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MJ~Leben u. Sterben~u das Geschehen danach!

23.746 Beiträge ▪ Schlüsselwörter: Mord, Michael Jackson, Verurteilung ▪ Abonnieren: Feed E-Mail

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23.03.2013 um 06:58
habe bei FB was interessantes "entdeckt" ... :D



The story of MICHAEL JACKSON, TOHME TOHME and AEG LIVE. Part 1

March 10, 2013
by Vindicatemj (Helena)


http://vindicatemj.wordpress.com/2013/03/10/the-story-of-michael-jackson-tohme-tohme-and-aeg-live-part-1/


The story of MICHAEL JACKSON, TOHME, TOM BARRACK and AEG LIVE. Part 2

March 22, 2013
by Vindicatemj (Helena)


http://vindicatemj.wordpress.com/2013/03/22/the-story-of-michael-jackson-tohme-tom-barrack-and-aeg-live-part-2/

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23.03.2013 um 10:15
Paris Jackson questioned about dad's death in lawsuit

120724080654-entparis-prince-jackson-sto

Los Angeles (CNN) -- Paris Jackson, the 14-year-old daughter of Michael Jackson, is being questioned Thursday about her father's last days as part of her family's wrongful death lawsuit against a concert promoter.

In addition, Jackson lawyers told the judge in a court filing this week they were concerned that lawyers for AEG Live, the company accused of liability in Jackson's death, were "behaving aggressively and erratically" in their questioning of the Jackson children.

AEG Live asked Los Angeles Superior Judge Yvette Palazuelos to order Blanket Jackson to appear for a deposition, but his doctor warned it would be "medically detrimental" to the 10-year-old boy, according to the court filing.

When AEG Live lawyers deposed Prince Jackson, 16, earlier this month, they asked questions intended "to agitate the boy, creating serious concern among his guardians and attorneys," the document said.

Prince "testified that he was intimately involved in his father's affairs," an AEG Live lawyer said in an e-mail defending the questioning.

The wrongful death lawsuit is a high-stakes contest. Prince, Paris, Blanket and their grandmother, Katherine Jackson, are suing AEG Live for billions of dollars. The trial is set to begin in Los Angeles next month.

Jackson lawyers complained that AEG Live lawyers engaged in "a concerted tactical effort made to harass and burden the Jackson family through these abusive discovery processes."

While Blanket -- who was just 6 when his father died on June 25, 2009 -- will not be called as a witness in the trial, AEG Live has tried to force him to sit for a deposition, the filing said.

Blanket's doctor provided a letter saying it would be "medically detrimental" to the boy. "Yet defendants still to this day say they may move to compel Blanket's deposition," the Jackson filing said.

Jackson lawyers accused AEG Live lawyers of mistreating Prince when he was deposed on a recent Saturday. They "behaved in a manner designed to agitate the boy, creating serious concern among his guardians and attorneys," their filing said.

"Defense counsel asked the boy completely irrelevant and repetitive personal questions about whether he sends text messages, whether he send text messages from his phone, and whether he 'tweets,'" they said. "Defense counsel also asked the boy about every place he had ever lived, every teacher he had ever had and about his current efforts to start a career in addition to being a full-time student -- none of which have anything to do with the case at hand."

AEG Live lawyer Jessica Stebbins Bina, in an e-mail included in the court filing, defended her co-counsel Marvin Putnam's questioning of Prince.

"My understanding is that the deposition proceeded with appropriate questioning, and that the questions were legitimate questions appropriate to a wrongful death suit," she said.

The Jackson lawyers also complained about the questioning of family matriarch Katherine Jackson, who is 82. AEG Live lawyers deposed her for nine hours over three days and are asking for a fourth chance, they said. The questioning could have been easily done in two or three hours, they told the judge.

The lawsuit contends that AEG Live is responsible for Jackson's death because it hired and supervised Dr. Conrad Murray, who was administering the surgical anesthetic propofol to Jackson each night for a month to induce sleep as he prepared for a series of concerts organized by AEG Live.

AEG Live contends that Michael Jackson chose Murray as his personal physician. The promoter denies having hired or supervised Murray.

A jury found Murray guilty of involuntary manslaughter after hearing testimony that he violated medical standards in his treatment of Jackson.

http://edition.cnn.com/2013/03/21/showbiz/paris-jackson-testimony/index.html?sr=sharebar_twitter


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23.03.2013 um 10:18
Paris Jackson Deposed In Katherine Jackson’s Wrongful Death Lawsuit Against AEG




http://radaronline.com/exclusives/2013/03/paris-jackson-deposed-katherine-jackson-wrongful-death-lawsuit-aeg-exclusive/


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25.03.2013 um 14:50
Conrad Murray defends lawyer as appeal nears
By Alan Duke, CNN
March 25, 2013 -- Updated 1006 GMT (1806 HKT)


Dr-Conrad-Murray-Denied-Bail-As-He-Await

Los Angeles (CNN) -- Dr. Conrad Murray defended his appellate lawyer from "a slew of disparaging remarks" just days before she files the appeal of the doctor's involuntary manslaughter conviction in Michael Jackson's death.

CNN has obtained sections of that 300-page appeal, including the defense argument that the trial judge erred by not allowing the testimony of Dr. Arnold Klein, a dermatologist the defense contended addicted Jackson to Demerol in his last weeks.

Murray's appeal, which will be filed Monday, also argues that prosecutors never proved Jackson was hooked up to an IV drip of the drug that killed him. The defense theory was that Jackson had administered the fatal dosage himself while the doctor was away.

The coroner ruled that Jackson died from an overdose of the surgical anesthetic propofol in combination with sedatives on June 25, 2009. Murray told investigators he used propofol to induce sleep because Jackson was suffering from insomnia.

Murray served as Jackson's personal physician as the pop icon prepared for 50 shows that were to debut in London in July 2009, but his patient was fighting a battle for sleep between rehearsals.

