Preliminary Hearing Updates only. NO DISCUSSION

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Doctor's private life in the spotlight

Prosecutors put a spotlight on Dr. Conrad Murray’s complicated personal life Friday, summoning to the witness stand three mistresses –- two former and one current -- as they continued laying out evidence against the doctor in Michael Jackson’s death.

Only one of the women, the doctor’s current girlfriend, testified at length about him. But their testimony suggested that prosecutors may try link the financial costs of Murray’s romantic life with his desire to keep the $150,000-a-month job with the singer.

“When you began an intimate relationship with Dr Murray … were you aware he had six other children?” Deputy Dist. Atty. Deborah Brazil asked Nicole Alvarez, the mother of his toddler son.

Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor, who will determine whether there is enough evidence to try Murray for involuntary manslaughter, said the question was irrelevant and ordered Alvarez not to answer.

Murray, 57, is married to a medical-school classmate but has fathered children with several other women, including Alvarez, the mother of his 20-month-old son.

Murray was simultaneously dating another woman, Houston cocktail waitress Sade Anding, and it was her testimony that bore most directly on Jackson’s death. She was on the phone with Murray around the time the doctor found the singer stricken in bed. She said he abruptly stopped responding to her comments.

“I just remember saying, ‘Hello, hello, hello! Are you there? Are you there,’” Anding recalled. She said she heard “a commotion, as if the phone was in a pocket or something,” followed by coughing and a “mumbling of voices” that she did not recognize.

She said she called Murray back and also texted him, but was unable to reach him.

Jackson died June 25, 2009 after going into cardiac arrest in a bedroom of his rented Holmby Hills home. The coroner determined that he died from a combination of the surgical anesthetic propofol and several sedatives.

Phone records indicate that Murray made 11 calls during the time that authorities say he should have been closely monitoring Jackson.

Bridgette Morgan, another former girlfriend, testified briefly that she had phoned Murray about a half-hour before Jackson stopped breathing, but did not reach him.

The most extensive testimony came from Alvarez, a 29-year-old actress who met Murray in 2005 when he was a customer at a Las Vegas “gentlemen’s club” where she worked.

Asked by Brazil asked if she knew the doctor, who lived in Las Vegas with his wife and children, was married when they met, she said she couldn’t remember. Later in her testimony, however, she said that Murray’s permanent residence was “in Las Vegas with his wife.”

She gave birth to their son in March 2009 and said she was planning to take the baby to London with Murray for Jackson’s planned concert stand at the O2 Arena.

Brazil produced packing slips showing six deliveries from a Las Vegas pharmacy -– the pharmacy from which Murray ordered propofol -- to the apartment where she lived and Murray paid the rent. She said Murray told her he was having packages shipped to the apartment, but she never opened the boxes or looked closely at the return address.

Alvarez said that she knew Murray left her apartment each night to treat Jackson, but that the physician told her “absolutely nothing” about those treatments.

“Dr. Murray and I were on a need-to-know basis. He’s a professional man and I know my position and my place in his life and it is not my duty to know” the details of his medical practice, she said.

Alvarez was a prickly and at times hostile witness for the prosecution, asking Brazil to repeat questions so often that the judge admonished her to pay better attention.

When the prosecutor asked about her expectations of Murray’s schedule while he was treating Jackson, she replied testily, “To begin with, I don’t have expectations of Dr. Murray, so I wouldn’t expect anything … that’s just a rule I live by.”

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lan...tors-private-life-in-spotlight-in-court-.html
 
Re: Preliminary hearing 7/1/11 day Four. UPDATES ONLY. NO DISCUSSION

Coroner Found A Dozen Bottles of Propofol

An investigator for the L.A. County Coroner's Office testified her office found 12 bottles of Propofol in Michael Jackson's home.

Elissa Fleak says two bottles were in the bedroom where MJ died, and the other 10 were in a nearby closet.

One of the Propofol bottles found in the room by the nightstand was empty.

In addition to the Propofol, investigators found a pharmacy full of drugs, including lorazepam, diazepam, temazepam, trazodone, flomax, clonazepam, tizanidine, hydrocodone, lidocaine and benoquin.

Also found ... used syringes and needles, as well as a box of unopened hypodermic needles, IV catheters and vials.
 
Trials and Tribulations is following Murray Prelim and they are taking detailed notes.They are also making updates from the court. They do not wish their full notes to be copied and posted so as they post a update I'll go through and make a summary here. If you want to read their full posts you can visit Trials and Tribulation website.

Elissa Fleak LA Coroner Investigator

- Fleak arrives at UCLA at 5:20PM for physical examination of the body to see if she can infer anything about the cause of death

- Fleak gets 4 bottles of blood from UCLA for toxicology tests.

- After ER she goes to MJ's house to make observation of the bedroom taking photographs, documenting the room.

- Fleak starts with documenting prescription medications found on the stand. She observes flomax clonazapan, diazapam, lorazapam, tomazapam, trazadone tiziaandine, several pill bottles, tubes of lotion. Hydrocodone. tube of lidocane lotion. benequin. She documents who prescribed what.

- Tube of lidocaine lotion on table. There was a syringe on the table and one on the ground as well, next to the bed. IV bag with connected tubing. Blue “ambu” bag. goes to a nasal canua. Syringe on the table, needle on the floor, they may have been together they may not have been. (this is the one she described as broken syringe) ,an IV stand. saline bag. jug of urine. several urine pads. open box of disposable hypodermic needles. Iv catheters. empty vial of propofol and tomazinil.

- She returns June 29 for her investigation. She learned from detectives that there's additional evidence in the house. She goes to the attached room lined with wooden closets lined with wood. She recovers several items.

- List of the items: 1 black square bag with a zipper. 1 dark blue bag with a zipper with costco on the outside.light blue and brown colord bag. With a zipper with baby essentials bag .Misc. medical supplies. bag full of bedoquin lotions.

- Inside one bag : black pressure cuff, three 30 mil bottles of lidocaine. 2 empty and one of them had some liquid in it. All three of them had been opened.

- Large blue costco bag: saline bag that hat had been cut open with 100 mg propofol bottle inside it (open and had liquid in it). 20ml propofol open with liquid in it. 10 ml morazapam bottle open with liquid in it. 2 bottles of midazalom 10 ml both open both had liquid in them. bloody piece of gauze A bag of miscellaneous medical packaging and finger pulse monitor.

- Other bags: 2 100ml bottles of propofol , 2 20 ml bottles of propofol unopened, 3 20 ml bottles of lidocaine opened.1 30 mil bottle of lido unopened 20 ml bottle of diazolam opened 1 4ml of diazopam unopened etc (this is not a complete list)

- Additional items : Red pill bottle with no label that contained 14 caples turend out ot be emphederine. Over the counter night drops. Five business cards of Dr. Murray.IV clamp
blue strip of rubber.

- Overall : 11 bottles of propofol + 1 empty propofol bottle on the floor = 12 bottles of propofol. 6 bottles of lidocaine

- Fleak says she also saw some juice bottles.

- Fleak says the syringe was 2 feet from the bed, bottle of Propofol and syringes were also a couple of feet away.
 
CNN In Session

Elissa Fleak was the next witness called to the stand. She’s been a Coroner Investigator for the L.A. County Coroner for the past 8 years.

