Dr. Conrad Murray guilty of involuntary manslaughter in Michael Jackson’s death


Do you remember where you were when you heard that Michael Jackson died? I do. It wasn’t as memorable a moment for me as the Challenger disaster (I’m old) or River Phoenix or Heath Ledger’s deaths, but it was up there. Somehow it was momentous and yet seemed inevitable at the same time. The doctor who administered Jackson’s fatal dose of Propofol, Dr. Conrad Murray, has been declared guilty of involuntary manslaughter. The jury deliberated for less than 9 hours. We haven’t been covering the trial here as it hasn’t been particularly note-worthy apart from some colorful witnesses. Plus, I just find this whole story sad. Murray was declared guilty today, and was carted off to jail without bail. He will be sentenced on November 29. As you can see from the video above, Murray kept a straight face during the verdict announcement but you could tell that he was majorly pissed off.

A jury found Michael Jackson’s doctor guilty of involuntary manslaughter in the 2009 death of the King of Pop.

Dr. Conrad Murray appeared stone-faced as the verdict was read Monday in a Los Angeles courtroom. The 58-year-old doctor, who is to be sentenced November 29, is facing up to four years in prison. He could also lose his medical license.

Jackson’s sister LaToya screamed out upon hearing the verdict, while his crying mother, Katherine, was consoled by her son, Jermaine Jackson.

Murray’s supporters looked somber over the news, with one shaking her head back and forth, mouthing the word “no.”

Jackson fans who had gathered outside the courtroom burst into applause and cheered as the verdict, “Guilty!,” was announced.

The decision was reached after less than nine hours of deliberation. The prosecution asked for Murray to be remanded into custody immediately. “He is now a convicted felon,” prosecutor David Walgren said.

Defense lawyer Ed Chernoff argued that he is not danger to the community before Murray was escorted out of the courtroom by the Sheriff.

Jackson died on June 25, 2009. The complete story of his death finally emerged during the six-week trial. It was the tale of a tormented genius on the brink of what might have been his greatest triumph with one impediment standing in his way — extreme insomnia.

Testimony came from medical experts, household employees and Murray’s former girlfriends, among others.

The most shocking moments, however, came when prosecutors displayed a large picture of Jackson’s gaunt, lifeless body on a hospital gurney and played the sound of his drugged, slurred voice, as recorded by Murray just weeks before the singer’s death.

Jackson talked about plans for a fantastic children’s hospital and his hope of cementing a legacy larger than that of Elvis Presley or The Beatles.

“We have to be phenomenal,” he said about his “This Is It” concerts in London. “When people leave this show, when people leave my show, I want them to say, `I’ve never seen nothing like this in my life. Go. Go. I’ve never seen nothing like this. Go. It’s amazing. He’s the greatest entertainer in the world.”‘

Throughout the trial, Jackson family members watched from the spectator gallery, fans gathered outside with signs and T-shirts demanding, “Justice for Michael,” and an international press corps broadcast reports around the world. The trial was televised and streamed on the Internet.

Prosecutors portrayed Murray as an incompetent doctor who used the anesthetic propofol without adequate safeguards and whose neglect left Jackson abandoned as he lay dying.

Murray’s lawyers sought to show the doctor was a medical angel of mercy with former patients vouching for his skills. Murray told police from the outset that he gave Jackson propofol and other sedatives as the star struggled for sleep to prepare for his shows. But the doctor said he administered only a small dose on the day Jackson died.

Lawyers for Murray and a defense expert blamed Jackson for his own death, saying the singer gave himself the fatal dose of propofol while Murray wasn’t watching. A prosecution expert said that theory was crazy.

Murray said he had formed a close friendship with Jackson, never meant to harm him and couldn’t explain why he died.

The circumstances of Jackson’s death at the age of 50 were as bizarre as any chapter in the superstar’s sensational life story.

Jackson was found not breathing in his own bed in his rented mansion after being dosed intravenously with propofol, a drug normally administered in hospitals during surgery.

The coroner ruled the case a homicide and the blame would fall to the last person who had seen Jackson alive — Murray, who had been hired to care for the singer as the comeback concerts neared.

Craving sleep, Jackson had searched for a doctor who would give him the intravenous anesthetic that Jackson called his “milk” and believed to be his salvation. Other medical professionals turned him down, according to trial testimony.