A wrongful death lawsuit filed by Jackson's three children and his mother is set for trial next month. The family accuses concert promoter AEG Live of liability in his death by hiring and supervising the doctor, who was convicted of involuntary manslaughter in November 2011.
Murray takes a side in lawyer dispute
Murray -- during a phone call to CNN Saturday from the Los Angeles County jail where he's been held since he was sentenced to four years in prison -- said he was "impelled to stand up for" attorney Valerie Wass, who has been involved in a personal dispute with Murray's trial lawyer Michael Flanagan.

Flanagan was helping Wass, who wrote the appeal, until the two lawyers were involved in a jailhouse argument last January. Flanagan dropped Murray as a client after the incident, but the appeals court later ordered him to respond to requests from Wass for case files, which she said he had withheld.

Murray, who witnessed the January incident between his attorneys, issued a strong statement of support for Wass in his call from jail.

"In recent weeks, I became keenly aware that a slew of disparaging remarks and personal information about my appellate attorney, Valerie Wass, were unjustly released to the media and the public," Murray said. "Because of this injustice, I am impelled to stand up for this woman, for whom I have the utmost respect and confidence."

Wass completed work on the appeal even though "with the blink of an eye, all of her promised assistance vanished; they abandoned ship," Murray said.

Responding to CNN on Sunday, Flanagan said he had no comment.

"Although she needed help, she did not quit, did not jump ship, nor did she succumb to pressure while others abdicated their responsibilities," he said. "She held steadfastly to her professional and moral conduct, which was bolstered by her amazing mettle of mind and spirit."

Murray said Wass "stood up for me amidst a most arduous and challenging series of obstacles, and whose loyalty remains indisputable. It is my belief that she took a personal hit for me, and I want to let her know that I'll forever be grateful."
Murray's appeal: Jackson's Demerol addiction
Although Murray could be freed in about seven months, he is seeking to clear his name and get his medical license back by having his conviction overturned on appeal.

The appeal contends that Los Angeles Superior Judge Michael Pastor wrongly prevented Murray's trial lawyers from making their case that Jackson was going through withdrawal from a Demerol addiction the day he died.

"The reason it sought to prove that Jackson was going through Demerol withdrawal on June 25th was to show his state of mind -- specifically, that his resulting physiological and psychological state, along with the pressure he was under from preparing for the upcoming tour, rendered him so desperate for sleep that he would take the extraordinary action of self-administering propofol when he was outside the presence of appellant," Wass writes.

Defense experts testified at the trial that Jackson's insomnia could have been caused by the withdrawal.

The defense wanted Klein and two staff members to testify about Jackson's 23 visits to their Beverly Hills clinic in the three months before his death, including five in June 2009. Jackson was given Demerol during those visits, the last time on June 22, three days before he died.

"Michael Jackson could not sleep because of the Demerol," the defense said in pretrial arguments. "Dr. Murray did not know that. But Arnold Klein did. Michael Jackson needed sleep because he was withdrawing and addicted, both addicted and withdrawing from Demerol. That's important to our defense. In fact, it's absolutely vital."

Pastor, however, ruled that testimony from Klein and his staff would be a "distraction and divergence" in the trial.

"The defense was also unable to prove whether Jackson was addicted to Demerol and going through withdrawal at the time he died, because experts in the case articulated they could not reach conclusions based only on reviewing Klein's records," Wass writes in the appeal.

If Klein or his staff had been allowed to testify at the trial, "It is reasonably probable that at least one juror on the panel would have found appellant not guilty of involuntary manslaughter," the appeal argues. "Accordingly, regardless of the applicable standard of review, appellant's conviction must be reversed."
Murray's appeal: No proof of IV drip
The prosecution's theory in the trial was that Murray hooked Jackson up to an unusual makeshift IV drip of propofol and then left him alone to make phone calls in an adjacent room. Murray was criminally negligent because he did not properly monitor his patient who later died from an overdose, they argued.

The defense argued that the IV drip only sent saline into Jackson's leg to hydrate him and that Murray used a syringe to slowly push a safe dose of propofol into Jackson's blood while he watched him fall asleep. A frustrated Jackson could have awakened while Murray was away and administered the fatal dose himself, the defense said.

"The propofol infusion theory offered by the prosecution's expert was not supported by the evidence, and in fact, was so absurd, improbable and unbelievable that a rational trier of fact could not have concluded that the evidence was sufficient to establish that appellant had placed Jackson on a propofol drip on the day of his death," the appeal argues.

The prosecution built the IV drip theory based on testimony of one of Jackson's guards who said he saw a propofol bottle hanging above Jackson's death bed when he arrived to help revive him. An investigator also found a saline bag with a slit in it, which the prosecution contended was used to hold the bottle on the IV stand.

Defense propofol expert Dr. Paul White testified such an IV drip set up was "befuddling" because a propofol bottle comes with a hanging device. The hanging tab on the bottle was not used, both sides agreed.

"The prosecution concocted the novel and ridiculous method of placing the vial into the bag through the slit, hanging the bottle upside down at an angle using the bag for support, and then hanging the bag from the IV stand," the appeal argues.

A piece of tubing key to the IV drip was never found, but the prosecution suggested Murray could have slipped it into a pocket before leaving the bedroom to ride to the hospital with Jackson.

Wass argues that is "pure speculation, and the absence of evidence of a long IV line with propofol residue is fatal to the prosecution's theory."

"If an IV line used in a propofol infusion had been placed in appellant's pocket, it would have been dripping propofol, and resulted in a messy wet pocket," the appeal argues. "Such a result is not reflected in any photograph, testimony, or statement of any witness."
Murray's appeal: Jackson gave himself fatal dose
Michael Jackson got little sleep the morning he died, despite Murray's bedside efforts using sedatives, according to Murray.

"It is likely that Jackson's heightened insomnia on June 25th was exacerbated by his surreptitious Demerol addiction and the resultant acute withdrawal syndrome therefrom," the appeal says. "Jackson's last Demerol injection was on June 22nd, less than 72 hours before his death, which could have been a peak period for the occurrence of withdrawal symptoms."