Fleak performed an external body exam on MJ on 6/25/09 and says she did not see obvious signs of a cause of death.

Fleak also went to Jackson’s home to examine his bedroom - where she took pics and collected ‘several pill bottles’ from beside his bed.

Fleak says the prescribing physician on all the prescription medicines, whether in pill or cream form, was Dr. Conrad Murray.

Fleak notes items she found in MJ bedroom – an I.V. stand, what appeared to be a jug of urine and an unopened box of hypodermic needles.

She also says she recovered an empty 200 milligram bottle of Propofol.

Fleak returned to the Jackson home 6/29/09 and inventoried items from 4 different bags found in MJ bedroom.

Among the items inventoried, Fleak noted a blood pressure pump, a saline bag, gauze, a finger pulse monitor and 11 bottles of Propofol

In total, there were 12 bottles of Propofol found and documented in Jackson's room.

On cross Fleak says a needle on the bedroom floor was about a foot away from Jackson’s bed - while the Propofol was ‘a couple of feet away’.

The defense ended its questioning and there is no redirect examination. Elissa Fleak is dismissed.
 
Re: Preliminary hearing 7/1/11 day Four. UPDATES ONLY. NO DISCUSSION

A coroner's investigator testified Friday that she found 12 bottles of a powerful anesthetic that contributed to the death of Michael Jackson in the singer's bedroom and closet after he died.
Investigator Elissa Fleak said nine of the bottles were found in a bag labeled "Baby Essentials" in the closet. Other medications and syringes also were discovered during a search of Jackson's rented mansion four days after his death on June 25, 2009, she said.

Fleak was the first investigator to describe in detail the items authorities recovered from Jackson's bedroom.

Her testimony came on the fourth day of a preliminary hearing to determine if there is enough evidence for Dr. Conrad Murray to stand trial for involuntary manslaughter. He has pleaded not guilty.

Fleak said she found a total of six vials of the painkiller lidocaine, as well as other prescription medications and syringes, including two found next to Jackson's bed.

Murray's attorney, J. Michael Flanagan, asked Fleak whether she checked to see how much liquid remained in each of the vials.

"There were so many vials, I don't remember which ones were more full or less full," Fleak said.

Authorities contend Jackson died after Murray gave him a lethal dose of propofol and other sedatives in the bedroom then delayed calling 911 while he collected and bagged medications.

Earlier in the day, a former girlfriend of Murray testified that he had been distracted when he called her on the morning of the singer's death, and she heard commotion in the background.

Witness Sade Anding said she realized at one point that Murray wasn't paying attention to her. She heard coughing and mumbling but didn't recognize the voice as Murray, she said.

"I heard commotion as if the phone was in a pocket or something," Anding said.

The testimony added details to a timeline being developed by prosecutors at a hearing.

Phone records show Murray called Anding at 11:51 a.m. She said she stayed on the line for five to six minutes, but Murray never got back on the phone.

The records indicate 911 was dialed at 12:21 p.m.

Prosecutors also called Murray's current girlfriend, Nicole Alvarez, and asked about shipments the doctor had sent to her apartment from a Las Vegas pharmacy.

Alvarez acknowledged receiving several packages for Murray but said she never looked inside and didn't know the contents.

Authorities have said in court documents they believe Murray was having shipments of propofol and other medications used by Jackson sent to Alvarez.

It's unusual to send propofol to a private residence but not illegal.

The phone records show Murray called Alvarez from the ambulance that transported Jackson to a hospital, but prosecutors did not ask her about the call that lasted two minutes.

http://www.usatoday.com/life/people/2011-01-07-michael-jackson_N.htm
 
Re: Preliminary hearing 7/1/11 day Four. UPDATES ONLY. NO DISCUSSION

Murray Lawyer Begins to Paint Defense Strategy

The defense for Dr. Conrad Murray laid the groundwork for their strategy -- that Michael Jackson delivered the fatal shot of Propofol -- during cross-examination of an investigator from L.A. County Coroner's Office.

Murray's lawyer, J. Michael Flanagan, asked Elissa Fleak two questions that alluded to their theory: 1) Was the IV bag fingerprinted? and 2) Was it possible for Jackson to reach the syringes from the bed?

As TMZ first reported, the defense will argue that Jackson became frustrated when he couldn't sleep that day and gave himself the shot of Propofol that eventually killed him.

edited to add: apparently Judge didn't allow these questions and Fleak didn't answer the questions.
 
Recap posted by Ivy on Twitter:

Summary of Conrad Murray Preliminary Hearing Day 4 / Jan 7 2011

- Katherine, Joe, and Latoya Jackson are all present.

Detective Dan Myers testimony

- Myers is under cross examination. A lot of objections to the questions.

Sade Anding testimony

- Sade is employed Sullivan Steak house (in Houston) and met Murray there in February 2009. She was Murray's girlfriend/mistress in June 2009.

- Sade Anding -- who was in Houston the day MJ died -- testified she received a call from Murray at around 12:30 PM. It's unclear if she was referring to Pacific or Central time. But there is only one call in the phone records from Murray to Sade, and that's at 11:51 AM PT.

-She said he abruptly stopped responding to her comments. “I just remember saying, ‘Hello, hello, hello! Are you there? Are you there,’” Anding recalled. She said she heard “a commotion, as if the phone was in a pocket or something,” followed by coughing and a “mumbling of voices” that she did not recognize.

- She said she called Murray back and also texted him, but was unable to reach him.

Bridget Morgan Testimony

- Morgan met Murray in 2003 at a club and has a social relationship with him. She called Murray on June 25th but didn't talk with him.

Nicole Alvarez Testimony

- Alvarez met Murray in 2005 at a club she works. Alvarez says that she and Murray developed an ‘intimate relationship’ but she doesn’t recall if he told her that he was still married. Later in her testimony, however, she said that Murray’s permanent residence was “in Las Vegas with his wife.”

- She says Murray stays with her 2-3 nights and doesn't know where he is when he's not staying with her. "Well, I don’t have expectations of Dr. Murray, so that’s fair to say. That’s just a rule that i live by."

- She learns sometime that Murray is MJ's personal doctor (she's quite confused about when she learned it though).

- She says Murray would leave the house at 9-10PM and return between 7-10AM (although there wasn't a pattern).

- Alvarez said that she knew Murray left her apartment each night to treat Jackson, but that the physician told her “absolutely nothing” about those treatments. “Dr. Murray and I were on a need-to-know basis. He’s a professional man and I know my position and my place in his life and it is not my duty to know” the details of his medical practice, she said.

- Alvarez says Murray invited her on a trip to England – Murray already told her that he was accompanying MJ on the same trip.

- She says Murray told her that packages will come to her house and asked her to just bring them inside. She says he didn't tell her the contents or say that they were important. She says she never opened any of the packages. She says she never asked about the packages (what they contained).

- She says as the packages were for Murray she didn't pay attention to the sender. She said Murray told her he was having packages shipped to the apartment, but she never opened the boxes or looked closely at the return address.

Elissa Fleak LA Coroner Investigator

- Fleak arrives at UCLA at 5:20PM for physical examination of the body to see if she can infer anything about the cause of death. She did not see obvious signs of a cause of death.

- Fleak gets 4 bottles of blood from UCLA for toxicology tests.

- After ER she goes to MJ's house to make observation of the bedroom taking photographs, documenting the room, collecting ‘several pill bottles’ from beside his bed.