Murray gave up his practices in Houston and Las Vegas and agreed to travel with Jackson and work as his personal physician indefinitely.

For six weeks, as Jackson undertook strenuous rehearsals, Murray infused him with propofol every night, the doctor told police. He later tried to wean Jackson from the drug because he feared he was becoming addicted.

Jackson planned to pay Murray $150,000 a month for an extended tour in Europe. In the end, the doctor was never paid a penny because Jackson died before signing the contract.

During the last 24 hours of his life, Jackson sang and danced at a spirited rehearsal, reveling in the adulation of fans who greeted him outside. Then came a night of horror, chasing sleep — the most elusive treasure the millionaire entertainer could not buy.

Testimony showed Murray gave Jackson intravenous doses that night of the sedatives lorazepam and midazolam. Jackson also took a Valium pill. But nothing seemed to bring sleep.

Finally, Murray told police, he gave the singer a small dose of propofol — 25 milligrams — that seemed to put him to sleep. The doctor said he felt it was safe to leave his patient’s bedside for a few minutes, but Jackson was not breathing when he returned.

[From Fox news]

Is this justice for MJ? I don’t know. Jackson sought out a powerful anesthetic to sleep, and he was rich and connected enough to find a doctor who would administer it to him. Another, more competent doctor would have used monitoring equipment to ensure their patient was alive and breathing throughout the night. A more competent doctor never would have tried to cover up their patient’s death. That type of doctor would never have taken this case, and wouldn’t have given that drug to a patient to sleep, either. Despite this verdict, I doubt Murray will get more than a few months in jail, ultimately. RIP Michael Jackson.

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photo credit: WENN.com

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54 Responses to “Dr. Conrad Murray guilty of involuntary manslaughter in Michael Jackson’s death”

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  1. SueAnn says:

    Just more tax payer money put towards paying for his sorry life. I could care less if he does time. Take his medical practice away and all his money. That is where he will truly suffer…

  2. MuhreeuhMaria says:

    RIP M.J.

  3. SueAnn says:

    Michael had a hand in his own death. It isn’t like Murray was holding him down pumping him full of propofol against his will. Murray was blinded by the money MJ offered him and would do whatever to keep that pay check, hence the negligence and lying to keep himself stocked with the meds. Just another greedy idiot. MJ was a sad lost soul and I hope he has finally found peace.

  4. KatScorp says:

    One thing troubles me – the coroner found propofol in MJ’s stomach contents.

    With that aside, administering a general anethestic without monitoring equiptment – nor paddles – at the ready is shockingly negligent of Murray.

    That MJ fantard in the yellow cap looks suspiciously like the Linnocent fantard from her trials. I feel for the cop trying to resist the urge to shoot him.

  5. leetruth says:

    Thank you God! Conrad is a travesty of a doctor. RIP MJ.

  6. Cheyenne says:

    It doesn’t matter what the patient wants, if the doctor knows it’s injurious to the patient, he is bound by medical ethics not to administer it.

  7. Firecracker says:

    Wow, I didn’t think they’d find him guilty. I’m wondering with the jail overcrowding how much time he will serve.

    Katscorp, how would it get into his stomach? Would it be that he drank it? Silly question I guess.

  8. leetruth says:

    @georgebrewer, it is only sick tormented souls who go about badmouthing others just for the sake of it. Miss you MJ!

  9. daisydoodle says:

    Conrad was a “quack”, however, Michael was a full blown drug addict and surrounded himself with “yes men” in his life…

  10. dorothy says:

    While I don’t condone what this Dr. did I do think that M. Jackson was probably very instrumental in his own death.
    I imagine the Dr. was under tremendous pressure to do what Jackson wanted, as he was not used to not getting his way.

  11. Elizabeth says:

    @ leetruth
    MJ was either a perfect pawn of greedy people who prompted their sons to accuse MJ of improper behaviour in exchange for a big payoff OR he really did do what he was accused of. We will never know really. But I don’t think this “comeback” would have faired any better than the last few times he tried this. Sad all around really. MJ was very talented but never got the chance to have a normal life.

  12. DarkEmpress says:

    I am glad he was found guilty. Michael Jackson was an addict. His family has tried to skirt around the issue and they never admit it but clearly from the evidence in this trial he was. Nonetheless as a medical professional Dr. Murray should not have given in to the whims of an addict simply because he was a superstar willing to pay a lot of money for his drugs. This trial should alert the other medical practitioners who wrongly administer or distribute medications to their wealthy or celebrity clients that if anything goes wrong they will be held legally accountable.