But he did fall asleep at 10:40 a.m after a single dose of propofol, he told investigators. After watching him for 15 minutes, Murray left him alone, the appeal says.

"The evidence is consistent with a scenario in which Jackson quickly self-injected the lethal bolus dose of propofol while appellant was outside the bedroom," the appeal contends. "Based on the toxicology results, it appears that the rapid injection lead to cardiac arrest and a quick death."

He may have had access to a bottle of propofol without Murray knowing, the appeal says.

"Jackson was very familiar with propofol, as other doctors had administered propofol to him," Wass writes. "It is conceivable that Jackson had obtained a secondary source for the drug, especially because Jackson had been receiving nightly infusions from appellant for the previous two months, and appellant had Sunday nights off."

If Jackson -- not Murray -- administered the final and fatal dose, then it was not the doctor's fault the patient died, the argument says.

Murray's appeal disputes the prosecution argument that Murray was criminally liable even if Jackson had administered the fatal dose himself because Murray should have known that leaving the drugs near Jackson's bed posed a risk. The risk was "not reasonably foreseeable," it said.

The prosecution will have a chance to respond to Murray's arguments before the California appeals court makes a decision.

http://edition.cnn.com/2013/03/24/showbiz/conrad-murray-appeal/index.html?sr=sharebar_twitter


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25.03.2013 um 20:23
@ghost7777
weißt Du zum vorgenannten Artikel, wann das Berufungsverfahren beginnt. Angeblich in wenigen Tagen?
Am Ende trifft das Berufungsverfahren mit dem Auftakt des Prozesses Jackson vs AEG live zusammen, das wäre ja ein komischer Zufall.
......und dann? Am Ende wird dann noch festgestellt, daß Michael sich selbst das Propofol gegeben hat und was machen dann die Jacksons in dem anderen Prozess?
Na ich weiß nicht, das ist wirklich ein Zufall???


@FaIrIeFlOwEr
guter Artikel vom 23.3. um 6.58h
vindicatemj.wordpress.com/2013/03/22/the-story-of-michael-jackson-tohme-tom-barrack-and-aeg-live
Habe nicht gewußt, daß der Barrack den Michael auch unter Druck gesetzt hat, er hat ja angeboten, Neverland zu finanzieren, wenn er dafür mit AEG einen Vertrag abschließt, falls das wirklich so stimmt.
Vorstellen kann ich es mir. Der Barrack soll mit dem Randy Phillips verbandelt sein.

Ich verstehe trotzdem nicht, warum der Tohme nicht mit vorgeladen wird, der hat doch den Michael als enger Berater auch unter Druck gesetzt?
Der wird nirgendwo erwähnt, es ist mir unverständlich!!!
Hat der dem Jermaine und dem Rest sooooo viel Gutes getan und Michaels Schätze von Neverland gut an alle verteilt????

Deshalb taucht jetzt plötzlich das auf:

Ich könnte wieder 1156fe haeh
Wer verkauft das???? Das geht doch nicht.

For Sale: Michael Jackson's MTV Video Music Award for "Thriller

http://www.nbclosangeles.com/news/local/Michael-Jackson-MTV-Moonman-Award-Thriller-199868691.html


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25.03.2013 um 22:12
Heute vor 30 Jahren moonwalkte Michael das erste Mal über die Bühne:

Thirty Years Ago: Michael Jackson First Moonwalked

Watch Jackson's first moonwalk from the Motown 25th Anniversary special

012f23 proxy
Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/videos/thirty-years-ago-tonight-michael-jackson-first-moonwalked-20130325#ixzz2OaVmq0ka
Follow us: @rollingstone on Twitter | RollingStone on Facebook


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26.03.2013 um 10:19
Zitat von SylvinaSylvina schrieb:weißt Du zum vorgenannten Artikel, wann das Berufungsverfahren beginnt. Angeblich in wenigen Tagen?
Sorry weiß ich auch noch nicht ......müßte ja dieser Tage dann sein .


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26.03.2013 um 10:25
https://twitter.com/AlanDukeCNN (Archiv-Version vom 06.10.2013)

Judge in Jacksons v. AEG sets April 2 hearing to consider CNN request for cameras in the trial.

Mal sehen ...vielleicht kommt es doch noch zu einer Übertragung hmmmmm.....


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27.03.2013 um 14:14
Paris Jackson: Souverän vor Gericht
Paris Jackson (14) verblüffte die Anwälte mit ihrer Souveränität, als sie diese Woche vor Gericht aussagte.
Katherine Jackson (82), die Mutter des verstorbenen Popstars Michael Jackson (+50, 'Thriller') und Großmutter von Paris, hatte ein Verfahren gegen den Konzertpromoter Aeg Live angestrengt, dem sie vorwirft, zum Tode ihres Sohnes beigetragen zu haben, indem das Unternehmen "ihm Druck machte, sich trotz seines anfälligen Gesundheitszustands auf seine Comeback-Konzerte 2009 vorzubereiten". Das Verfahren wurde im Namen der drei Kinder des King of Pop, Prince, Blanket und Paris, eröffnet. Letztere behielt während ihrer eidesstattlichen Aussage in dem Fall die Fassung und machte damit Eindruck auf die anwesenden Anwälte.

"Paris beeindruckte alle involvierten Anwälte mit ihrer Professionalität und ihrem Verhalten während ihrer eidesstattlichen Aussage vergangene Woche", erzählte ein Insider 'Radar Online'. "Ihr älterer Bruder, Prince, hatte eine schwere Zeit während seiner Aussage in der Woche zuvor, daher wurden Zugeständnisse getroffen, um sicherzustellen, dass das nicht nochmal passiert. Das ist der Grund, weshalb Katherines Anwälte verlangten, dass die Anhörung von Paris im Gerichtssaal stattfinde, so dass der Richter eingreifen könnte, falls es den Anschein macht, dass es zuviel für sie wird. Zum Glück kam es nicht dazu. Paris wird sich noch einen weiteren Tag den Fragen stellen müssen, aber das ist okay für sie - sie ist eine extrem intelligente, mitfühlende und nachdenkliche junge Dame."