- Fleak starts with documenting prescription medications found on the stand. She observes flomax clonazapan, diazapam, lorazapam, tomazapam, trazadone tiziaandine, several pill bottles, tubes of lotion. Hydrocodone. tube of lidocane lotion. benequin. She documents who prescribed what.

- Tube of lidocaine lotion on table. There was a syringe on the table and one on the ground as well, next to the bed. IV bag with connected tubing. Blue “ambu” bag. goes to a nasal canua. Syringe on the table, needle on the floor, they may have been together they may not have been. (this is the one she described as broken syringe) ,an IV stand. saline bag. jug of urine. several urine pads. open box of disposable hypodermic needles. Iv catheters. empty vial of propofol and tomazinil.

- She returns June 29 for her investigation. She learned from detectives that there's additional evidence in the house. She goes to the attached room lined with wooden closets lined with wood. She recovers several items.

- List of the items: 1 black square bag with a zipper. 1 dark blue bag with a zipper with costco on the outside.light blue and brown colord bag. With a zipper with baby essentials bag .Misc. medical supplies. bag full of bedoquin lotions.

- Inside one bag : black pressure cuff, three 30 mil bottles of lidocaine. 2 empty and one of them had some liquid in it. All three of them had been opened.

- Large blue costco bag: saline bag that hat had been cut open with 100 mg propofol bottle inside it (open and had liquid in it). 20ml propofol open with liquid in it. 10 ml morazapam bottle open with liquid in it. 2 bottles of midazalom 10 ml both open both had liquid in them. bloody piece of gauze A bag of miscellaneous medical packaging and finger pulse monitor.

- Other bags: 2 100ml bottles of propofol , 2 20 ml bottles of propofol unopened, 3 20 ml bottles of lidocaine opened.1 30 mil bottle of lido unopened 20 ml bottle of diazolam opened 1 4ml of diazopam unopened etc (this is not a complete list)

- Additional items : Red pill bottle with no label that contained 14 caples turend out ot be emphederine. Over the counter night drops. Five business cards of Dr. Murray.IV clamp
blue strip of rubber.

- Overall :
6 bottles of lidocaine.
12 bottles of propofol. Elissa Fleak says two bottles were in the bedroom where MJ died, and the other 10 were in a nearby closet. One of the Propofol bottles found in the room by the nightstand was empty.

- Fleak says she also saw some juice bottles.

- On cross Fleak says a needle on the bedroom floor was about a foot away from Jackson’s bed - while the Propofol was ‘a couple of feet away’.

- Murray's lawyer, J. Michael Flanagan, asked Elissa Fleak two questions that alluded to their theory: 1) Was the IV bag fingerprinted? and 2) Was it possible for Jackson to reach the syringes from the bed? Judge didn't allow these questions as they were speculative and Fleak didn't answer these questions.
 
Preliminary Hearing 10/1/11. Day Five. UPDATES ONLY. NO DISCUSSION.

We will post updates here for your convenience.
 
Re: Preliminary Hearing 10/1/11. Day Five. UPDATES ONLY. NO DISCUSSION.

CNN In Session

Murray Hearing: first order of business-Judge Pastor & attorneys discuss evidentiary matters regarding info taken from Dr. Murray's iPhone.

After a 45-min delay, Judge Pastor says 'some info on files are privileged...but a significant number of materials are not.'

A new file was made and given to prosecutors. A 15-minute recess was granted for new items to be reviewed.


Plus we learned that toxicologists will testify either today or tomorrow. (from Trials and Tribulations)
 
Re: Preliminary Hearing 10/1/11. Day Five. UPDATES ONLY. NO DISCUSSION.

TMZ

Judge: Murray's iPhone Admissible as Evidence

Judge Michael Pastor ruled this morning that recently obtained data from Dr. Conrad Murray's iPhone can admitted as evidence.

According to Murray's attorney, Ed Chernoff, the phone contains a few short voicemails and 12 screenshots that may be used as evidence during the hearing.

The prosecution has used phone records create a timeline of what Murray did on the day Michael Jackson died.
 
Re: Preliminary Hearing 10/1/11. Day Five. UPDATES ONLY. NO DISCUSSION.

Recently obtained data from the cell phone of the doctor charged in Michael Jackson's death can be admitted as evidence in a preliminary hearing, a judge ruled Monday.

Murray's defense attorney, Ed Chernoff, described some of the data as brief voicemails. He also said there were 12 screenshots found on the phone that may be used as evidence.

Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor made the ruling before testimony was to resume at the hearing of Dr. Conrad Murray.

A prosecutor said he intended to use some of the information, which was disclosed to attorneys handling the case late last week, when he calls his first witness of the day.

Pastor said some of the information is protected by attorney-client privilege, but most is not.

Prosecutors have used Murray's phone records to help create a detailed timeline of the doctor's actions on the day Jackson died.

http://www.forbes.com/feeds/ap/2011/01/10/entertainment-us-michael-jackson-doctor_8248516.html
 
Re: Preliminary Hearing 10/1/11. Day Five. UPDATES ONLY. NO DISCUSSION.

TMZ

Dr. Murray Ordered a Boatload of Propofol

A pharmacist Dr. Murray used to order Propofol just testified the doctor order box after box of the drug in the two months before Michael Jackson's death.

Tim Lopez, a pharmacist at Applied Pharmacy Services in Las Vegas, said beginning on April 6, 2009, Dr. Murray began ordering large quantities of Propofol. On that date, he ordered 10 single dose vials.

Murray, who had the drugs sent to his girlfriend's Santa Monica home where he was living, also ordered boxes of the drug on April 28 -- 4 boxes and each of the boxes had 10 100ml vials.

Later that month, Murray ordered 20 vials of midazolan and 20 vials of lorazepam.

On May 12, Murray ordered 4 boxes of Propofol, along with 2 trays of midazolan.

On June 10, Murray ordered 4 boxes of Propofol, and 2 20ml Propofol.

In all, Murray ordered 255 vials of Propofol in the two months -- including 130 vials of Propofol in 100ml doses and another 125 vials of Propofol in 20ml vials.
 
From Trials and Tribulations draft updates.

STEPHEN J. MARX

- Marx is the Computer forensic examiner in the DEA who examined the iPhone.

- Screenshots are the save of what has been on the screen in the memory of the iPhone.

- Email june 25th 2009, with the greeting of Hi Conrad, with signature, Bob Taylor, of Bob Taylor’s Insurance of London. Came from a sender based in London England. Based on that header as sent from UK, 5:54 am in Los Angeles. The email was about specific inquires regarding the health of MJ.

- Murray responds to it at LA Time 11:27AM. The response content is about autorization of release of medical records, to get insurance.

- There were also forwarded emails attached from the insurance broker , they were sent back and forth regarding company officials representatives MJ and AEG
 
From Trials and Tribulations draft updates.

Tim Lopez

- Owner of Applied Pharmacy Services and a pharmacist for 15 years.

- Murray calls him in March, 2009 about benoquin 20% (cream for vitiligo) and it’s availability. Pharmacy finds a supplier. Murray ordered 40 of the 30 gram, 20%. Murray tells the pharmacy that his patient was african american and that he would instruct in the dispersal of it’s use.

