny man on the floor, eyes open and a surgical cap on his head. His skin was turning blue. Paramedic Richard Senneff asked the sweating, frantic-looking doctor in the room what condition the stricken man had.
"He said, 'Nothing. He has nothing,'" Senneff told jurors at the involuntary manslaughter trial of Jackson's doctor, Conrad Murray.
"Simply, that did not add up to me," Senneff said.
Over the course of the 42 minutes that Los Angeles paramedics tried to revive Jackson, several other things about the room and Murray's responses seemed inconsistent with what had really happened, Senneff said.
After repeated prodding, Murray revealed a few details about his actions, saying that he had only given Jackson a dose of the sedative lorazepam to help him sleep. Senneff noted there were bottles of medicine on Jackson's nightstand, and Murray finally offered that he was treating the singer for dehydration and exhaustion.
Murray never mentioned that he had also been giving Jackson doses of the anesthetic propofol and other sedatives, a key omission that prosecutors say shows he repeatedly tried to conceal his actions during the struggle to save Jackson.
Murray, 58, has pleaded not guilty. If convicted, Murray could face up to four years in prison and lose his medical license.
Prosecutors contend the Houston-based cardiologist repeatedly lied to medics and emergency room doctors about medications he had been giving Jackson in the singer's bedroom. They contend Murray administered a fatal dose of propofol and other sedatives.
Defense lawyers claim Jackson gave himself the fatal dose after his doctor left the room.
Defense attorney Nareg Gourjian asked Senneff whether Jackson's appearance was consistent with someone who was a drug addict.
Senneff said that was a difficult determination to make, but that the singer "looked like he had a chronic health problem."
Senneff was the first paramedic to reach Jackson's bedroom and said within moments, he and three other paramedics were working to revive Jackson. After trying multiple heart-starting medications and other efforts, Jackson was still lifeless.
"Did you ever see any sign of life in Mr. Jackson during the entire time you were attempting to save him," prosecutor Deborah Brazil asked.
"No I did not," Senneff said.
Another paramedic dispatched to the room, Martin Blount, agreed. He told jurors that they thought Jackson was dead soon after arriving in the room.
Blount also said he saw three open bottles of lidocaine on the floor of the room, but Murray never mentioning giving Jackson the painkiller. He told jurors he saw the doctor scoop up the vials and drop them in a black bag.
Emergency room personnel at a nearby hospital advised Senneff to declare Jackson dead in his bedroom, but the singer was transported because Murray wanted life-saving efforts to continue.
He said he also saw Murray collecting items from Jackson's bedside after the singer was taken to an ambulance. The doctor was alone in the bedroom for several moments before joining paramedics in the ambulance for the drive to the hospital, Senneff said.
In the ambulance, Blount said, he heard Murray make a phone call. "'It's about Michael, and it doesn't look good,'" Blount recalled hearing Murray saying.
Jurors also heard from a former Murray patient who lauded the doctor's treatment of him, but said his cardiologist became increasingly distant and hard to reach while working with Jackson.
"I felt like I was getting the best care in the world," said Robert Russell of Las Vegas, before Murray became the singer's personal physician. "The advice he gave me saved my life."
He grew irritated with Murray after the doctor went to work for Jackson. Russell said he couldn't get answers about his own treatment, and the man who once spent so much time offering care and advice was unreachable.
He called Murray's office on June 25, 2009 - the day Jackson died - and demanded to speak to the doctor.
The doctor returned the call and left him a voicemail at 11:49 a.m. Prosecutors are using records to show that Murray was on the phone in the moments before he realized Jackson was unconscious.
Thirty-seven minutes later, Senneff ran into Jackson's bedroom.

 
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