In dem Verfahren wird behauptet, dass der Leiter von Aeg Live "Dr [Conrad] Murray anheuerte und überwachte", der wegen der fahrlässigen Tötung des Superstars verurteilt wurde. Der ehemalige Leibarzt von Michael Jackson sitzt seit November 2011 eine vierjährige Haftstrafe im Los Angeles County Jail ab. Aeg weist indes jegliches Fehlverhalten von sich.

Es bleibt abzuwarten, wie die Verhandlung und die weitere Befragung von Paris Jackson laufen wird.

http://www.fan-lexikon.de/musik/news/paris-jackson-souveraen-vor-gericht.147881.html


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27.03.2013 um 19:36
Michael Jackson's 1984 MTV Video Music "Moonman" Award for his "Thriller"
da654e 14729f sm

so, das Gebot liegt z.Z. bei 13 T $. "Sanders" - Auktionshaus befindet sich direkt in Los Angeles am Santa Monica Blvd.
Wo findet man, wer der Verkäufer ist? Mich würde doch nur zu sehr interessieren, wer so etwas macht? Das gehört doch eindeutig zu Michaels Erbe und zu den Kindern, so eine Sauerei!!!
Am Die. 2.4.2013 ist da Auktionsende. Welch merkwürdiger Zufall.


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27.03.2013 um 19:53
@ghost7777
danke, ja das Berufungsverfahren müßte dieser Tage sein.


Außerdem gehört dem Murray seine Aussage eindeutig auch in den Zivilprozess Jackson vs AEG, alles andere können die sich sparen. Genauso das Kindermädchen Grace wird auch nicht vorgeladen, na wo gibt es denn so was????????
Alle anderen, die da jetzt aussagen sollen, auch Michaels Kinder, ist für mich irrelevant.
Soi ein Blödsinn, kein Mensch weiß, was da abgegangen ist, aber jeder will seinen Senf dazugeben.
Also ich würde zum großen Rundumschlag ausholen, wenn mir jemand an mein Geld will und das werden die Anwälte von AEG auch tun, auch wenn ich es nicht für gut heiße, wie gnadenlos AEG Michael ausgenutzt hat und vorallem gnadenlos darauf gewartet hat, daß er aufgibt und sie sein "Verbürgtes" einverleiben können. Für jeden war es sichtbar, daß es Michael nicht gut ging, nur sein Arzt will es nicht gesehen haben, hahaha, eine Unverschämtheit..........und dafür wird er jetzt in dem Prozess, wo es um ihn geht, nicht befragt?????? Ein Absurdum in meinen Augen!

Die Paris war 9 Jahre alt, was soll sie mitbekommen haben? Der Michael hat sich bestimmt nicht mit ihr über seine geschäftlichen Belange unterhalten. Das wurde der in den letzten 4 Jahren gut eingetrichtert und sie hat genug mitbekommen und sicherlich auch vieles gelesen. Auf jeden Fall ist sie gesteuert von ihrem Clan und Prince wahrscheinlich auch. Aber abwarten, was sie daraus machen. Ich denke, es wird hauptsächlich auf die Tränendrüsen gedrückt, das werden sie ja inzwischen können, sie wollen ja die Schauspiellaufbahn einschlagen.
Vielleicht können sie jetzt Trauer zeigen, zur Trauerfeier ging es ja nicht!


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30.03.2013 um 07:20
Allen, die hier lesen:

Schöne Ostern



a7064a 13036834-3d-gerendert-illustratio


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30.03.2013 um 07:25
Ich weiß nicht, ob es stimmt, aber bei MJJC wurde behauptet, daß am Dienstag der Anderson Cooper von CNN den Conrad Murray aus dem Gefängnis heraus interviewt!!!
Na passt doch, am Dienstag beginnt ja auch der Zivilprozess der Jacksons gegen AEG, bei dem der Murray aber nicht befragt wird, obwohl er ja wohl der Haupttäter ist!
Sehr skuril alles.
http://www.mjjcommunity.com/forum/threads/128956-Conrad-Murray-will-be-interviewed-by-CNN-on-Tue-April-2nd

Bei CNN - Anderson Cooper ist davon nichts zu lesen.


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30.03.2013 um 17:23
Ich wünsche auch ein
wunderschönes Osterfest!!!


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30.03.2013 um 20:58
e6a248 Bild0471Original anzeigen (0,3 MB)
schöne Ostertage auch für die, die hier schreiben


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01.04.2013 um 11:38

Prince
Could Be Called to Testify
in MJ Wrongful Death Suit



0331-prince-mj-getty-3

Prince and Michael Jackson never worked together in their illustrious careers ... until now ... because TMZ has learned Katherine Jackson intends to call Prince as a witness in her wrongful death lawsuit against AEG.

As TMZ first reported, MJ's mom and three kids are seeking $40 billion in damages from AEG or its alleged negligent hiring and supervision of Dr. Conrad Murray.

According to docs filed earlier this month, Katherine's legal team plans to call nearly 100 witnesses ... with one of them being Prince.

It's curious, since Prince and MJ never collaborated, but we're hearing Katherine's legal team believes Prince had a bad experience with AEG in the past that could be relevant.

Can you imagine Prince on the witness stand?

"Dearly beloved, we are gathered here today to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth."