- Later Murray asks about propofol and saline bags. Pharmacy provides the information Murray requests and he placed an order. Initial order 1 carton of 100ml bottles. Ten inside the carton and 2 specific formultions of propofol. plus nine saline bags. And renewed the benoquin order.

- Later he asks them if they would ship his orders to Santa Monica (Nicole Alvarez's address).

- Later Murray asks about bedoquin cream if there was a formula that was less greasy.

- Murray also asks for energy formulations that would give increased wakefulness. He wants it to be non-narcotic and as natural as possible. He wants something over the counter (not prescription).

- Murray says his patient were complaining of injection pain and asked if the pharmacy could make a topical analgesic. He indicated he wanted a lidocaine only.

- Pharmacy makes the energy formulation by putting 3 products available over the counter putting them in 1 capsule. They added caffeine, asprin and ephedrine. and made 30 capsules with that formulation

- They also list all the orders they received from Murray.
 
CNN In Session

The first witness of the day is Stephen Marx--a former computer forensics examiner in the DEA lab in Virginia. Marx examined Dr. Murray's iPhone.

Marx says Murray received an e-mail on June 25, 2009 at 5:54 am (L.A. time) from what appears to be an insurance broker in London.

Marx testifies the e-mail's sender was inquiring about Jackson's health.

The e-mail is confirming Murray was the only doctor Jackson consulted during a 3-year period & asks about press reports re: Jackson’s health

Murray responds: 'as far as the statements of his health published by the press...they’re all felicitous, to the best of my knowledge.'
 
Re: Preliminary Hearing 10/1/11. Day Five. UPDATES ONLY. NO DISCUSSION.

A pharmacist testified Monday that the doctor charged in Michael Jackson's death bought 255 vials of a powerful anesthetic in the three months before the singer died from a lethal combination of the drug and other sedatives.

Dr. Conrad Murray purchased four shipments of the anesthetic propofol between April 6 and June 10, 2009, said Tim Lopez, owner of Applied Pharmacy Services in Las Vegas, where Murray has a clinic.

Murray bought 130 vials of propofol in 100 milliliter doses and another 125 vials in the smaller dose of 20 milliliters, Lopez said while testifying at a preliminary hearing to determine if there is enough evidence for Murray to stand trial after pleading not guilty to involuntary manslaughter.

A coroner's investigator previously testified that 12 vials of propofol were found in the bedroom and closet of the singer's rented mansion after his death.

Lopez said Murray asked him to ship some of the propofol to an address in Santa Monica, Calif. The address belongs to the doctor's girlfriend, although Lopez testified that Murray told him it was one of his clinics.

Murray also bought other sedatives from Lopez, according to the testimony.

Murray has told police he was concerned Jackson was addicted to propofol, and that he was trying to wean the singer from it.

In other testimony Monday, a retired federal investigator said he had retrieved an e-mail from Murray's cell phone containing an exchange between the doctor and a London insurance broker handling a policy for Jackson's planned series of comeback concerts.

The broker asked Murray on the morning of Jackson's death to address press reports that Jackson was in poor health.

"As far as the statements of his health published by the press, let me say they're all malicious to the best of my knowledge," Murray replied.

Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor ruled before the hearing began Monday that the information could be introduced as evidence.

Murray's defense attorney, Ed Chernoff, had described some of the data as brief voicemails. He also said there were 12 screenshots found on the phone.

Pastor said some of the information was protected by attorney-client privilege, but most is not.

Prosecutors have used Murray's phone records to help create a detailed timeline of the doctor's actions on the day Jackson died.

http://www.accessatlanta.com/atlanta-music/witness-jackson-doc-bought-800064.html
 
Pharmacist sent large amounts of anesthetic to Dr. Conrad Murray

The owner of a Las Vegas specialty pharmacy testified Monday that he sent large quantities of propofol to Dr. Conrad Murray in the three months before Michael Jackson died from an overdose of the surgical anesthetic.

Pharmacist Tim Lopez said Murray never mentioned the pop star was his only patient at the time and instead led him to believe the 255 vials of propofol he requested were being used for patients at a Los Angeles clinic.

In reality, the four shipments Murray placed, including a final order 10 days before Jackson stopped breathing, went to the Santa Monica apartment where Murray’s mistress and infant son lived.

Lopez said that when he volunteered to personally deliver an order during a trip to Los Angeles, Murray told him not to.

“He said just Fed Ex it the way we normally do,” Lopez recalled.

Lopez took the stand at a preliminary hearing to determine whether prosecutors have enough evidence to try Murray for involuntary manslaughter. The 57-year-old doctor has pleaded not guilty. He has acknowledged using the drug as a sleep aid for his famous patient, a chronic insomniac.

Defense lawyers have suggested in court that the amount of propofol Murray gave Jackson was not enough to cause the singer's June 25, 2009, death. Under questioning by a prosecutor, the pharmacist said Murray asked several times for advice on what the doctor might take to boost his energy and “wakefulness.”
Jackson usually had Murray work an overnight shift at his rented Holmby Hills mansion, according to other witnesses. Lopez said he created a capsule of three over-the-counter products -- caffeine, ephedrine and aspirin -- for the doctor, who later said it had helped his problem.

Judge Michael Pastor also reviewed data gleaned from Murray’s iPhone. Screen shots of the doctor’s e-mail inbox show he and others involved with Jackson’s planned comeback concert series were discussing the singer’s health in the hours before he died.

In one e-mail displayed in court, a London insurance broker trying to secure a policy in case of cancellation asked Murray to prove details about the singer’s care and to respond to media allegations that Jackson suffered from lupus, cancer and other ailments.

The doctor e-mailed back that he did not have authorization to share the information, but wrote, “As far as the statements of his health published by the press, let me say they are all fallacious to the best of my knowledge.”

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lan...s-of-anesthetic-to-dr-conrad-murray.html#more
 
Re: Preliminary Hearing 10/1/11. Day Five. UPDATES ONLY. NO DISCUSSION.

CNN In Session

The next witness is Tim Lopez. He is a pharmacist and runs his own business, Applied Pharmacy Services, in Las Vegas.

Lopez says in Nov. '08, Murray called him to get a cream to treat vitiligo. However, the cream wasn't available to Lopez.

Lopez lost contact with Murray & heard from him again in March '09. In April '09, Lopez says Murray ordered packages of the vitiligo cream.

In the same month Murray contacted Lopez to let him know he was happy with the cream. Murray then inquired about Propofol & saline bags.

April 6: Murray placed an order for 1 carton of 100 milliliter vials and 1 carton of 20 milliliter vials of Propofol & 9 saline bags.

He also duplicated his order of Benoquin, the cream used to treat vitiligo and asked that his order be shipped to his office in Vegas.

Murray then changed his mind on the shipping location and asked that the shipment be sent to the address of Nicole Alvarez.

Lopez testifies between the months of April & June, Murray called his pharmacy at least 7 times to place specific orders on different drugs.

Some ordered drugs were lorazepam, midazolam, propofol & flumazenil. Murray requested that each order be sent to the Santa Monica address.

Lopez is shown a series of sales invoices/shipping documents pertaining to Murray's orders.

Some of the receipts misspell the recipient's name as 'Nicole Alvarie' rather than Alvarez. The last is dated June 15, 2009.
 
Jaime Lintemoot,

- Lintemoot is a senior criminalist at the LA County Coroner’s Office and the primary toxicologist when it comes to cases involving propofol.