  13. Zoe says:

    The coroner said the trace of Propofol in his stomach was extremely small and normal given the drip and that it is inconclusive.

    I’m shocked at the number of people acting like this doctor is innocent, it’s clear they are hung up on their opinions of who Jackson was. The case isn’t about whether or not you liked him, whether or not he was guilty of something in the past, or whether or not he was a junkie. It’s about an unethical doctor who put profit over a human life, resulting in a patient’s death.

    The doctor committed a laundry list of horrible malpractice – giving Jackson an anesthetic not to be used outside of a hospital to help him ‘sleep’, bought hundreds of vials of it and was regularly administering it, didn’t know how to properly administer it, didn’t have the proper equipment, left an anesthetized patient alone to talk to his girlfriends on the phone, didn’t do CPR correctly (What kind of cardiologists can’t do this?!), didn’t call 911, concealed evidence, lied to investigators and paramedics… are these the actions of an innocent man? Please. All the people saying MJ “asked for it” are insane. The man had trouble sleeping and the doctor hooked him up. Murray wasn’t a drug-peddler on the street, he was a trained medical professional who knew the difference between right and wrong, took a Hippocratic Oath, and had a responsibility to ensure his patient’s care, and know his medical history. For $150,000 a month, this man shouldn’t have left Jackson’s side for a minute, nonetheless engaged in any of this nonsense.

    The doctor is where he is today because he put himself there. Justice was served, this loser will have his medical licenses rightfully stripped from him (he’s an embarrassment to the profession), and hopefully Michael’s poor mother and children can finally get some peace.

    Honestly, the people who think Conrad Murray was innocent are higher than Jackson.

    It doesn’t matter what you thought of the man, every human deserves to be cared for by their doctors and not have something like this happen, medical malpractice is never OK and is the doctor’s responsibility.

  14. wunder says:

    Even if MJ was an addict and even if he did surround himself with a bunch of ‘yes’ men, this still does NOT excuse what Murray’s negligence led to. . .Murray was the doctor in charge of MJ’s medication/monitoring, so he bears the responsibility for MJ’s death!

  15. Zoe says:

    ::MJ was either a perfect pawn of greedy people who prompted their sons to accuse MJ of improper behaviour in exchange for a big payoff OR he really did do what he was accused of. We will never know really. But I don’t think this “comeback” would have faired any better than the last few times he tried this.::

    I just want to add that both of Jackson’s accusers had parents with well documented criminal histories of suing for false claims and extortion, so they aren’t credible witnesses and no one else ever came forward. Therefore, to suggest that “little boys lives were saved” or that MJ was a pedophile is complete rumor and based on what is known, most likely BS. Pretty strong allegations to slap on someone if you don’t know the truth. People fail to realize that this man was a human being and if he didn’t do it, what an awful fate to have to live with all those people saying you did without a shred of evidence.

    Lastly, as far as his final concerts – they were already a huge success. His concerts sold 750,000 tickets in five minutes, a feat no other artist could accomplish. The concerts weren’t a “comeback” at all – they were his retirement shows, and clearly based on those numbers – Jackson’s success never disappeared and media claims he was a has-been were clearly far off. Sad he’ll never have had the opportunity to actually retire and get some peace. Years after his death, people are still hating without a good excuse.

  16. Firecracker says:

    Zoe, thanks for the info. I didn’t really follow the trial. I did catch that he didn’t call 911 rite away like he should’ve and MJ might have been saved.

  17. Shy says:

    Well it was Michael Jackson’s fault. He turned his life to this medical circus. He was the one to blame for his death.

    But conviction of Murrey is good. He was a doctor and he shouldn’t have take part in this Michael’s madness. And he knew he did wrong when he tried to cover it up.

    And it should be a warning to all those other doctors who give legal pills to stupid celebrities and then they overdose. Why didn’t they investigate who gave those prescript drugs to Heath Ledger and Brittany Murphy. Those doctors should be prosecuted too. If they wouldn‘t give (probably for good money) those receipts to Heath and Brittany then they would not take them every day and would be still alive.

  18. Charlotte says:

    Conrad Murray definitely has to face the consequences of his actions, but so should all of Jackson’s “handlers” and family members who were also aware of his addictions. I truly believe they have culpability as well.

