Michael Jackson thread - MJ articles and discussion

DEA joins Michael Jackson death probe
By ANTHONY MCCARTNEY, AP Entertainment Writer Anthony Mccartney, Ap Entertainment Writer – July 2, 2009

LOS ANGELES – The circumstances surrounding Michael Jackson's death have become a federal issue, with the Drug Enforcement Administration asked to help police take a look at the pop star's doctors and possible drug use.

Following Jackson's death, allegations emerged that the 50-year-old King of Pop had been consuming painkillers, sedatives and antidepressants.

The DEA was asked to help the probe by the Los Angeles Police Department, a law enforcement official in Washington told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the investigation.

The federal agency can provide resources and experience in investigating drug abuse, illicit drug manufacturers known as "pill mills" and substances local police may not be familiar with, the official said Wednesday.

While the investigation into the singer's death deepened, passionate Michael Jackson fans spent another day in an uneasy limbo, awaiting word from the King of Pop's camp about where and when a memorial service might be held for their hero — and if they're even invited.

Speculation about the potential location of a memorial ricocheted during the day from the Staples Center to the Los Angeles Coliseum to the Nokia Theater.

One spot that was ruled out as an immediate memorial venue was Jackson's sprawling Neverland ranch in Santa Barbara County. Jackson family spokesman Ken Sunshine said a public memorial was in the works for Jackson but it wouldn't be held at Neverland.

That came as a blow to many Jackson fans who had already descended on the estate in the rolling hills near Santa Barbara with the hope of attending a public viewing.

"We're terribly disappointed," said Ida Barron, 44, who arrived with her husband Paul Barron, 56, intending to spend several days in a tent.

It appeared more likely that a funeral and burial would take place in Los Angeles, a person familiar with the situation told The Associated Press.

Many of Jackson's die-hard fans refused to believe that the family would bury their most famous son without acknowledging the supporters who helped propel him to superstardom.

"I can't believe they wouldn't do something for his fans," said Rosie Padron, who had roped off a spot just outside the Neverland gates. "Michael loved his fans."

New Yorkers weren't willing to wait. The weekly Amateur Night at the Apollo Theater turned into a Jackson celebration, with impersonators emulating his outfits and mimicking his dance moves.

Allison Hector, who wore a T-shirt with the image of the "Thriller" album cover, ecstatically emulated moves she learned watching Jackson's music videos.

"Nobody moves like him," the 19-year-old said, her eyes filling with tears. "I feel it in my blood — I just can't help it!"

On the legal front, Jackson's 7-year-old will was filed Wednesday in a Los Angeles court, giving his entire estate to a family trust and naming his 79-year-old mother Katherine and his three children as beneficiaries. The will also estimates the current value of his estate at more than $500 million.

Katherine Jackson was appointed the children's guardian, with entertainer Diana Ross, a longtime friend of Michael Jackson, named successor guardian if something happens to his mother. A court will ultimately decide who the children's legal guardian will be.

Jackson's lawyer John Branca and family friend John McClain, a music executive, were named in the will as co-executors of his estate. In a statement, they said the most important element of the will was Jackson's steadfast desire that his mother become the legal guardian for his children.

"As we work to carry out Michael's instructions to safeguard both the future of his children as well as the remarkable legacy he left us as an artist, we ask that all matters involving his estate be handled with the dignity and the respect that Michael and his family deserve," the statement said.

The will doesn't name father Joe Jackson to any position of authority in administering the estate. Also shut out is ex-wife Debbie Rowe, the mother of his two oldest children.

The executors moved quickly to take control of all of Michael Jackson's property, going to court hours after filing the will to challenge a previous ruling that gave Katherine Jackson control of 2,000 items from Neverland.

Paul Gordon Hoffman, an attorney for the executors, told Superior Court Judge Mitchell Beckloff his clients are the proper people to take over Jackson's financial affairs. He called Katherine Jackson's speed in getting limited power over her son's property "a race to the courthouse that is, frankly, improper."

Judge Beckloff urged attorneys from both sides to try to reach a compromise. A hearing on the estate was set for Monday.

The will, dated July 7, 2002, gives the entire estate to the Michael Jackson Family Trust. Details of the trust will not be made public.

Jackson owns a 50 percent stake in the massive Sony-ATV Music Publishing Catalog, which includes music by the Beatles, Bob Dylan, Neil Diamond, Lady Gaga and the Jonas Brothers.

Jackson, who died June 25 at age 50, left behind three children: son Michael Joseph Jr., known as Prince Michael, 12; daughter Paris Michael Katherine, 11; and son Prince Michael II, 7. Rowe was the mother of the two oldest children; the youngest was born to a surrogate mother, who has never been identified.

