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Posts Tagged ‘ death ’
Did Jackson Self-Administer Fatal Dose of Propofol?
Defense Tries To Put Jackson Doctor In Positive Light
By ANTHONY McCARTNEY, Associated Press LOS ANGELES â After weeks of hearing prosecutors and witnesses cast the physician charged in Michael Jackson’s death as a bad doctor, defense attorneys will shift the case to some of Dr. Conrad Murray’s positive traits as the case nears its close. Murray’s defense team plans to call up to five character witnesses Wednesday who will likely speak about the Houston-based cardiologist’s care and life-saving abilities. The attorneys did not name the witnesses, but they are expected to be Murray’s patients. The flurry of character witnesses come as defense attorneys wind down their case. They told a judge Tuesday that after the character witnesses, they will only call two experts to try to counter prosecution experts who said Murray acted recklessly by giving Jackson the anesthetic propofol as a sleep aid. Defense attorneys could rest their case Thursday. They have already called nine witnesses, including a doctor and nurse practitioner who treated Jackson but refused his requests to help him obtain either an intravenous sleep aid or propofol. Murray, 58, has pleaded not guilty to involuntary manslaughter. He faces up to four years behind bars and the loss of his medical license if convicted. His attorneys contend Jackson was desperate for sleep and gave himself the fatal dose of propofol when his doctor left the room. They attempted to argue that Jackson would have been indebted to concert promoter AEG Live for nearly $40 million if his shows were canceled, but a judge blocked any mention of the figure to the jury Tuesday. Instead, jurors heard from two witnesses who knew Jackson and described their interactions with the singer in the months before his death. Nurse Cherilyn Lee testified about trying to help Jackson gain more energy in early 2009 to prepare for rehearsals for his planned series of comeback concerts. She said the singer complained he couldn’t sleep, and on Easter Sunday asked her to help him obtain Diprivan, a brand name for propofol. Lee, at times tearful, said she initially didn’t know about the drug. But after asking a doctor about it and reading a reference guide, Lee said she tried to convince Jackson it was too dangerous to use in his bedroom. “He told me that doctors have told him it was safe,” Lee testified of Jackson’s request for the anesthetic. “I said no doctor is going to do this in your house.” The singer, however, insisted that he would be safe as long as someone monitored him, she said. By Murray’s own admission, he left Jackson’s bedside on the morning of his death. When he returned, Jackson was unresponsive, according to his interview with police two days after Jackson’s death on June 25, 2009. The physician said he only left Jackson’s bedside for two minutes, although his own attorneys have suggested it might have been longer. Phone records show Murray made or received several calls in the hour before Murray summoned help. Lee acknowledged that she told detectives that she had told Jackson, “No one who cared or had your best interest at heart would give you this.” After refusing to help Jackson obtain propofol, she never saw the singer again. Another defense witness, AEG Live President and CEO Randy Phillips, said Jackson appeared to have total confidence in Murray during meetings in early June, just a weeks before the “This Is It” concerts were to debut in London. Jackson had missed some rehearsals and there were complaints from the show’s choreographer that the singer didn’t seem focused. A meeting was convened to discuss Jackson’s health, and Murray reassured Phillips and others that the singer was healthy and would be able to perform. “It was very obvious that Michael had great trust” in Murray, Phillips said. Phillips said he attended Jackson’s final rehearsal and was impressed. “I had goose bumps,” he said, adding that wasn’t a typical reaction. “I am as cynical as you can be about this business.” After the rehearsal, Phillips said he walked Jackson to his vehicle, which was waiting to take him to the rented mansion. “He said, `You got me here. Now I’m ready. I can take it from here,’” Phillips recounted. By the time Jackson and security arrived at the home, Murray had already arrived at the house and was waiting to help the singer get to sleep. Read more here: Defense Tries To Put Jackson Doctor In Positive Light
James Clark: The Numbers Are in, the Death Penalty Is Out
Over the last few weeks, polls were released by several independent organizations that all point to one conclusion: Californians are ready to dump the death penalty. The Public Policy Institute of California (PPIC) and the Field Poll both show California voters’ strong preference for life without the possibility of parole over the death penalty. In the Field Poll released September 29, 48% of California voters opted for a sentence of life without the possibility of parole while only 40% chose the death penalty. And Gallup Polling shows that American support for capital punishment has dropped dramatically over the past 20 years. Jeanne Woodford, former death row warden and current spokesperson for the SAFE California Campaign , said, “We see [these poll results] as a historic shift that will carry us through to the elections.” SAFE CA is the new initiative to end California’s death penalty on the November 2012 ballot. It’s about replacing the death penalty with a safe and affordable public safety solution: life without the possibility of parole plus work and restitution. More Californians chose that over the death penalty because they know it saves $184 million state tax dollars every year. A single execution is exorbitantly expensive — $308 million – and most Californians can probably think of better ways to spend their money. For the same cost , we could hire about 6,000 new police officers, or about 5,000 new fire fighters. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out that hiring thousands more public employees would make a bigger positive impact on a community than would executing a single individual. And it’s also worth pointing out that for the cost of a single execution, we could provide 2,865 children with a free k-12 education. Californians care about their communities, and they care about education and public safety. They know that cash-strapped California has to invest its resources wisely, and they know that protecting and educating their families will always bring more bang for their buck than wasting hundreds of millions of dollars on one execution. These polls show that California is on the verge of a major shift in public priorities. When the SAFE CA Act lands on the ballot in November 2012, voters will have a chance to put their taxpayer money where their mouths are and fund real solutions over empty “tough on crime” rhetoric. Sign up now to volunteer with the SAFE CA campaign to ensure that our tax dollars are invested in our communities. Read more from the original source: James Clark: The Numbers Are in, the Death Penalty Is Out
A Former Prisoner of Khaddafy Speaks Out About the Regime
TV Junkie: ‘Bored To Death’ Season Premiere; ‘Enlightened’ Series Premiere Tonight
No lowest common denominator TV for us tonight, we’ll be checking out the season 3 premiere of HBO’s “Bored To Death” at 9pm followed by Laura Dern’s debut series “Enlightened.” We’ve got TV news & The TV Junkie Must-Watch Plan for tonight in the full post. more › See the article here: TV Junkie: ‘Bored To Death’ Season Premiere; ‘Enlightened’ Series Premiere Tonight