  19. LeeLoo says:

    I think this whole case has less to do with Michael Jackson and more to do with making an example out of doctors who illegally prescribe drugs to celebrities. I think LA County wanted to make an example of Murray. If the CA economy wasn’t so royally messed up I think we would be seeing a major crack down on Hollywood doctors that celebrities go “doctor shopping” at.

  20. Turtle Dove says:

    Quite surprised that Dr. C.M. hasn’t had a heart attack yet. He’s looked like hell for quite some time. he doesn’t look pissed to me, he looks sad, depressed.

    What he did was wrong, but he was the one left holding the ball when MJ died. This could have easily been another doctor, but it was him. That doesn’t excuse him from his actions, but as OPs pointed out, Michael was an addict and would have gotten a fix elsewhere. This is a lesson learned for doctors but, sadly, it’ll always be short term because there will always be celebs who are over-medicated and succumb to drug intoxication (ie -Heath) or something like the events surrounding MJs death.

  21. Elizabeth says:

    @ zoe
    I’m almost 50 and I remember that MJ’s star power definitely faded in the late ’90’s and early ’00’s. He had 2 or 3 CD’s that he launched that really didn’t sell well and he opened the concerts in secondary markets overseas – i.e. where someone like MJ would be a 1st class draw. There was one CD with some anti-semetic comments that didn’t go over well. If the farewell concerts in London sold out quickly, great. But he had some rough years in between where he didn’t sell very well. I’m not a “hater”, I just remember his career wasn’t doing well at that time (’00’s).

  22. ViloDeMenus says:

    Even if Murray gets the max, he won’t go to prison but the county jail, and he will do months, not years. This was always an expensive to do that was going to end in not so much. The most interesting thing about this whole trial was how Cooley pushed the prosecutor aside during the press conference and had his two pet Gorgons up there with him, even though neither of the three worked on the case at all. LA is really one strange place. The DA is a failure ridden gloryhound who couldn’t wait to take credit with his co-failures once a camera was turned on. That’s why it’s a nearly unlivable city at this point. Cooley is a major reason it’s one of the most dangerous cities in the world, so why not take credit for something you didn’t do. Creepster.

  23. Seal Team 6 says:

    Michael Jackson was ultimately responsible for his death, and I also think that id Murray was on trial, most of his family should have been, too. They treated him like Dina treat Linnocent, as their cash cow. And, like Dina with Lindsay, they didn’t care what it took to keep the money rolling in.

    Murray should have lost his license and paid a huge fine, but the Jacksons needed the finger pointed away from them, too.

    His mother and children are the only ones in this whole mess I feel sorry for.

  24. bobby says:

    just another example of corrupt american justice. this guy did nothing wrong except get involved with a child molester

  25. skuddles says:

    What a sad situation – MJ had a huge addiction problem and Murray had a huge debt problem. But bottom line is the doctor betrayed the physician code to “do no harm” – his greed overrode his ethics as MJ’s addiction overrode his common sense.

  26. Joe's Mom says:

    I did watch a lot of the Trial, and I think they said the Propofol in his stomach was due to post mortum redistribution (natural occurrence where a drug, etc., will just leak and drift into other organs or locations after death). That’s a crappy definition, but basically what it is. This is a long, sad story, but the bottom line is, MJ paid Dr. Murray to help him sleep and even though this was a ridiculous method outside of a hospital setting, MJ was GUARANTEED it would be safe, if he was MONITORED. Dr. Murray left him unattended and went gabbing on the phone for who really knows how long. Having anyone, even a security guard sitting there with him while he was anesthetised, would have saved his life, if they had called 911 immediately when he stopped breathing. Dr. Murray was criminally negligent, as charged.

  27. Cheyenne says:

    @Bobby (or is it Booby?): You’re aware — or aren’t you — that the parents of both the boys who accused Jackson had prior criminal histories of extortion?

  28. G says:

    Two observations.

    Murray is surely guilty of something, but seeing his lifelong enablers and sycophants shift all the blame to this unsophisticated patsy disgusts me.

    Why does every doctor MJ has ever had describe him as a “friend”? That is weird. He obviously took great pains to exert his charm to get his fix.