- From the blood taken in UCLA they determined propofol was present and later they did tissue tests.
 
Re: Preliminary Hearing 10/1/11. Day Five. UPDATES ONLY. NO DISCUSSION.

TMZ

Did Michael Jackson Drink Propofol???

Michael Jackson may have drank himself to death by consuming a juice box laced with Propofol -- at least that's what Conrad Murray's defense team suggested in court today.

Murray's attorney, J. Michael Flanagan, was questioning a Senior Criminalist from the L.A. County Coroner's Office about the 70 grams of fluid found in MJ's stomach at the time of the autopsy ... fluid that tested positive for traces of Propofol.

Flanagan noted the presence of a juice box on MJ's nightstand ... and asked if it had been tested for Propofol ... raising the possibility that MJ was sippin' on the anesthetic shortly before he died.

The criminalist testified he had not tested the juice box.

So what's Flanagan's point? He might be suggesting that MJ was secretly self-administering his Propofol ... which would support Murray's defense theory that MJ accidentally caused his own overdose.
 
Detectives describe Jackson doc's timeline of meds
LINDA DEUTSCH | January 10, 2011 07:13 PM EST |

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LOS ANGELES — A detective has testified that the doctor charged iin the death of Michael Jackson told police he had given the singer a powerful anesthetic at least six nights a week for two months before his death.

Los Angeles police detective Orlando Martinez said Monday that Dr. Conrad Murray told him he avoided giving propofol to Jackson until about 10:40 a.m. on the day he died.

Martinez says Murray reported giving the pop star 25 milligrams of the anesthetic – about half the usual dose.

Martinez says Murray told police he had given Jackson several sedatives intravenously earlier in the day.

Murray has pleaded not guilty to involuntary manslaughter. Prosecutors contend he administered a lethal mix of propofol and other sedatives to the singer.

The link:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/huff-w...ackson-doctor/
 
Trials and Tribulations website daily draft update.

Orlando Martinez

- Martinez is LA Robbery Homicide detective with 16 years experience. He investigates deaths.

- Martinez interviews Murray on June 27th.

- Murray says he first met MJ in 2006 through a patient's son and later treated MJ and his kids for flu in Las Vegas.

- Murray tells the detectives that he received a call from Michael Amir Williams saying that MJ wanted him as his doctor for the tour.

- Murray tells the detectives for a little over 2 months he has been treating MJ, assisting him to sleep six nights a week. Murray said he would assist MJ with 50 milligrams of propofol (maximum). An injection to get him to sleep and with an IV drip to keep him under.

- Murray says that he felt that MJ had developed a dependency on the propofol. So he decided to try to wean him off, and introduce other agents. Last 3 days Murray says He lowered the amount of propofol and administered the other two drugs -lorazapam and the midazalam.

- What happened after MJ came home from rehearsal : MJ arrived upstairs to the room, they had a brief discussion as to what went on that night and that MJ had a shower and changed. Murray rubbed some skin lotion on MJ back for a dermological condition

- Murray says IV was either on MJ's right or left leg below the knee.

- Murray's timeline
2AM : 10 mg valium orally. 2 mil lorazapam with saline pushed slowly 2 to 3 minutes.Done with a syringe using the IV port
3AM : 2 mg of diazopam same method
3:20AM : MJ fells asleep for 10-12 minutes then wakes up.
Murray says he turned down the lights turned on the music, and suggested that MJ to meditate. MJ says he has to cancel the rehearsal / shows because he couldn't sleep.
Murray gives more Mirazapam - no effect
5AM : 2 miligrams of lorazapam - no effect. MJ complains about cancellations.
7:30AM : MJ still up, complains about the pressure on him for cancelling rehearsals. Murray gives another 2 milligrams of diazopam.- no effect
10AM: MJ asks for his milk.
10:20-10:40 : Murray gives propofol. 25 mg over some time.
11AM : MJ falls asleep. Murray watches MJ for a while when he feels comfortable with MJ's situation he goes to the bathroom for 2 minutes.
He comes back after 2 minutes and stunned to see that MJ wasn’t breathing, because he always looked at his chest and his diaphramatic motion.
Murray starts chest compressions. - one hand under supporting MJ's back and the other hand on top of his chest. He says he also did mouth to mouth.
Murray says he couldn't get MJ to the floor on his own.
Murray says he was caring for MJ and didn't want to interrupt it and that's why he didn't call 911.
Murray injected MJ with tomazapil. .2 mil

- During this process he called Michael Amir Williams - while holding the cell phone one hand, giving chest compressions with other. Murray also left the room to the landing to call out to Kai Chase.

- Murray doesn't tell the detectives that he was making phone calls and sending text messages when he was supposed to care for MJ. Murray only mentions the call he made to Michael Amir Williams.

-Chernoff on cross: "Murray told you that MJ told Dr J that he wanted to push the medication in himself but Murray told you that he wouldnt’ let MJ do that." - Yes
 
Re: Preliminary Hearing 10/1/11. Day Five. UPDATES ONLY. NO DISCUSSION.

TMZ

Murray to Cops: Michael Begged Me For Propofol

In some of the most dramatic testimony to date, an LAPD detective testified Dr. Conrad Murray told him Michael Jackson "begged" him for Propofol shortly before he died.

LAPD Robbery Homicide Detective Orlando Martinez testified about an interview he conducted with Dr. Murray two days after MJ died. Martinez said Murray told him the night before Jackson died he was having trouble sleeping. Murray said he was trying to ween Jackson off of Propofol -- a drug he was giving MJ almost every night for two months.

Murray told Martinez he was giving Jackson a variety of other drugs, beginning sometime after 1AM, to no avail. Jackson then said if he didn't get to sleep he would cancel rehearsal.

Murray said he was feeling "pressure" from MJ to give him something to help him sleep, and Jackson was begging for Propofol. Murray claims he gave him a reduced dose, with Michael's help. As TMZ has reported many times before, Murray said MJ like to "push in the Propofol himself and that other doctors let him do it."

Murray went to the bathroom for 2 minutes, came back and claims he saw MJ wasn't breathing.
 
CNN In Session

The 20th witness is Orlando Martinez of the L.A.P.D. Martinez was one of the lead investigators of this case.

Martinez testifies that he began trying to contact Murray on 6/25, but was unable to. Martinez was contacted by Murray's attorney on 6/26.

Martinez and Murray's attorney, Michael Pena, made arraignments for Murray to meet Martinez on 6/27 at a hotel in Marina Del Rey.

During their meeting Murray told Martinez that for a little over 2 months he had treated Jackson and assisted him with sleeping nightly.

Murray said he would inject Jackson with 50 milligrams of Propofol...and then a drip infusion to keep him under .

Martinez testifies that Murray told him that 50 milligrams was the most he would give Jackson.

Martinez says Dr. Murray expressed a concern about Jackson developing a dependency on Propofol.

Murray felt MJ developed a dependency on Propofol, so with MJ's permission he decided to wean him off Propofol and use some other agents.

Martinez: Murray said he lowered the amount of propofol that he usually gave MJ, and he introduced midazolam & lorazepam, to help MJ sleep.

Martinez says that Murray told him he began prescribing Jackson with medication at around 2 a.m. on June 25th to help MJ sleep.

