An investigator documented a mini-pharmacy of medical vials found near Michael Jackson’s deathbed – but overlooked a plastic juice bottle that could be key to the defense of the singer’s embattled doctor.?The investigator for the coroner’s office, Elissa Fleak, testified Thursday at the trial of Jackson’s doctor that she catalogued all of the medical evidence but did not collect the naked juice container that photographs prove was on the singer’s nightstand.
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“I did not collect the juice bottle,” Fleak said under cross examination on the eighth day of Dr. Conrad Murray’s trial for involuntary manslaughter.?The juice bottle is a linchpin to the defense’s theory in the case: Murray gave Jackson a dose of the surgical-strength anesthetic propofol, his lawyers say, but after it worked through his system, the singer gave himself a second – and ultimately lethal dose.
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A paramedic who responded to the home and an emergency room doctor who later tried to revive Jackson’s lifeless body both testified previously that Murray did not reveal to them that the star had been given the anesthetic.?A prosecution expert testified at a preliminary hearing in January that Jackson’s stomach did contain some propofol, but that the small amount was not consistent with someone ingesting the drug.
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Then, in a bombshell for the defense, the expert said under cross-examination that he made a math mistake and that ingestion was in fact a possibility.?An autopsy found Jackson died of a propofol overdose.?Prosecutors plan to call a different medical expert whose testimony is expected to shoot down the defense’s Juice-bottle theory
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The involuntary manslaughter trial of the doctor charged in Michael Jackson’s death is moving into its “CSI” phase, with jurors set to hear next from investigators and detectives.?The panel also will hear from Dr. Conrad Murray himself, though it will be through a more than two-hour interview that police conducted with the Houston-based cardiologist two days after Jackson’s June 2009 death.
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The exact order of the witnesses is unclear, but court transcripts of discussions between the judge and lawyers from both sides Tuesday, shows that prosecutors are entering the next stage of the trial – furthering their case against Murray through the recollections of people who investigated him.
Murray has pleaded not guilty in the case. He faces up to four years behind bars and the loss of his medical license if convicted of involuntary manslaughter. Authorities contend he gave the singer a lethal dose of the anesthetic propofol and other sedatives in Jackson’s bedroom. Murray’s attorneys say that Jackson gave himself the fatal dose.
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The prosecution had been prepared Tuesday afternoon to call a police detective who would introduce the interview with Murray, which is expected to be played in its entirety for jurors. Defense attorneys said they needed more time to prepare for the witness, prompting the judge to send the trial into recess early and instruct prosecutors to call other witnesses to give Murray’s lawyers opportunity to get ready.
Lead defense attorney, Ed Chernoff, hinted at a sidebar conference that the next witness may now be Stephen Marx, a forensic computer examiner for the Drug Enforcement Agency who analyzed Murray’s iPhone. At a preliminary hearing earlier this year, Marx talked about emails he was able to retrieve from the phone, but in upcoming testimony he is likely to talk about a much more dramatic find.
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Deputy District Attorney, David Walgren, said in opening statements that investigators were able to extract a recording of Jackson talking to Murray from the physician’s iPhone. The audio of Jackson speaking slowly and slurring his speech was one of the previously unknown pieces of evidence prosecutors are using against the doctor.
Statements and items shown to jurors during opening remarks are not evidence until someone testifies about them.
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Other investigators from the coroner’s office will be called during the remainder of the trial to talk about Jackson’s autopsy and toxicology findings that led to the determination that the singer died from acute propofol intoxication and the effects of the sedatives.?Prosecutors plan to call their main expert on propofol Tuesday, according to the transcripts.
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The investigators come seven days into the government’s case against Murray, which has featured dramatic testimony about the frantic efforts to revive Jackson. In the past two days, jurors have heard in rapid-fire succession from witnesses who called or texted Murray in the hours before Jackson’s death.
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The witnesses included several of the doctor’s mistresses and his current girlfriend, Nicole Alvarez, who received shipments of propofol at her apartment on Murray’s behalf but said she never knew what he was being sent.
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Another woman, Sade Anding, told jurors that Murray called her at 11:51 a.m. on the day Jackson died, but stopped paying attention to her during the call. Murray’s phone sounded like it had been shoved in a pocket.?“I pressed the phone to my ear and I heard mumbling and voices. Like the phone was in his pocket. I heard coughing,” she said.?
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