Rowe, who was married to Jackson in 1996 and filed for divorce three years later, surrendered her parental rights. An appeals court later found that was done in error, and Rowe and Jackson entered an out-of-court settlement in 2006.

Neither Rowe nor her attorneys have indicated whether she intends to seek custody of the two oldest children.
___

AP writers Michael R. Blood, Noaki Schwartz and Ryan Nakashima in Los Angeles; John Rogers in Los Olivos; Michele Salcedo in Washington; and AP Entertainment Writer Erin Carlson in New York contributed to this story.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090702/ap_on_en_mu/us_michael_jackson
_________

The DEfuckingA have to stick their nose into everything. There won't be freedom until that organization is disbanded.
 
Powerful sedative found in Michael Jackson's home
Associated Press
Yahoo! News
By MICHAEL R. BLOOD, Associated Press writer
July 3, 2009

LOS ANGELES – The powerful sedative Diprivan was found in Michael Jackson's home, a law enforcement official said Friday as the city planned for a massive crowd at the singer's memorial service.

Diprivan is an anesthetic widely used in operating rooms to induce unconsciousness. Also known as Propofol, it's given intravenously and is very unusual to have in a private home.

The law enforcement official spoke on condition of anonymity because the person was not authorized to speak about the matter.

A Los Angeles Police spokesman, Lt. John Romero, declined to discuss the case. "It's an ongoing investigation," he said.

The cause of Jackson's death has not been determined. Autopsy results are not expected for several weeks.

At the downtown Staples Center, where Jackson's memorial will be held Tuesday morning, Assistant Police Chief Earl Paysinger said anywhere from 250,000 to 700,000 people could try to reach the arena, even though only 17,500 tickets will be available.

City Councilwoman Jan Perry urged people to stay home and watch the memorial on TV. There will not be a funeral procession through the city.

Tickets to Jackson's memorial service will be free. They can be obtained by registering at Staplescenter.com. There will be 11,000 tickets for seats inside Staples Center and 6,500 for seats in the adjacent Nokia Theatre, where fans can watch a simulcast. On Saturday night, 8,750 names will be randomly selected to receive two tickets each.

No details about the memorial service itself were released.

Jackson was known to have suffered from severe insomnia. In the weeks before his death, Cherilyn Lee, a registered nurse who was working with the singer, said Jackson pleaded for Diprivan amid the stress of preparing for a massive series of comeback concerts.

Lee said she repeatedly rejected his demands because the drug was unsafe.

Told Friday that Diprivan had been found at Jackson's house, she said, "I did everything I could to warn him against it."

Jackson had trouble sleeping as far back as 1989, said one of his former publicists, Rob Goldstone, who spent a month on the road with Jackson during the "Bad" tour.

"He had very bad nightmares, he found it very difficult to sleep," Goldstone said.

Diprivan, which has a milky appearance, is sometimes nicknamed "milk of amnesia." Last fall, doctors from the Mayo Clinic warned at a conference that in rare cases, Diprivan can trigger an irreversible chain of events leading to heart dysfunction and death.

They said three patients receiving Diprivan to treat severe seizures had suffered cardiac arrest, and two died. The doctors said the clinic stopped using Diprivan to treat such patients because of the danger.

The drug's manufacturer, AstraZeneca PLC, warns that patients using Diprivan should be continuously monitored, and in a tiny number of cases patients using it have suffered cardiac arrest, although it was not clear the drug was to blame.

Authorities are investigating allegations that the 50-year-old Jackson had been consuming painkillers, sedatives and antidepressants. Any criminal charges would depend on whether Jackson had been overly prescribed medications, given drugs inappropriate for his needs, or if doctors knowingly prescribed Jackson medications under an assumed name.

Edward Chernoff, an attorney for Jackson's doctor, Dr. Conrad Murray, said Friday through a spokeswoman that he had agreed with investigators not to comment until information is released through official channels. Murray was in Jackson's rented mansion when the singer went into cardiac arrest in his bedroom on June 25.

Murray has spoken to police and authorities say he is not a suspect. In an earlier interview, Chernoff said Murray never gave or prescribed Jackson the painkillers Demerol or OxyContin, and denied reports suggesting that the doctor gave the pop star drugs that contributed to his death.

Chernoff would not discuss what drugs the doctor administered to Jackson, but said they would have been prescribed in response to a specific complaint.
____________

AP Entertainment Writer Lynn Elber and AP Music Writer Nekesa Moody contributed to this report.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090703/ap_on_re_us/us_michael_jackson
 
MJ had mad connects, how many people could just be like I want diprivan,versed etc and get it? The fucked up part is that this drug has given DEA access to this case and it'll become even more of a cluster fuck.
 