Read more: http://www.tmz.com/2013/03/31/michael-jackson-prince-aeg-wrongful-death-lawsuit/#ixzz2PCe6UXtL
Visit the TMZ Store: http://tmzstore.com


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02.04.2013 um 08:17
ein deutschsprachiger Bericht zum vorgenannten TMZ Artikel ... :)

40 Milliarden-Prozess - Prince sagt für Michael Jackson aus

MJ's Mutter Katherine Jackson wünscht sich Prince als Zeugen


2cd25bcb7062813eb8118c50c570067a zpsc5b3Original anzeigen (0,2 MB)
Zwei große Exzentriker: Prince & Michael Jackson



Michael Jacksons Mutter Katherine Jackson und seine drei hinterbliebenen Kinder haben Klage gegen die internationale Veranstaltungsfirma AEG eingereicht und fordern 40 Milliarden (!) US Dollar Schadensersatz.

Diese Summe soll sich zusammensetzen aus Zahlungen, die Jackson nie erreichten und die er verdient hätte, wäre er nicht gestorben. Katherine Jackson wünscht sich laut dem Online-Nachrichtendienst "TMZ", dass Musik-Legende Prince, 54, für seinen verstorbenen Kollegen aussagt.

Zwar haben sie nie zusammen gerbeitet, aber Katherine will wissen, dass auch Prince in der Vergangenheit Probleme mit AEG hatte. Ihre Anwälte planen, 100 Zeugen in den Zeugenstand rufen.

AEG ließ indes verlauten, die geforderten 40 Milliarden seien "absurd", da sich Jacksons Karriere zum Zeitpunkt seines Todes in einer Abwärtsspirale befunden hätte.

http://www.ok-magazin.de/people/news/17048/-40-milliarden-prozess-prince-sagt-f%C3%BCr-michael-jackson-aus (Archiv-Version vom 04.04.2013)


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02.04.2013 um 09:04
Ivy ‏@Ivy_4MJ 6h
It's interesting that Alan Duke titled his article as "AEG Live to put Michael Jackson on trial in own death" but does not ask himself why
1:58 AM - 2 Apr 13
*****
Ivy ‏@Ivy_4MJ
The story says there will be a new documentary - "Michael Jackson: The Final Days," a CNN documentary that will premiere at 10 p.m. Friday.
*****
Ivy ‏@Ivy_4MJ
CNN - If there had been a health problem with Jackson, AEG Live would have had no problem postponing the start of the tour, he said.
*****
Ivy ‏@Ivy_4MJ
CNN: Mr. Jackson was emphatic about the idea that he was great. 'You guys are all worrying about nothing. Look at me. I am fine.'"
*****
Ivy ‏@Ivy_4MJ
CNN : "Mr. Jackson was not in a position to get up on the stage and do the rehearsal because he had flu-like symptoms," Putnam said
*****
Ivy ‏@Ivy_4MJ
wow this is significant. If Michael was paying Murray , it changes everything.
*****
Ivy ‏@Ivy_4MJ
CNN - AEG's lawyer : "We know this. We know this because the plaintiffs have said so."
*****
Ivy ‏@Ivy_4MJ
CNN - In fact, Putnam said, he learned during the discovery process that MJ was paying Murray during the last two months of his life.
*****
Ivy ‏@Ivy_4MJ
AEG Live's role with Murray was only to "forward" money owed to him by Jackson, just as a patient would use their "MasterCard," Putnam said.
*****
Ivy ‏@Ivy_4MJ
CNN - "He had been MJ's long-time physician and continued in that capacity and was directed by him and could only be fired at will by him."
*****
Ivy ‏@Ivy_4MJ
CNN - "He (Murray) was chosen by Michael Jackson," Putnam said. "He was brought to Los Angeles by Michael Jackson. "
*****
Ivy ‏@Ivy_4MJ
CNN - AEG lawyer: The only way AEG Live can lose the case, he said, "would be on an emotional basis outside of the facts."
*****
Ivy ‏@Ivy_4MJ
CNN - AEG lawyer : "We went out of our way to ensure we did precisely not that," Putnam said. "They may want (cont) http://tl.gd/n_1rjhmnm

(cont) http://www.twitlonger.com/show/n_1rjhmnm
CNN - AEG lawyer : "We went out of our way to ensure we did precisely not that," Putnam said. "They may want to try to make the world believe that AEG Live is doing something inappropriate as to these children, but I'd ask the world to pause for a moment and look at what's actually happening here. They're the ones who are bringing this lawsuit and they're the ones who are saying they're going to put these children on the stand, something that I'm relatively certain their father would never, ever want to occur."
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Ivy ‏@Ivy_4MJ
CNN: Putnam questioned why their lawyers would call Prince and Paris to testify, suggesting it was "for the emotional response."
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Ivy ‏@Ivy_4MJ
CNN: "I don't know how you can't look to Mr. Jackson's responsibility there," AEG lawyer Marvin Putnam said. "He was a grown man."
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Ivy ‏@Ivy_4MJ
CNN :AEG Live to put Michael Jackson on trial in own death
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Ivy ‏@Ivy_4MJ
And the media finally woke up to AEG's defense strategy
*****
Alan Duke ‏@AlanDukeCNN
AEG Live to put Michael Jackson on trial in own death http://www.cnn.com/2013/04/01/showbiz/jackson-death-trial/index.html?sr=sharebar_twitter
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02.04.2013 um 09:13
AEG Live to put Michael Jackson on trial in own death

By Alan Duke
April 2, 2013 -- Updated 0006 GMT (0806 HKT)


STORY HIGHLIGHTS

* Michael Jackson's mom and kids claim AEG Live is liable in his death
* The suit accuses AEG Live of the negligent hiring of Dr. Conrad Murray
* Murray was Jackson's employee, not AEG Live's, promoter's lawyer says
* Jury selection begins Tuesday in a Los Angeles court


Los Angeles (CNN) -- Michael Jackson's last concert promoter will defend itself in a wrongful death lawsuit filed by the pop icon's family by arguing that Jackson was responsible for his own demise.

Child molestation accusations against Jackson, for which he was acquitted after a trial, and evidence of his drug addiction will likely be presented by AEG Live's lawyers as they argue that the company had no liability in his death.

The Jackson v. AEG Live trial, which could last two or three months, begins in a Los Angeles courtroom Tuesday.