  29. skuddles says:

    Excellent point G… this cycle started long before Murray ever stepped into the picture – and he’s certainly not the only person who should be held accountable. Where is that snake Klein in all this anyway?

  30. misstrishm says:

    Sad story. RIP MJ. There’s no winners here.

  31. leetruth says:

    @zoe and shy, I agree wholeheartedly. We all expect our doctors to be on point at all times where our health is paramount. Murray is guilty due to negligence. I hope this sends out a clear message to other doctors to uphold at all times their hippocratic oaths; too many jewels have been lost in their prime – Elvis, Ledger, Brittany Murphy, Monroe and MJ plus the common man not given proper medical care. @georgebrewer, search yourself.

  32. G says:

    @skuddles. Klein must be breathing a giant sigh of relief. Murray made several mistakes, but the main one was to take on that trainwreck as a patient.
    Sad.

  33. ShanKat says:

    He won’t serve more than 22 months. No one is using the OJ/RDJ private suite @ county…maybe Con has a shot at it.

    I hate this news because it means the Hilton clique will be having parties and celebrating like they won a righteous victory.

  34. Zoe says:

    @ Elizabeth ::He had 2 or 3 CD’s that he launched that really didn’t sell well and he opened the concerts in secondary markets overseas::

    Let’s review record sales. Jackson’s largest selling record (and the world’s bestselling) was Thriller, which sold over 65 million records worldwide. The Bad album was the second biggest selling, at the time. Flash forward to his last record, 2001’s Invincible (and the only album release he had in the 00s). The album sold over 7 million records worldwide. A far cry from Thriller indeed, but nowhere near the failure the media tried to hype. First off, even today’s best-selling artists generally don’t break the 3 million-mark. For him, it may have been a low number, but it’s still over double what other artists can pull. On top of that is the fact that Michael was at war with Sony who wanted to buy his Beatles ATV catalogue and he wouldn’t sell it, so they retaliated by not promoting the album, so the 7 million he did sell were on ZERO promotion, unheard of. If it had been promoted and advertised, you would have seen larger sales. Consequently, the album prior to that was History, which sold six million copies – bear in mind that HIStory was a double-CD so it was twice as expensive as other CDs and is the best-selling double CD in history.

    Yes, his record sales saw some decline (you can’t have the best-selling album of all time and continue that unprecedented level of sales, no matter who you are), but the notion that he was a has-been or an artist that couldn’t outsell every other is media fiction, right up through the end.

  35. forelithe says:

    All of the doctors who treated Jackson over the past decade should have been on trial with him.

  36. skuddles says:

    G I could have sworn I read somewhere and not too long ago too that Klein was also under investigation…but haven’t heard anything since.

    forelithe – agreed!

  37. Alex says:

    Well, he will probably get released after 3 days due to overcrowding, if Lindsay’s history is anything to go by.

  38. 2 Mainstream says:

    So now MJ’s fans have someone to blame. Good for them.

  39. crys737 says:

    So this guy gets a speedy trial and a jail sentence and no bail. Meanwhile in the crack kingdom of all things linnocent, everything is peachy…wtf california legal system?

  40. Bopa says:

    Conrad is going to State Prison not LA County Jail so no he won’t get out in 3 days. If he’s sentenced to 4 years then he might be out in 1-2 for good behavior but he won’t be out in days.

  41. SamiHami says:

    While MJ did certainly have a hand in his own death, Murray was certainly guilty of involuntary manslaughter for his role. As a medical professional his only responsibility was to promote the good health of his patient. Instead, blinded by the money and fame surrounding MJ, he gave in to MJ’s addictions and became nothing more than a drug dealer.

    When Murray became a doctor he swore an oath to do no harm to patients. He failed, whether it was negligence or just plain poor judgement. He is guilty both criminally and ethically. He should do some time and he should lose his license to practice medicine permanently.

  42. Pyewacket says:

    If you are a legit doctor, you do not sell your sould to the devil for a few dollars. It doesn’t matter if MJ asked for the Propofol, a doctor’s duty is to say no. Murray let greed take over and now he has gotten what he deserved. A doctor has a duty to help people, not help their addictions.

  43. whome says:

    Wanda sykes said it best … “MICHEAL JACKSON DIED FROM BEING MICHEAL JACKSON”. end of story!
    I guess we save all our sympthay for the famous child molestors..