MJ-Demerol1.jpg


Use this "
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^ Not me to be honest, I personally have always believed he was guilty of child molestation but just got some OJ justice. It is funny to me how when people die everyone forgets all the fucked shit they did and makes them out to just be the best person ever.
 
drug_mentor;7304473 . . . It is funny to me how when people die everyone forgets all the fucked shit they did and makes them out to just be the best person ever.[/QUOTE said:
I hope my family will feel that way about me when I go. But, probably they won't.
 
have they released the autopsy results or said what drug it was that mighta killed him?

i had heard on the news that it was something that he recieved for anesthesia for surgery? any chance it was IV fent and midazolam or something like that?
 
Real death probes lack 'CSI' magic
by Connie Midey - Jul. 7, 2009 12:00 AM
The Arizona Republic

After a mysterious death, whether it involves a celebrity like Michael Jackson or the person next door, survivors want answers about causes, and they want them immediately. Television shows and today's tell-me-now sources of information have led us to expect no less.

But expectations aren't always based on reality. When Los Angeles County medical examiners completed Jackson's autopsy June 26, the public was told it would have to wait up to six more weeks for toxicology testing before learning the official cause of death.

In a world of instant news spread by Twitter, six weeks is an eternity. But in the post-mortem world, it's perfectly normal.

"In my field, we call it the 'CSI' effect," said Norman Wade, toxicology-lab director and chief toxicologist for the Maricopa County Medical Examiner's Office. "It has an effect on juries and on regular people. They see someone on a show like 'CSI' putting something into a machine and getting results in like 30 seconds, and they think it's just that simple."

It's not.

Even with the newest bells-and-whistles equipment to speed the work, pinpointing a cause of death is a time-intensive, hands-on job, taking about 30 days on average but in a rare, complicated case, as long as months, Wade said.

Toxicology testing in a forensic lab such as Maricopa County's looks for as many as 1,200 substances - prescription medicines, illicit drugs, alcohol, toxics used in suicides - to determine why someone has died.

"This is a forensic lab," Wade said, "and we take that very seriously. There's a lot of check and double-check. We don't do just one test. We do two, sometimes three or more to make sure."

And before computers do their work, humans meticulously prepare samples for testing, each batch including quality-control samples. Wade and his seven lab employees extract vitreous matter from the eyes (it is less subject to post-mortem decomposition than other parts of the body), blood, urine (if present), stomach contents and certain tissues, most often from the liver or brain, and sometimes from the lungs.

Depending on whether samples are liquid or solid, they may need to be evaporated, reconstituted or filtered and put on glass slides or in vials before screening.

Forensic employees load prepared samples into lab equipment, tell the computer what the samples are and in what sequence to check them, and hit the "run" button.

Samples are subject to four increasingly complex and sensitive levels of screening, which test for everything from alcohol to drugs and esoteric toxics - about 1,200 substances in all.

Results are logged in computers and on work sheets, with each sample tested multiple times and by different people. If questions remain, samples are sent to an out-of-state reference lab for further review.

Even then a case is not complete.

A forensic lab interprets findings, often in consultation with a pathologist, and suggests the drugs or drug interactions that could have resulted in death.

The lab then sends its report to the medical examiner, who puts toxicology-screening results together with autopsy findings and issues a cause of death.

One forensic scientist devoting full time to unraveling the mystery of one death might be able to find causes in less time, perhaps in two weeks for a relatively simple case, Wade said.

But that won't happen at the Maricopa County Medical Examiner's Office, which handled more than 7,000 cases in 2008, making it the fourth-busiest medical examiner's office in the United States. (New York City's office is No. 1, with about twice as many cases.)

"We've had some high-profile cases here," Wade said, "but we finished them within a month, just like all the others. The family wants to know what happened, and our philosophy is that somebody in the limelight is no more important to their family than somebody who's not in the limelight."

Reach the reporter at 602-444-8120 or [email protected].
Link: http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarep...ticles/2009/07/07/20090707toxicology0707.html
 
I got a sick Michael Jackson mix that has all the classics with other mashups and breakbeats thrown in, pretty sick... even some techy house in it... want the mix pm me I lost the link....
 
For some reason when I closed the above link it kept opening more and more windows of the story, I had to restart my computer to stop it. I don't know if it was just my computer or if the link is dodgy.

He has gotten on even more drugs since 2003 according to the preliminary toxicology report released the other day.

I would love a pharm collection like that, my mouth is fucking watering.
 
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