Jackson died two weeks before his "This Is It" comeback concerts, organized by AEG Live, were to have debuted in London in the summer of 2009.

"I don't know how you can't look to Mr. Jackson's responsibility there," AEG lawyer Marvin Putnam said. "He was a grown man." Putnam was interviewed for "Michael Jackson: The Final Days," a CNN documentary that will premiere at 10 p.m. Friday.

"Mr. Jackson is a person who was known to doctor shop," Putnam said. "He was known to be someone who would tell one doctor one thing and another doctor something else."

The child molestation trial is relevant because it "resulted in an incredible increase in his drug intake," Putnam said.

Jackson's eccentricities are fair game, AEG Live says

"We're talking about Michael Jackson," Putnam said. "This is a man who would show up in pajamas. This is a man who would stop traffic and get out and dance on top of his car. This is a man who would go to public events with a monkey named Bubbles. This is a man who said he slept in an oxygen chamber."

Lawyers for Jackson's mother, Katherine, and children, Prince, Paris and Blanket, argue that AEG Live is liable because the company hired and supervised Dr. Conrad Murray, who used a surgical anesthetic in a fatal effort to treat the singer's insomnia as he prepared for the comeback concerts. Murray was convicted of involuntary manslaughter and is serving a prison sentence.

Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Yvette Palazuelos ruled in February that Jackson lawyers have shown enough evidence to warrant a jury trial on the negligent hiring case. She also ruled there was evidence to support the Jacksons' claim that AEG Live executives could have foreseen that Murray would use dangerous drugs in treating the singer.

The lawsuit seeks a judgment against AEG Live equal to the money Jackson would have earned over the course of his remaining lifetime if he had not died in 2009. If AEG Live is found liable, it could cost the company several billion dollars, according to estimates of Jackson's income potential. AEG Live is a subsidiary of AEG, a global entertainment company that was for sale recently with an $8 billion asking price.

The judge will hear arguments for television cameras in the Los Angeles courtroom just before jury selection starts Tuesday morning. While the Jackson lawyers are expected to support CNN's request to televise the trial, AEG lawyers say they are worried it could create a fan "frenzy" outside the courthouse.

Prince and Paris Jackson to testify about dad's last days

The wrongful death trial, which could last several months, is expected to include testimony from Jackson's mother and his two oldest children, Prince and Paris.

Putnam questioned why their lawyers would call them to testify, suggesting it was "for the emotional response."

"I can't understand why bringing them to the stand has anything to do with whether or not Dr. Conrad Murray was hired by AEG or hired negligently. But perhaps they're bringing them to the stand for different reasons."

He bristled at the allegation, made by the Jackson lawyers in a court filing last month, that he was "behaving aggressively and erratically" in his questioning of Prince Jackson.

"We went out of our way to ensure we did precisely not that," Putnam said. "They may want to try to make the world believe that AEG Live is doing something inappropriate as to these children, but I'd ask the world to pause for a moment and look at what's actually happening here. They're the ones who are bringing this lawsuit and they're the ones who are saying they're going to put these children on the stand, something that I'm relatively certain their father would never, ever want to occur."

Jackson lawyers, he said, "are trying to sensationalize things that never happened" with their allegations about the way Prince was treated, he said. "I think in that scenario they're going to try to whip things up into a frenzy in the hopes that justice will not be served."

The only way AEG Live can lose the case, he said, "would be on an emotional basis outside of the facts."

Murray worked for Michael Jackson, not AEG, lawyer says

The key to AEG Live's defense is its contention that Murray was never an AEG employee but rather was chosen and paid by Michael Jackson for nearly four years until Jackson died.

While Murray has indicated he would invoke his Fifth Amendment right to avoid answering questions, Putnam pointed to the interview the doctor gave to police two days after Jackson's June 25, 2009, death. Murray told detectives it was his understanding that he was Jackson's employee, not AEG Live's, even though the concert promoter would be the party cutting his paychecks.

"He was chosen by Michael Jackson," Putnam said. "He was brought to Los Angeles by Michael Jackson. He had been Michael Jackson's long-time physician and continued in that capacity and was directed by him and could only be fired at will by him."

AEG Live became involved with Murray only after Jackson had persuaded him to join his "tour party" for the "This Is It" concerts, Putnam said. "Then what happens is AEG starts to go back and forth with him and his attorney, Dr. Conrad Murray, with drafts of contracts."

Although Murray began treating Jackson six days a week in May, it was only the night before Jackson's death that Murray signed a contract. AEG executives and Jackson never signed it, Putnam said. The Jackson lawyers will argue the signed contract was not necessary to establish employment.

The unsigned contract and the oral understanding with Murray called for the doctor to be paid $150,000 a month while he served as Jackson's personal physician while he performed 50 shows at London's O2 Arena in the second half of 2009 and into 2010.

AEG's role was like MasterCard, lawyer says

AEG Live's role with Murray was only to "forward" money owed to him by Jackson, just as a patient would use their "MasterCard," Putnam said. "If you go to your doctor and you pay with a credit card, obviously MasterCard in that instance, depending on your credit card, is providing the money to that doctor for services until you pay it back. Now, are you telling them MasterCard in some measure in that instance, did MasterCard hire the doctor or did you? Well, clearly you did. I think the analogy works in this instance."

In fact, Putnam said, he learned during the discovery process that Michael Jackson was paying Murray during the last two months of his life. "He was paying for him during his entire time in Los Angeles and during the time we're talking about, Dr. Conrad Murray was being paid by Michael Jackson," he said. "We know this. We know this because the plaintiffs have said so."

The revelation that Jackson paid Murray during that period has not been reported. Jackson lawyers declined to comment, citing ethical limitations to their ability to talk to the media about the case.

