Jackson doctor to stand trial for manslaughter

A judge ordered Michael Jackson’s personal doctor to stand trial on involuntary manslaughter charges for allegedly killing the singer with an overdose of powerful sedatives. Conrad Murray, who claims he was just treating the pop icon for insomnia when...

A judge ordered Michael Jackson’s personal doctor to stand trial on involuntary manslaughter charges for allegedly killing the singer with an overdose of powerful sedatives.

Conrad Murray, who claims he was just treating the pop icon for insomnia when he died in June 2009, also had his license to practice medicine in California suspended.

The cardiologist will be arraigned on January 25, the Los Angeles Superior Court judge ruled after six days of hearings that included evidence that Dr Murray tried to cover up having given Jackson an overdose of the drug propofol.

Judge Michael Pastor said testimony presented in court convinced him that to let the doctor keep his medical licence “would constitute an imminent danger to public safety”

Michael Jackson’s death shocked the entertainment world and triggered intense debate over the performer’s health in the run-up to London concerts, known as the This is It tour.

Dr Murray could face up to four years in jail and permanently lose his doctor’s licence if the case goes to full trial and he is convicted.

His defence team has suggested that the singer could have effectively killed himself by administering an extra dose of propofol while Dr Murray was out of the room.

Prosecutors allege that Dr Murray, 57, “abandoned his patient” after administering the propofol some time between 10.40 a.m. and 11 a.m. to help Michael Jackson sleep, and then tried to cover it up after the singer’s death.

Tuesday’s widely-expected ruling came shortly after a forensic expert testified that Michael Jackson’s death was a homicide, saying the singer was in generally good health when he died on June 25, 2009 at his Los Angeles mansion.

Christopher Rogers, head of forensic medicine for the Los Angeles County coroner’s office, said the star died of acute intoxication with propofol, which is usually used as an anaesthetic in hospital settings.

He said he would describe Michael Jackson’s death as a homicide even if, as claimed by Dr Murray, the singer had himself administered an extra dose of propofol while the doctor was out of the room.

“Based on the quality of the medical care, I would still call this a homicide, even if the doctor did not provide the propofol to Mr Jackson,” he said during the second week of the pre-trial hearings.

Last week the court heard from a series of witnesses who testified that Dr Murray delayed calling 911, tried to conceal what drugs he had administered, and did not know how to carry out emergency resuscitation. Paramedic Martin Blount said that when he arrived Michael Jackson seemed to have been dead for at least 20 minutes, despite Dr Murray’s claim that he had stopped breathing a minute before they were called.

On Friday investigator Elissa Fleak said she found 12 vials of propofol in Jackson’s house after he died, while a pharmacist testified Monday that he supplied 255 vials of the drug to Dr Murray in the two months before the death.

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