Homicide ruling, documents detail death of Jackson


LOS ANGELES (AP) — The Los Angeles County coroner’s finding that the death of Michael Jackson was a homicide could mean criminal charges for his doctor, who told investigators he administered a mix of powerful drugs to treat the pop star’s insomnia hours before his death.

The homicide ruling was based on forensic tests that found the anesthetic Propofol combined with at least two sedatives to kill Jackson, a law enforcement official told The Associated Press, speaking on condition of anonymity because the findings have not been publicly released.

The finding does not necessarily mean a crime was committed. But it does help prosecutors if they decide to file criminal charges against Dr. Conrad Murray, the Las Vegas cardiologist who was caring for Jackson when he died June 25 in a rented Los Angeles mansion.

“It is an easier prosecution when the medical examiner calls it a homicide,” said Dr. Michael Baden, the former chief medical examiner in New York City, who is not involved in the Jackson investigation.

Through his lawyer, Murray has said he administered nothing that should have killed Jackson.

Murray told investigators that at the time of Jackson’s death, he had been trying to wean the entertainer off Propofol. The doctor said he’d been treating Jackson for insomnia for about six weeks with 50 milligrams of the drug every night via an intravenous drip, a search warrant affidavit said.

Murray said he feared Jackson was becoming addicted to the anesthetic, which is supposed to be used only in hospitals and other advanced medical settings.

Murray told police he was present when another Las Vegas anesthesiologist, Dr. David Adams, sedated Jackson with Propofol at an unnamed cosmetologist’s office “sometime between March and April of this year,” according to the affidavit.

It was about the time Jackson requested that Murray become his personal physician for a European tour, the affidavit said.

A woman at Adams’ office in Las Vegas referred calls Tuesday to his lawyer, Liborius Agwara, who did not immediately respond to messages seeking comment.

The affidavit says Murray told detectives that two days before Jackson’s death, he had lowered the Propofol dose to 25 milligrams and added the sedatives lorazepam and midazolam, a combination that succeeded in helping the pop star sleep. The next day, Murray said, he cut off the Propofol, and Jackson fell asleep with just the two sedatives.

But on June 25, Murray said, he tried unsuccessfully to make Jackson sleep with a series of drugs that included a 10-milligram tablet of Valium and repeated injections of 2 milligrams of lorazepam and 2 milligrams of midazolam.

When the combination didn’t work, he said he gave in to Jackson’s “repeated demands/requests” for Propofol, which the singer called his “milk,” according to the affidavit. Around 10:40 a.m., Murray administered 25 milligrams of the white-colored liquid — a relatively small dose — and finally Jackson fell asleep.