Joined Jul 27, Messages Points Thank you for sharing!!! Do you have the same link for the HTWF case pls?? Victory22 Proud Member. I haven't seen this LA Court site brought to people's attention anywhere here. It provides access to public court documents related to high profile cases. They have opened a file for the People vs Conrad Murray. Don't get all freaked out as there is only a notice about posting public documents there right now.
SandyK Proud Member. Joined Jul 25, Messages 28 Points 0. Last edited: Apr 24, Dialdancer Proud Member. Joined Jul 25, Messages 78 Points 0. Thank you, This information will be of great help to people who are closely following the trial. Why can't they be publicly posted?
I try not to refer back to the , because we all know there was much that should and should not have happened, thing which were unlawful and down right illegal, but portions of the transcripts were published by MJ friends and foes. Last edited: May 9, New motion by the defence has been posted.
Joined Jul 25, Messages 13 Points 0. Whys the court not posted the pros reply to the defence motion about schaffer testifying. Defence motion for the p. Joined Jul 25, Messages 3, Points 0. No its not there. Naturelle Proud Member. Do you think all the court transcripts would be posted there? Met Murray at a Las Vegas nightclub in Morgan told jurors that she tried to reach Murray the morning of Jackson's death but he didn't answer his phone.
An employee at Murray's Houston clinic, Ruggles briefly testified about a phone call with her boss the morning Michael Jackson died. A former girlfriend, who met Murray at a "social type club" in Las Vegas, testified that she received a text message from the doctor the morning of June 25, , the day Jackson died.
She was a waitress at a Houston steakhouse when she met Murray. Anding testified that she got a call from Murray at a. She told jurors that several minutes into the call Murray disappeared from the other end of the line. The actress and mother to Murray's toddler son testified that she received seven FedEx packages at her apartment for Murray -- shipments prosecutors have said included large quantities of propofol.
The Las Vegas pharmacist testified that his pharmacy shipped many vials of propofol to Murray at an address in Santa Monica. An account representative for a medical supply company, Hirschberg testified about the items Murray purchased through his practice and had shipped to his Las Vegas office. A computer forensic examiner, Marx testified about the emails he recovered from Murray's iPhone. The jurors also heard the recording of a conversation between Murray and an incoherent Jackson that was also retrieved from Murray's iPhone.
An investigator with the Los Angeles County Coroner's office. Fleak testified about the extensive collection of prescription medicines and medical supplies recovered in Jackson's bedroom and closet. A toxicologist at the Los Angeles County coroner's office, Anderson told jurors about the process of testing and identifying the medicines found in Michael Jackson's body.
A pathologist at the Los Angeles County coroner's office, Rogers told jurors about the findings of the autopsy he performed on Michael Jackson. The cardiologist told jurors that Dr. Conrad Murray violated the standard of care when treating Michael Jackson. A pulmonary and critical care physician, Kamangar testified about Dr. Conrad Murray's violation of the standard of care in his treatment of pop star Michael Jackson. A professor of anesthesiology at Columbia University and an expert on propofol.
Shafer tells jurors that Dr. Conrad Murray committed 17 'egregious' violations of the standard of care, any of which could have led to the singer's death. The records custodian for the Beverly Hills Police Department testified about the second delay caused in the call from Jackson's home because it was routed through her agency before reaching the Fire Department.
The Los Angeles Police Department surveillance specialist testified about retrieving surveillance camera footage from Jackson's home showing the pop star and Dr.
Murray's arrival the night before Jackson's death. The LAPD robbery homicide detective told jurors a key prosecution witness, security guard Alberto Alvarez, only mentioned key details about Dr. Murray's alleged cover-up efforts two months after Jackson's death and after the coroner released the cause of death.
Murray asked him to put away. Defense contends the drawings made a year and half apart are "significantly different. The Beverly Hills doctor told jurors Jackson he was "fearful" about his comeback tour. He said two months before his death that Jackson asked for "some form of anesthetic" for his insomnia.
The "holistic practitioner" testified that she recommended a sleep study and tests to determine why Jackson was having trouble sleeping, but the singer said he "didn't have time for all that. The hospital executive, who was chief operating officer of the UCLA hospitals at the time, testified that as a press release about Jackson's death was being prepared, Dr.
Dr Murray's lawyers had planned to argue that Arnold Klein had administered the singer with painkillers for "no valid reason" but prosecutors said they were attempting to transfer responsibility for his death away from Dr Murray.
Testimony from five other doctors who treated Jackson is also disallowed. Half of the chosen panelists are Caucasian, five are Hispanic and one is African-American.
The jurors have a wide range of professions, including a bus driver, paralegal and a bookseller. Prosecutors say Dr Murray acted with "gross negligence" and gave Jackson a lethal dose of propofol. The defence claim Jackson administered too much of the sleeping aid himself. In the audio, recorded six weeks before the star's death, the star appears to slur his speech as he tells Dr Murray about his plans for the This Is It tour.
He is heard telling detectives: "He's not able to sleep naturally". Prosecution witness Dr Christopher Rogers, the medic who carried out the singer's post mortem, said it was more likely that Dr Murray mistakenly gave him too much. Dr Shafer said the drug should never be used to treat insomnia. Dr Allan Metzger, a friend of Jackson's for over two decades, testifies the singer had requested anaesthetics from him as a sleep aid. She told him: "No one who cared or had your best interest at heart would give you this".
After refusing to supply Jackson with the drug in April, she never saw him again. Dr Waldman says records from Jackson's dermatologist show he had large doses of the drug in the months before his death and that insomnia is a symptom of Demerol withdrawal.
He admits the drug is not usually used to treat insomnia, describing it as "complete off-label use of the drug". He says he made his decision "freely and explicitly".
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