E-mails reveal AEG's involvement, Jacksons say

A cornerstone of the Jacksons' case is an e-mail AEG Live Co-CEO Paul Gongaware wrote 11 days before Jackson's death. The e-mail to show director Kenny Ortega addressed concerns that Murray had kept Jackson from a rehearsal the day before: "We want to remind (Murray) that it is AEG, not MJ, who is paying his salary. We want to remind him what is expected of him."

Jackson lawyers argue the e-mail is evidence that AEG Live used Murray's fear of losing his lucrative job as Jackson's personal physician to pressure him to have Jackson ready for rehearsals despite his fragile health.

The AEG Live lawyers say the Jackson lawyers have "taken it completely out of context." Gongaware and the others were only concerned with making sure Murray had all the help he needed, such as perhaps a physical therapist or a nutritionist for his patient, Putnam said.

"Not only was there no such pressure, there couldn't be in a professional relationship," Putnam said in his CNN interview. "To say that that was the case would say that a doctor in some measure was not abiding by his Hippocratic Oath. If there's a professional who's providing a service for you, others outside of that professional relationship may go to that person, as you might any doctor and say, 'Are you doing all the things necessary for Mr. Jackson?' That doesn't apply pressure or control."

Ortega, who had worked closely with Jackson on previous tours, sounded a loud warning about his health after Jackson showed up for a rehearsal shivering just over a week before his death. He wrote in an e-mail to AEG Live President Randy Phillips: "It is like there are two people there. One (deep inside) trying to hold on to what he was and still can be and not wanting us to quit him, the other in this weakened and troubled state. I believe we need professional guidance in this matter."

In the e-mail, which was disclosed during Ortega's testimony at Murray's criminal trial, the show director also said he was worried about "real emotional stuff" Jackson appeared to be dealing with. "Everything in me says he should be psychologically evaluated," he wrote. Ortega said Jackson had "strong signs of paranoia, anxiety and obsessive-like behavior" and suggested they hire a "top psychiatrist in to evaluate him ASAP."

AEG Live worried about the flu, not drugs, lawyer says

The Ortega e-mail was not sounding an alarm about Jackson's health but just telling Phillips that Jackson was suffering "flu-like symptoms," Putnam said.

"Mr. Jackson was not in a position to get up on the stage and do the rehearsal because he had flu-like symptoms," Putnam said. "He was cold, he was shaky and as a result he didn't perform that evening."

"People were worried about that flu," so AEG Live executives called a meeting with Jackson and Murray the next day at Jackson's home to discuss it, he said.

"So Mr. Phillips went to that meeting at Mr. Jackson's home, that would be on the 20th of June, that's five days before Mr. Jackson passed," Putnam said. "And they got there, and Mr. Jackson was emphatic about the idea that he was great. 'You guys are all worrying about nothing. Look at me. I am fine.'"

Phillips sent Ortega a glowing endorsement of Murray: "This doctor is extremely successful (we check everyone out) and does not need this gig so he is totally unbiased and ethical."

The flu scare was one of only "a couple of occasions" that AEG Live's president had to be concerned about Jackson's health, Putnam said.

Other than "little instances like that," there "was nothing that ultimately gave rise any time before Mr. Jackson's death that there was any problem with Mr. Jackson," he said.

AEG Live would not have rushed Jackson, lawyer says

If there had been a health problem with Jackson, AEG Live would have had no problem postponing the start of the tour, he said.

"AEG Live had already moved the concerts because they weren't going to be ready in time for early July because of the number of set pieces Mr. Jackson wanted," he said. "There would be no rush for AEG Live to have to get to the stage by, I think at that point, by July 13th. If there was a problem here AEG wanted to know there was a problem because they could simply move the concerts."

The 50 shows were to be spread out over a year in the O2 Arena, which AEG owned and controlled, he said. "AEG had no interest in rushing to get to July 13th. On the contrary, if there was an issue they would have wanted to know."

What did Randy Phillips know?

An earlier e-mail leaked to the Los Angeles Times last year suggests that AEG Live's president saw Jackson's problems first-hand the day the pop star was to appear at the O2 Arena to publicly announce the shows. "MJ is locked in his room drunk and despondent," Phillips wrote in a March 5, 2009, e-mail to AEG Live's parent company, the paper reported. "I (am) trying to sober him up."

"I screamed at him so loud the walls are shaking," Phillips wrote. "He is an emotionally paralyzed mess riddled with self-loathing and doubt now that it is show time."

Despite this, Putnam insisted that Phillips was "incredibly impressed" and "saw a really engaged, interested, very smart, and savvy Michael Jackson."

The AEG Live chief had only "certain limited encounters" with Jackson in the months leading up to the scheduled shows, but he did get glowing reports, Putnam said. "Mr. Phillips kept hearing from various people in the tour party from rehearsals, and practices and meetings with various promoters, meetings with people who were going to do clothes, makeup, things of that nature," he said. "It was the same, that Mr. Jackson was incredibly engaged, was incredibly interested and seemed great."

AEG Live executives also had "no indication at any point that there was a problem with Conrad Murray," Putnam said. "He was licensed in four states. He had never been reprimanded. There were no indicators or warning signs of a problem. "

"Mr. Phillips had met him once, and he seemed quite happy that this was a fine, outstanding doctor in all appearances and he liked that fact," Putnam said. "And he liked that fact that he didn't appear to be a sycophant."

Trial judge thinks Jackson may have a case

Palazuelos, in her ruling rejecting an AEG Live's request to have the case thrown out, said she agreed that the Jackson lawyers had provided evidence that AEG Live didn't do "a sufficient background check of Dr. Murray, which would have established that Murray was deeply in debt."

Jackson's previous relationship with Murray, who treated him and his children for minor illnesses in Las Vegas, did not relieve AEG Live of liability, "although the fact may be relevant in determining proportional liability and damages," she said.

While the AEG Live lawyers argued the company could not have foreseen that Murray might use dangerous drugs on Jackson in preparation for the tour, Palazuelos said there was evidence that Gongaware had "previous tour experiences" with Jackson in which "tour doctors" gave "large amounts of drugs/controlled substances to him."