  44. aenflex says:

    The Physician takes the oath. I get it. But still, MJ was addicted to so many things, fame, opulence, attention, drugs, children. He was a downward spiral from the start and and I don’t feel sorry for him at all. I do feel sorry for his loved ones that are grieving, though.

  45. irishserra says:

    I co-sign with those who acknowledge that MJ was a troubled addict and that it is his own fault that he is dead.

    While Conrad Murray may have been irresponsible, he is no different than any other goddamned pill pusher out there who calls himself a doctor. When it’s all said and done, if the government and/or society were truly willing to change the frequency and ease with which drugs were dispensed, you can be damned sure that these same people who are so quick to blame this man for MJ’s ongoing issues and subsequent death would be up in arms over not having their vices under the pretense of medicine.

  46. Bren says:

    One of the boys MJ was accused of molesting said the whole thing was made up by his parents and that nothing ever happened.

  47. leetruth says:

    MJ was a man who died through his doctor’s negligence. End of story haters.

  48. canuck says:

    Anybody who flatly denies that MJ was a child molestor without going through the evidence collected by the DA’s office over the years and relies on parroted BS like “MJ was a victim of a smear campaign” is just plain simple. There were not just “two boys” and of course he paid them off, that’s why he got away with it. If he was so innocent why did he shell out millions to shut them up?

    http://www.thesmokinggun.com/documents/crime/case-against-michael-jackson?page=0,2

  49. Kara Ann says:

    Conrad Murray was the one on trial. The question was one of negligence.

    Michael Jackson wasn’t on trial.
    The qestion wasn’t whether or not Jackson was an addict. Nor, was the question about Jackson’s past prosecution for child molestation.

    If a person objectively followed this case, that person would find Murray guilty. He was and is. I’ve no sympathy for him. He knew the chances he was taking with Jackson’s life (and his own), he rolled the dice (for the money), and he lost. Case closed.

  50. whome says:

    @lee truth 49… Hating on a addict child molestor who played a very stong hand in his own death…. yeah i see ppl hating all right

  51. crtb says:

    MJ was a man who died through his doctor’s negligence. End of story haters.

    Really? So Micheal didn’t ask for those drugs to be administered to him at his home? No one is hating – just telling the truth.Michael Jackson was a junkie. And like all drug addicts, he over dosed. No one was responsible for his deathe except Michael. Where was his family? He had been abusing drugs for years. Why didn’t they do an intervention. Everyone turned a blind eye until his death. They are the ones you should be calling haters!

  52. crtb says:

    One of the boys MJ was accused of molesting said the whole thing was made up by his parents and that nothing ever happened.

    Michael admited on film to sleeping with multiple boys. Any adult man who sleeps in the same been with a young boy whom he is NOT related to, is a pediphile. Would you let your son have sleep over with a 40 year old neighbor and let him sleep in his bed? Oh H3ll no!

  53. Trashaddict says:

    The doctor is responsible. Michael Jackson was responsible. And it has resulted in a colossal waste of time for the courts, a waste of taxpayer money, more money in the pockets of the lawyers, and more lunacy from deluded fantards. At this point in my life I am so tired of people who so willingly waste their time, their lives, and everybody else’s.

  54. Kara Ann says:

    @#53 (Can’t read your name),

    I know that Jackson was an addict. I know that Jackson requested those drugs from this doctor (and probably many others.) I agree he overdosed. I disagree that Murray shouldn’t face prosecution for his actions. I don’t expect junkies to have the mental capacity or control to make good decisions about their health care i.e. stop taking drugs (obviously). I DO EXPECT doctors to their jobs in protecting their patients health. I DO EXPECT doctors to “just say no”. This one didn’t because of the money. He was basically Michael’s private dealer albeit he dealt drugs that street corner dealers don’t have access to. As far as Jackson’s family is concerned, I assume that they didn’t like what he was doing and were unable/unwilling to stop him. I don’t think that makes them accessories to a crime. I think that it makes them bystanders who watched while their loved indulge himself in unhealthy bahavior. Many of us have been unable to make those we love make good decisions in reference to addictions. You can’t do it for them.
    Does Jackson bear some culpability in his own death? Absolutely.
    Does Murray bear culpability for Jackson’s death? Absolutely.
    Don’t worry too much about the good doctor, he’ll be on bookshelves and morning shows making more money off of Jackson as soon as he can. Tell me then that this doctor is a man of professionalism and ethics.