Over the next few hours, Murray injected Jackson with alternating doeses of midazolam and lorazepam, to help Jackson sleep.

Martinez testifies that according to Murray, none of the doses put Jackson to sleep for a prolonged period of time.

Martinez: At 10:00 am MJ was still awake, still complaining to him that he needs to sleep. MJ simply asked for ‘milk,’ meaning Propofol.

Martinez: Around 10:40 or 10:50, Murray administered Propofol to MJ.

Martinez: Dr. Murray said he gave him half his normal dose, 25 milligrams over the course of 25 minutes .

Martinez: Murray says MJ fell asleep around 11:00 am. Murray monitored him for a while until he felt comfortable with MJ’s condition.

Martinez: After monitoring Jackson, Murray says he left to go relieve himself in the restroom.

Martinez testifies Murray told him, during questioning, he was gone for about 2 min & when he returned to the room, MJ was not breathing.

Murray told Martinez that when he got to the room, shortly after 11 a.m., he started doing CPR on Jackson.

When Martinez asked Murray why he did not move MJ to the floor, Murray said he, 'could not move Mr. Jackson to the floor by himself.'

When Martinez asked Murray why he did not call 911, Murray said he was 'caring for his patient, and he did not want to neglect him.'

Martinez: Murray never mentioned making phone calls, sending emails or sending or receiving text messages while he was caring for Jackson

On cross, Martinez concedes that his interview with Dr. Murray was actually “pretty long”. Possibly over two hours and 47 minutes.

Martinez says Murray didn't refuse to answer any questions and he didn't try to stop the interview at any time to speak to his attorneys.

Martinez says that he – not Murray – is the one who chose to end the interview.

Martinez: According to Murray, Jackson referred to propofol as “milk,” and called lidocaine his “anti-burn.”

Martinez: Dr. Murray told him Jackson “liked to push it in himself” while getting injections, and “that other doctors let him do that.”

Murray told Det. Martinez that he wouldn’t let Michael Jackson do that.
 
Michael Jackson begged for propofol, detective says in recapping Conrad Murray's statement

The doctor said he had weaned Jackson off the drug but felt 'pressured' to administer it again.

Dr. Conrad Murray told detectives that Michael Jackson begged him for propofol on the day he died, saying his long-awaited comeback would never happen if the physician didn't put him to sleep with the drug he called "milk," according to court testimony Monday.

A homicide investigator said Murray described himself as "pressured" into administering the surgical anesthetic despite concerns that the 50-year-old music legend had become addicted as he prepared for a series of concerts in London.

"Mr. Jackson began to complain to him that he couldn't sleep and that he would have to cancel his rehearsals and cancel his shows," Los Angeles police detective Orlando Martinez said in Los Angeles County Superior Court.

Prosecutors summoned Martinez to the witness stand as they headed into the home stretch of a hearing to determine whether they have enough evidence to try Murray, 57, for involuntary manslaughter in the pop star's June 25, 2009, death from an overdose of propofol. The prosecution is expected to wrap up its presentation later this week.

Murray has pleaded not guilty.

The broad strokes of Murray's account to police — including his claim that he was in the restroom when Jackson stopped breathing — have already been made public, but the detective's testimony added additional details, such as the doctor's explanation for not calling for an ambulance immediately.

"He said he was caring for his patient and did not want to neglect him," Martinez said.

"Did he indicate that calling for a 911 operator would be neglecting him?" asked Deputy Dist. Atty. David Walgren.

"Yes," the detective said.

Murray, a cardiologist, has been criticized for trying to perform CPR while Jackson was in the bed; Martinez said that when he asked the doctor about it, Murray claimed he wasn't able to move Jackson to the floor.

The testimony drew snorts from a contingent of Jackson fans in the spectator's gallery. Martinez noted that the strapping physician, who stands 6 feet, 5 inches, outweighed the emaciated singer by 90 pounds.

Murray walked away from the hospital where Jackson was pronounced dead before homicide detectives had a chance to interview him, but two days later, he and two lawyers met with investigators in a Marina del Rey hotel.

Murray told them that he had been giving Jackson propofol to sleep for two months but had weaned him off it two days before his death, with the singer's permission. He said that on the day Jackson died, he tried to get him to sleep with a series of other sedatives and by encouraging his patient to try "meditating" but that ultimately Jackson insisted on propofol.

The doctor gave a timeline that appears an hour off from the chronology prosecutors have established with phone records and other witness accounts, according to Martinez's testimony.

The detectives said Murray recalled sitting with Jackson until about 11 a.m., then leaving for two minutes to use the restroom. He said that when he returned he was "stunned" to find that Jackson was not breathing. Other witness testimony and cellphone records indicate that Murray made his discovery at noon.

Under cross-examination, the detective acknowledged that the physician told him Jackson had concealed his long history of using propofol with other doctors when he hired Murray.

"Dr. Murray said to you that he didn't sign up for this, that he found out about Michael Jackson's desire for propofol after the fact?" asked defense lawyer Ed Chernoff.

"Correct," Martinez replied.

Judge Michael Pastor also heard testimony from the owner of a Las Vegas pharmacy that filled Murray's phone orders for propofol. Pharmacist Tim Lopez said Murray never mentioned that the pop star was his only patient at the time and instead led him to believe the 255 vials of propofol he requested were being used for patients at a Los Angeles clinic.

In reality, the four shipments Murray placed, including a final order 10 days before Jackson's death, went to the Santa Monica apartment where Murray's mistress and infant son lived. Lopez said that when he volunteered to personally deliver an order during a trip to Los Angeles, Murray told him not to.

"He said just FedEx it the way we normally do," Lopez recalled.

If convicted, Murray faces up to four years in prison.

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-conrad-murray-20110111,0,3455010.story
 
Detective recounts events before Jackson death

Michael Jackson, desperate for sleep, warned a doctor on the day he died that he would have to cancel his comeback concerts unless he received a dose of "his milk" — the powerful anesthetic propofol, according to testimony from the lead detective in the case against Jackson's doctor.

As a result, Dr. Conrad Murray yielded and gave the singer a dose of propofol after a night of administering lesser drugs, detective Orlando Martinez said.

Prosecutors said the combination of drugs was lethal and filed an involuntary manslaughter charge against Murray, who has pleaded not guilty.

Martinez, who interviewed Murray two days after Jackson's death, gave a chilling step-by-step account at Murray's preliminary hearing, saying the pop star lay dying while Murray administered CPR but didn't call 911.

Martinez, who spent nearly three hours interviewing Murray in the presence of his lawyers, said Murray told him he had been giving Jackson doses of propofol six nights a week for two months but was trying to wean him from the drug after becoming afraid his patient was becoming addicted.

The detective said Jackson came home from rehearsal abut 1 a.m. on June 25, 2009, showered and got into bed. Murray said he immediately connected an intravenous tube to the singer's leg and began giving him sedatives, according to Martinez.

The doctor said that began a night of continuous efforts to get the star to sleep. He told police he gave him the sedatives lorazepam and midazolam intravenously and supplied a valium pill, but nothing seemed to work.

At 3:30 a.m. he said, Jackson fell asleep for about 10 minutes but then was awake again and complaining that if he didn't get sleep he would have to cancel his much-anticipated "This is It" tour, the detective said.