Gongaware testified in Murray's trial that he worked as tour manager for Jackson's "Dangerous" and "History" tours before joining AEG Live. The judge cited "Gongaware's general knowledge of the ethical issues surrounding 'tour doctors' and the practice of administering drugs to performing artists."

"There is a triable issue of fact as to whether it was foreseeable that such a physician under strong financial pressure may compromise his Hippocratic Oath and do what was known by AEG Live's executives to be an unfortunate practice in the entertainment industry for financial gain," the judge wrote.

http://edition.cnn.com/2013/04/01/showbiz/jackson-death-trial/index.html?sr=sharebar_twitter


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02.04.2013 um 11:09

Michael Jackson: Irrer Justiz-Thriller geht am Dienstag in eine neue Runde





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Michael Jackson: Irrer Justiz-Thriller geht am Dienstag in eine neue Runde

Montag, 1. April 2013, 19:34 Uhr



Mit nur einem Justiz-Thriller um den Tod von Michael Jackson ist es nicht getan: Nach einem schlagzeilenträchtigen Prozess gegen den Leibarzt des Sängers, Dr. Conrad Murray, hatte es im November 2011 einen Schuldspruch gegeben. Der Herzspezialist wurde wegen fahrlässiger Tötung zur Höchststrafe von vier Jahren Haft verurteilt. Späte Genugtuung für die Familie und die Fans des ‘King of Pop’, der am 25. Juni 2009 an der Überdosis eines Narkosemittels gestorben ist. Murray hatte dem Sänger über Wochen hinweg als Schlafmittel seine “Milch” gegeben, so nannte Jackson das weißliche Propofol, das ihn am Ende das Leben kostete.

Nun geht es mit einer Zivilklage wieder vor Gericht. Es geht um viel Geld. Und wieder dürften schockierende Einzelheiten aus dem 50-jährigen Leben des Popstars ans Licht kommen.

Jacksons Mutter Katherine (82) und seine drei Kinder haben den amerikanischen Konzertveranstalter AEG Live auf Schadenersatz verklagt. Sie werfen dem Unternehmen unter anderem vor, die Gesundheit und Sicherheit des Stars aus Profitsucht vernachlässigt zu haben. Das Unternehmen organisierte die für Sommer 2009 geplante Comeback-Konzertreihe des Sängers in London.

AEG Live soll für die Einstellung von Murray zur Verantwortung gezogen werden. Der Leibarzt verdiente angeblich 150.000 Dollar (etwa 115.000 Euro) im Monat, um den Sänger bei seinen Proben für die Auftritte gesund und fit zu halten. Jackson starb wenige Wochen vor dem geplanten Show-Auftakt.

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Es geht um Millionen, möglicherweise um Milliarden. Die Angehörigen wollen mit einer Summe entschädigt werden, die Jackson nach seiner Comeback-Tour und einem Karriereschub hätte verdienen können. Seine älteren Kinder, Prince (16) und Paris (14), werden im Zeugenstand erwartet. Beide wurden von den Anwälten des Konzertveranstalters bereits in die Mangel genommen. Nur der zehnjährige Blanket, der beim Tod seines Vaters gerade sechs Jahre alt war, bleibt von eidesstattlichen Aussagen verschont. Spannend wäre auch ein Auftritt von Conrad Murray vor Gericht. In seinem eigenen Strafprozess hatte der Arzt geschwiegen.

Beim Gericht macht man sich auf ein langes Verfahren gefasst. Es soll am Dienstag mit der Auswahl der Juroren beginnen. 45 bis 60 Prozesstage seien angesetzt, teilte eine Gerichtssprecherin vorab der Nachrichtenagentur dpa mit. Bis zu drei Monate kann das dauern.

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Schnell geht es bei Jackson-Prozessen selten zu. Als der Sänger 2005 im kalifornischen Santa Maria wegen Verdachts auf Kindesmissbrauch vor Gericht stand, zog sich das Verfahren über vier Monate hin. Es endete mit einem für Jackson triumphalen Freispruch in allen Anklagepunkten.

In der Klage gegen AEG Live erhebt Jacksons Familie schwere Vorwürfe. Der Sänger sei bei seinen letzten Proben körperlich am Ende gewesen. Der Veranstalter habe den labilen Zustand des Sängers gekannt, ihn aber nicht geschont. Murray sei unter Druck gesetzt worden, seinen Patienten um jeden Preis fit zu halten. E-Mails und vertrauliche Anweisungen der Konzertmanager sollen der Anklage als Beweisstücke dienen.

AEG-Anwalt Marvin Putnam erklärte laut CNN vorab, dass Murray von Jackson als persönlicher Arzt eingestellt worden sei. Der Konzertpromoter habe mit dieser Wahl gar nichts zu tun gehabt.

Mit dem Prozess rückt die Jackson-Familie erneut ins Rampenlicht. Seit dem Tod des Sängers geht der Rummel um ihn weiter. Seine Brüder Jackie, Tito, Jermaine und Marlon gehen in Erinnerung an den “King of Pop” seit Monaten auf Tour. Anfang März standen sie auch in München auf der Bühne. Mit einer Neuauflage von Jacksons Hit-Album ‘Bad’ zum 25. Jubiläum rollte die Vermarktungswelle im vorigen Herbst weiter.

Auch Jacksons Kinder, unter der Obhut von Großmutter Katherine und Cousin TJ Jackson, halten die Erinnerung an ihren Vater wach. Im vorigen Jahr hatten sie Jackson mit einem Abdruck seiner Tanzschuhe und eines Handschuhs vor dem Grauman’s Chinese Theatre in Hollywood verewigt. (Barbara Munker, dpa) 044

Mehr lesen: http://www.klatsch-tratsch.de/2013/04/01/michael-jackson-irrer-justiz-thriller-geht-am-dienstag-in-eine-neue-runde/156968#ixzz2PINKgxI9 (Archiv-Version vom 03.04.2013)
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