Did Michael Jackson kill himself? Pre-trial hearing due in LA
SOURCE: Agence France-Presse
LOS ANGELES—Lawyers for Michael Jackson's personal doctor will argue that he killed himself, prosecutors claimed ahead of a pre-trial hearing Tuesday into the pop icon's death.
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SOURCE: Agence France-Presse
LOS ANGELES—Lawyers for Michael Jackson's personal doctor will argue that he killed himself, prosecutors claimed ahead of a pre-trial hearing Tuesday into the pop icon's death.
Dr. Conrad Murray was charged with involuntary manslaughter last February over Jackson's death on June 25, 2009 at age 50 from drug-induced respiratory arrest at his Beverly Hills mansion.
Murray administered a powerful cocktail of sedatives and painkillers to help him sleep, but a prosecutor claims defense lawyers will say Jackson woke up and injected himself with an overdose while Murray was out of the room.
"I do think it's clear the defense is operating under the theory that the victim, Michael Jackson, killed himself," said Deputy District Attorney David Walgren at a preliminary hearing last week.
"They don't want to say it but that's the direction in which they are going," he added. A defense lawyer declined to comment on any theories outside the court.
In the pre-trial hearing starting Tuesday, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor will decide if there is enough evidence for Murray to have to undergo a full trial.
Such hearings are usually routine proceedings in which only one or two witnesses are called, but prosecutors are set to call as many as 35 witnesses, according to the Los Angeles Times.
Those summoned are expected to include medical experts and investigators as well as the security guards and staff who were around in the days and hours leading up to Jackson's death, it said.
A lawyer for Murray said he expects the judge to order a full trial. "I don't anticipate this is the type of case that the D.A. won't have facts to support the couple of elements necessary for this charge," said Joseph Low.
The pre-trial hearing, which could last up to two weeks, comes after Jackson's father refiled a wrongful death lawsuit in November against the late singer's doctor.
The 24-page lawsuit claimed that Murray spent 47 minutes on the phone while Jackson was dying.
Joe Jackson is seeking unspecified damages from Murray and others, including a Las Vegas pharmacy said to have supplied the powerful sedative drug propofol administered to the singer before he died.
The legal papers also recount Jackson's poor health in the run-up to his death, noting that at the time he was suffering from "co-morbidities including anemia, chronic pneumonia, chronic bronchitis and brain swelling."
Jackson's father already filed a suit with a federal US court on June 25 last year, the anniversary of his son's death, but it was dismissed because the court said it was not within its jurisdiction.
Murray administered a powerful cocktail of sedatives and painkillers to help him sleep, but a prosecutor claims defense lawyers will say Jackson woke up and injected himself with an overdose while Murray was out of the room.
"I do think it's clear the defense is operating under the theory that the victim, Michael Jackson, killed himself," said Deputy District Attorney David Walgren at a preliminary hearing last week.
"They don't want to say it but that's the direction in which they are going," he added. A defense lawyer declined to comment on any theories outside the court.
In the pre-trial hearing starting Tuesday, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor will decide if there is enough evidence for Murray to have to undergo a full trial.
Such hearings are usually routine proceedings in which only one or two witnesses are called, but prosecutors are set to call as many as 35 witnesses, according to the Los Angeles Times.
Those summoned are expected to include medical experts and investigators as well as the security guards and staff who were around in the days and hours leading up to Jackson's death, it said.
A lawyer for Murray said he expects the judge to order a full trial. "I don't anticipate this is the type of case that the D.A. won't have facts to support the couple of elements necessary for this charge," said Joseph Low.
The pre-trial hearing, which could last up to two weeks, comes after Jackson's father refiled a wrongful death lawsuit in November against the late singer's doctor.
The 24-page lawsuit claimed that Murray spent 47 minutes on the phone while Jackson was dying.
Joe Jackson is seeking unspecified damages from Murray and others, including a Las Vegas pharmacy said to have supplied the powerful sedative drug propofol administered to the singer before he died.
The legal papers also recount Jackson's poor health in the run-up to his death, noting that at the time he was suffering from "co-morbidities including anemia, chronic pneumonia, chronic bronchitis and brain swelling."
Jackson's father already filed a suit with a federal US court on June 25 last year, the anniversary of his son's death, but it was dismissed because the court said it was not within its jurisdiction.