Dr. Murray literally and physically abandoned Michael Jackson – Day 1

September 27, 2011 by  
Filed under Day 1, Manslaughter Trial

The above picture although very disturbing was presented in court and appears to be a lifeless Michael Jackson on a gurny. We have included it to show what happened and what state Dr. Conrad Murray left Michael Jackson when he took calls, wrote emails and hid medicine in the minutes following MJ’s death.

Conrad Murray knew he was doing something wrong when he ordered mass amounts of drugs, administered the drugs without proper training, equipment or monitoring, delayed calling 911 and then lied to medical officials trying to save Michael Jackson. This is the image the prosecution is trying to provide to the jury who now has to decide if the doctor was grossly negligent during the care of the superstar.

Awful and reckless behaviour must be proven and the prosecution laid out timelines.  It was heart wrenching to hear the evidence, see the pictures and hear the drugged recording of Michael weeks before his death and found on the doctor’s phone.

The prosecution’s opening statement was aired today on TV paint a reckless scene on the day Michael Jackson was pronounced dead under the care of Dr. Conrad Murray.

Pictures of the scene, bedroom, bathroom, medical equipment, drugs, jug of urine, MJ’s last rehearsal clothing. Phone records were discussed in relation to the timeline of what authorities believe was the doctor’s actions during his care and after the suspected time Michael died.

Interview details were discussed when authorities talked to the doctor after Michael’s death.

According to the prosecution, a minimum of 25 minutes seems to have elapsed when the doctor noticed Michael not responsive to the time he told security to call 911.

The jury heard that for over 2 months the doctor was giving nightly doses of Propofol. It was during the interviews that he finally admitted using this drug. For over 30 days monthly he administered this drug.

The prosecution went over what drugs were administered according to the doctor. According to the interview of Murray, the doctor claimed MJ would cancel the rehearsal so the doctor agreed to give him Propofol.

The amount administered was debated. The 25 mg of Propofol would have induced only 5 minutes of sleep. Over 155,000 mg of this drug were shipped to the doctor’s girlfriend.

‘Stunned in the sense that he wasn’t breathing’. Abandonment – leaving unattended is medical abandonment.

Claiming he was only gone for 2 minutes. Approximately 45 minutes of phone calls were conducting.

At 11:17 Murray is emailing the insurance broker to tell him Michael’s heath was fine.

In Murray’s own words, “To speak to a 911 operator would be neglecting him”.

In addition, the court saw bags were stored in the changing room.

The prosecution wrapped up their opening statements by going over Standard of Care. Here are some of the points raised by the prosecution.

Standard of Care

Hinges on gross lack of care in this case. Omissions and actions from doctor – extreme deviation of care – gross negligence – voluntary manslaughter.

Propofol – powerful anesthetic with highly monintored setting with equipment to revive a patient. Improper setting rprepresents an extremem violation of standard of care.

Propofol – not for treatment of insomnia – is gross negligence

Propofol requires continuous medical monitoring and equipment which Murray lacked.

Written informed consent – discuss procedure with patient – benefits, risks, etc. – no such document existed or was found.

Requires charting, documenting all vital records, dosages every 5 minutes -

No doctor patient relationship – to refuse inappropriate care. Employee-employee relationship. He worked for $150,000 a month.

Deceived paramedics by refusing to disclose the administration of propofol – repeated with emergency doctors.

According to the defense the doctor ‘Literally and physically abandoned Michael Jackson’.

The court heard a heart wrenching audio tape of Michael talking under the influence of drugs.

One of the question we have is what was MJ taking when this was recorded and more importantly, why was this recorded and found on the doctor’s cell phone.

Here are some of the picture of the crime scene, including his bedroom, bathroom, drugs and equipment and clothing that Michael wore during his last rehearsal.

 

 

 

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