Murray spoke of feeling pressure to get Jackson to sleep and sometime between 10:40 a.m. and 10:50 a.m. gave him half his usual 50 milligram dose of propofol, Martinez said.
"It was an injection to get him to sleep and a slow drip to keep him sleeping," the detective said.

He said Jackson fell asleep about 11 a.m. and Murray felt comfortable enough to leave the room and go to the bathroom. He told the detective he was out of the room for two minutes and "was stunned to see Mr. Jackson not breathing" when he returned.

Murray told police he started CPR through chest compressions then gave mouth-to-mouth resuscitation but did not consider calling 911.

"He said he was caring for his patient and did not want to neglect him," Martinez said.
He said Murray also was asked why he was giving Jackson CPR on a soft bed rather than moving Jackson to the floor.

"Dr. Murray said he could not move him to the floor by himself," the witness said.
Deputy District Attorney David Walgren pointed out that Murray is 6 feet 5 inches and weighs about 225 pounds. The frail Jackson weighed about 136 pounds when he died.

Phone records show 911 was not called until 12:21 p.m., and prosecutors contend the singer was dead before help arrived.

Murray's attorney Ed Chernoff asked Martinez if Murray had spoken of Jackson asking to self-administer propofol. He answered yes.

"Mr. Jackson knew all about propofol before Dr. Murray came on the scene?" asked Chernoff.

"Yes," said Martinez.

The detective was asked if Jackson had sought to "push the propofol" himself and he said that was correct.

"Michael Jackson told Dr. Murray he liked to push it in himself and other doctors let him do that?" Chernoff asked.

"Yes," sad the witness.

"And Dr. Murray said he wouldn't let him do that?" Chernoff asked.

"Correct," answered the witness.

Defense lawyers have presented little evidence during the hearing to decide if Murray should stand trial. Prosecutors have said they believe the defense will contend Jackson administered more propofol himself on the fateful day, leading to his death.

Earlier testimony by a pharmacist showed Murray purchased 255 vials of propofol during the three months before the singer died.

Murray bought 130 vials of propofol in 100-milliliter doses and another 125 vials in the smaller dose of 20 milliliters, said Tim Lopez, owner of Applied Pharmacy Services in Las Vegas, where Murray has a clinic.

The four shipments of propofol were purchased between April 6 and June 10, 2009, with most of the drugs shipped to the Santa Monica home of Murray's girlfriend, testimony showed.

Murray also purchased sedatives known as benzodiazpines, Lopez testified.

Using phone records and testimony from police and Murray's current and former girlfriends, prosecutors tried to show Murray was on the phone throughout the morning of Jackson's death, even after administering propofol to the singer.

They hope to convince a judge of several key points: that Murray was distracted when he should have been monitoring Jackson, that he delayed calling 911, that he botched CPR efforts and that the singer was dead before help was summoned.

Murray could face up to four years in prison if tried and convicted.

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/top/all/7375301.html
 
Ivy's twitter update:


Conrad Murray Preliminary Hearing Summary Day 5 January 10, 2011

- First order of business-Judge Pastor & attorneys discuss evidentiary matters regarding info taken from Dr. Murray's iPhone. A prosecutor said he intended to use some of the information, which was disclosed to attorneys handling the case late last week, when he calls his first witness of the day. Chernoff (Murray's attorney) voices concern about attorney-client privilege. The phone contains a few short voicemails and 12 screenshots. After a 45-min delay, Judge Pastor says 'some info on files are privileged... but a significant number of materials are not.' Judge Pastor allows Murray's iPhone admissible as evidence. A new file was made and given to prosecutors. A 15-minute recess was granted for new items to be reviewed.

Stephen Marx Testimony

- Marx is a computer forensic examiner in the DEA who examined the iPhone.

- He testifies about emails sent on June 25th between Murray and Bob Taylor, of Bob Taylor’s Insurance of London.*

- Bob Taylor sends Murray an email at 5:54 am LA time. The email was about specific inquires regarding the health of MJ. Murray responds to it at LA Time 11:27AM. The response content is about autorization of release of medical records, to get insurance.*

- The e-mail is confirming Murray was the only doctor Jackson consulted during a 3-year period & asks about press reports re: Jackson’s health. London insurance broker handling a policy for Jackson's TII concerts asked Murray on the morning of June 25th to address press reports that Jackson was in poor health.

- Murray responds: 'as far as the statements of his health published by the press...they’re all felicitous, to the best of my knowledge.'

- There were also forwarded emails attached from the insurance broker , they were sent back and forth regarding company officials representatives MJ and AEG

Tim Lopez Testimony*

- Tim Lopez is the owner of Applied Pharmacy Services and a pharmacist for 15 years.*

- Lopez says in Nov. '08, Murray called him to get a cream to treat vitiligo. However, the cream wasn't available to Lopez. Lopez lost contact with Murray & heard from him again in March '09.

- Murray calls him in March, 2009 about benoquin 20% (cream for vitiligo) and it’s availability. Pharmacy finds a supplier. Murray ordered 40 of the 30 gram, 20%. Murray tells the pharmacy that his patient was African American and that he would instruct in the dispersal of it’s use.*

- Later Murray asks about propofol and saline bags. Pharmacy provides the information Murray requests and Murray placed an order.

- April 6: Murray placed an order for 1 carton of 100 milliliter vials and 1 carton of 20 milliliter vials of Propofol & 9 saline bags.He also duplicated his order of Benoquin, the cream used to treat vitiligo and asked that his order be shipped to his office in Vegas.

- Murray then changed his mind on the shipping location and asked that the shipment be sent to the address of Nicole Alvarez. Lopez said Murray never mentioned MJ was his only patient at the time and instead led him to believe all the vials of propofol he requested were being used for patients at a Los Angeles clinic.

- Lopez testifies between the months of April & June, Murray called his pharmacy at least 7 times to place specific orders on different drugs. Some ordered drugs were lorazepam, midazolam, propofol & flumazenil. Murray requested that each order be sent to the Santa Monica address.

- Lopez said that when he volunteered to personally deliver an order during a trip to Los Angeles, Murray told him not to. “He said just Fed Ex it the way we normally do,” Lopez recalled.

- April 28 -- 4 boxes and each of the boxes had 10 100ml vials. Later that month, Murray ordered 20 vials of midazolan and 20 vials of lorazepam.

- On May 12, Murray ordered 4 boxes of Propofol, along with 2 trays of midazolan.

- On June 10, Murray ordered 4 boxes of Propofol, and 2 20ml Propofol.

- Overall: Murray ordered 255 vials of Propofol in the two months -- including 130 vials of Propofol in 100ml doses and another 125 vials of Propofol in 20ml vials.

- Murray also asks about benoquin cream if there was a formula that was less greasy.*

- Under questioning by a prosecutor, the pharmacist said Murray asked several times for advice on what the doctor might take to boost his energy and “wakefulness.” He wants it to be non-narcotic and as natural as possible. He wants something over the counter (not prescription). Pharmacy makes the energy formulation by putting 3 products available over the counter putting them in 1 capsule. They added caffeine, asprin and ephedrine and made 30 capsules with that formulation.*

- Murray says his patient were complaining of injection pain and asked if the pharmacy could make a topical analgesic. He indicated he wanted a lidocaine only.

Jaime Lintemoot Testimony

- Lintemoot is a senior criminalist at the LA County Coroner’s Office and the primary toxicologist when it comes to cases involving propofol.

