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HOUSTON : Pop star Michael Jackson died from a lethal
dose of the powerful anesthetic propofol given in a cocktail of drugs, leading
authorities to suspect his doctor of manslaughter, court documents showed on
Monday.
The "Thriller" singer suffered cardiac arrest and died on June 25 at age 50.
Since then, an investigation by state and federal agencies have focused on
Conrad Murray, Jackson's personal doctor who was at his bedside the day he died.
The findings, contained in a warrant to search Murray's home and offices, paint
a picture of an insomniac pop star who could not sleep without heavy medication.
Jackson sought out propofol -- routinely used to sedate patients and anesthetize
them before surgeries such as a colonoscopy -- and called it his "milk."
"The Los Angeles Chief Medical Examiner-Coroner, Dr. (Lakshmanan)
Sathyavagiswaran, indicated that he had reviewed the preliminary toxicology
results and his preliminary assessment of Jackson's cause of death was due to
lethal levels of propofol (diprivan)," according to a warrant to search Murray's
offices issued by California.
The document was unsealed and released by the Harris County District Clerk in
Houston, where Murray has an office. U.S. agents raided the office on July 22.
In an affidavit seeking the warrant, Houston police officer E.G. Chance said
U.S. agents had gathered "items constituting evidence of the offense of
manslaughter that tend to show that Dr. Conrad Murray committed the said
criminal offense."
Murray's attorney, Ed Chernoff, was not available to comment.
In a statement, a representative said Jackson's family has "full confidence in
the legal process, and commends the ongoing efforts of the L.A. County Coroner,
the L.A. District Attorney and the L.A. Police Department."
Murray, who was with Jackson on June 25 administering drugs to ease the pop star
to sleep, gave him a range of medication including a 25-milligram dose of
propofol via an intravenous drip at 10:40 a.m. PDT, the state search warrant
said.
Jackson was "very familiar" with propofol and referred to it as his "milk"
because of its milky appearance, the warrant said. Murray, who had been treating
Jackson for about six weeks leading up to his death, was worried that Jackson
was addicted to propofol. Murray was trying to wean him off the drug by giving
him smaller doses, it said.
Jason Hymes, an assistant clinical professor at the University of Southern
California who is not associated with the case, said the drug was a true
anesthetic. "You administer it to somebody and then operate on them ... This
concept of giving somebody a general anesthetic for sleep disturbance strikes me
as just bizarre and astoundingly inappropriate."
In the early hours of June 25, Murray also gave Jackson doses of anti-anxiety
medications Valium and Ativan and sedative Versed, the filing said.
Jackson went to sleep after Murray gave him the propofol, and Murray stayed by
his side for about 10 minutes, then left "to go to the restroom and relieve
himself," the search warrant said.
Murray was out of Jackson's room for about 2 minutes and when he returned,
Jackson was no longer breathing, the warrant said.
Source: Thearynews.com
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