- From the blood taken in UCLA they determined propofol was present and later they did tissue tests. Lintemoot mentions levels of propofol found by the tests.

- Murray's attorney, Flanagan, asked about the 70 grams of fluid found in MJ's stomach (that tested positive for traces of Propofol). Flanagan noted the presence of a juice box on MJ's nightstand ... and asked if it had been tested for Propofol ... raising the possibility that MJ was drinking on the anesthetic shortly before he died. The criminalist testified he had not tested the juice box.*

Orlando Martinez Testimony

- Martinez is LA Robbery Homicide detective with 16 years experience. He investigates deaths.*

- Martinez testifies that he began trying to contact Murray on 6/25, but was unable to. Martinez was contacted by Murray's attorney on 6/26.Martinez and Murray's attorney, Michael Pena, made arraignments for Murray to meet Martinez on 6/27 at a hotel in Marina Del Rey.

- Murray says he first met MJ in 2006 through a patient's son and later treated MJ and his kids for flu in Las Vegas.*

- Murray tells the detectives that he received a call from Michael Amir Williams saying that MJ wanted him as his doctor for the tour.

- Murray tells the detectives for a little over 2 months he has been treating MJ, assisting him to sleep six nights a week.*

- Murray said he would inject Jackson with 50 milligrams of Propofol...and then a drip infusion to keep him under . Martinez testifies that Murray told him that 50 milligrams was the most he would give Jackson.

- Martinez says Dr. Murray expressed a concern about Jackson developing a dependency on Propofol. Murray felt MJ developed a dependency on Propofol, so with MJ's permission he decided to wean him off Propofol and use some other agents. Martinez: Murray said he lowered the amount of propofol that he usually gave MJ, and he introduced midazolam & lorazepam, to help MJ sleep.

- What happened after MJ came home from rehearsal : MJ arrived upstairs to the room, they had a brief discussion as to what went on that night and that MJ had a shower and changed. Murray rubbed some skin lotion on MJ back for a dermological condition

- Murray says IV was either on MJ's right or left leg below the knee.

-- Murray's timeline and version of events

2AM : 10 mg valium orally. 2 mil lorazapam with saline pushed slowly 2 to 3 minutes.Done with a syringe using the IV port

3AM : 2 mg of diazopam same method

3:20AM : MJ fells asleep for 10-12 minutes then wakes up.

Murray says he turned down the lights turned on the music, and suggested that MJ to meditate. "Mr. Jackson began to complain to him that he couldn't sleep and that he would have to cancel his rehearsals and cancel his shows," Los Angeles police detective Orlando Martinez testifies.

Murray gives more Mirazapam - no effect

5AM : 2 miligrams of lorazapam - no effect. MJ complains again about cancellations.*

7:30AM : MJ still up, complains about the pressure on him for cancelling rehearsals. Murray gives another 2 milligrams of diazopam.- no effect

10AM: MJ asks for his "milk" - propofol

Martinez says Murray described himself as "pressured" into administering propofol despite his concerns that MJ had become addicted as he prepared TII.

10:20-10:40 : Murray gives propofol. 25 mg over some time.*

11AM : MJ falls asleep. Murray watches MJ for a while when he feels comfortable with MJ's situation he goes to the bathroom for 2 minutes.

He comes back after 2 minutes and stunned to see that MJ wasn’t breathing, because he always looked at his chest and his diaphramatic motion.

Murray starts chest compressions. - one hand under supporting MJ's back and the other hand on top of his chest. He says he also did mouth to mouth.

Murray says he couldn't get MJ to the floor on his own. Here Murray's explanation why he was giving MJ CPR on a soft bed rather than moving*
---"Dr. Murray said he could not move him to the floor by himself," the witness said.
--- Deputy District Attorney David Walgren pointed out that Murray is 6 feet 5 inches and weighs about 225 pounds and MJ weighed about 136 pounds when he died.

Murray says he was caring for MJ and didn't want to interrupt it and that's why he didn't call 911. Here is Murray's explanation for not calling for an ambulance immediately:

---"He said he was caring for his patient and did not want to neglect him," Martinez said.
---"Did he indicate that calling for a 911 operator would be neglecting him?" asked Deputy Dist. Atty. David Walgren.
--- "Yes," the detective said.

Murray injected MJ with tomazapil. .2 mil

- During this process he called Michael Amir Williams - while holding the cell phone one hand, giving chest compressions with other. Murray also left the room to the landing to call out to Kai Chase.

- Murray doesn't tell the detectives that he was making phone calls and sending text messages when he was supposed to care for MJ. Murray only mentions the call he made to Michael Amir Williams.

-Chernoff on cross: Murray's attorney Ed Chernoff asked Martinez if Murray had spoken of Jackson asking to self-administer propofol. He answered yes.

--- "Mr. Jackson knew all about propofol before Dr. Murray came on the scene?" asked Chernoff.
--- "Yes," said Martinez.
--- The detective was asked if Jackson had sought to "push the propofol" himself and he said that was correct.
--- "Michael Jackson told Dr. Murray he liked to push it in himself and other doctors let him do that?" Chernoff asked.
--- "Yes," sad the witness.
--- "And Dr. Murray said he wouldn't let him do that?" Chernoff asked.
--- "Correct," answered the witness.
 
Preliminary Hearing 11/1/11. Day Six. UPDATES ONLY. NO DISCUSSION.

Updates only
 
Re: Preliminary Hearing 11/1/11. Day Six. UPDATES ONLY. NO DISCUSSION.

Authorities Gunning for Conrad Murray's License

Sources tell TMZ .... the Medical Board of California will immediately ask the judge in Dr. Conrad Murray's preliminary hearing to yank his medical license if Murray is ordered to stand trial.



Judge Michael Pastor should rule within a week whether there's enough evidence to warrant a manslaughter trial in the death of Michael Jackson. If the judge orders a trial -- which he's expected to do -- the lawyer for the Medical Board -- who has been sitting in the courtroom -- will ask Judge Pastor to suspend Murray's license on the spot.

This will be the third attempt by the Board to suspend Murray's license. The first two attempts failed. Murray is already prohibited from administering "deep anesthetics," including Propofol.

Sources connected with Murray say he is furious that the Board is trying to suspend his ability to practice medicine, which would then make it impossible for him to pay for lawyers to defend him.

If California suspends Murray's license, it's likely the medical boards in Texas and Nevada would follow suit.

http://www.tmz.com/2011/01/10/conra...ckson-manslaughter-trial-preliminary-hearing/
 
Re: Preliminary Hearing 11/1/11. Day Six. UPDATES ONLY. NO DISCUSSION.

TMZ

Coroner Doesn't Believe Dr. Murray's Story

A doctor for the L.A. County Coroner's Office testified he doesn't believe Dr. Murray only gave Michael Jackson 25mg of Propofol.

Without saying Murray lied to cops during his interview two days after MJ died, Dr. Christopher Rogers testified if Murry were correct about the 25mg of Propofol, Jackson would have awakened after 3 to 5 minutes of sleep.

Rogers also testified he doesn't believe Jackson swallowed Propofol. The defense laid the groundwork for this theory yesterday, because small amounts of the drug were found in Jackson's stomach.

And Rogers said he believes it's inappropriate to use Propofol for insomnia and that Murray's care was "substandard."
 
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