August 26, 2010
Introduction:
A few months ago I caught wind that Conrad Murray's defense
strategy was going to put the blame on none other than the victim--Michael
Jackson--in a way I never thought possible--by saying Jackson
delivered the fatal dose of propofol to himself during Murray's
supposed 120-second absence from the room. For Murray to imply
this chain of events is a gross disrespect for the victim he
claims was a "friend". I thought initially this defense
was a bogus tabloid report, after all, Jackson's death was ruled
by experts to be "homicide via injection from another".
Thus, this defense strategy goes against the entire ruling of
death by experts who I hope will testify and back up their (what
I believe to be correct) conclusion--if there is a trial.
Before this hideous accusation of self-injection by Jackson,
Murray had been trying to shift blame on Jackson all along through
other methods, such as claiming he demanded propofol from him,
essentially forcing him to do it. Murray did and still does
possess free will. The exact wording of the Las Vegas search
warrant states, "Jackson remained awake and at approximately
1040 hours Murray finally administered 25 mg of propofol diluted
with lidocaine, via IV drip to keep Jackson sedated,
after repeated demands/requests from Jackson." First, there
was no IV drip delivering propofol as there was no manual/electronic
pump to do so. The only drip used was a gravity-fed saline drip
per the autopsy report. Second, you do not dilute propofol with
lidocaine. Third, how is someone who is being kept sedated in
fact wide awake and making repeated demands and/or requests?
I pray the police and DA are carefully examining every word
and every shred of evidence presented to them. I do not know
if they are or not, but I believe if they were examining the
evidence closer, the charges presented would be much higher
than involuntary manslaughter.
Murray's false claim that Jackson self-injected, which will
be examined in detail shortly, even if true still avoids providing
plausible explanations for such issues as: the massive lapse
in time (approximately 90 minutes) that Murray allowed to pass
without rendering sufficient aid, lacking proper devices to
render aid (the Ambu-bag was apparently part of the paramedics'
paraphernalia as if Jackson was not breathing but had a pulse
then Murray should have used the Ambu-bag with oxygen rather
than performing mouth-to-mouth CPR; the autopsy report states
the Ambu-bag was not even connected to the oxygen tank that
was reported empty on 07/13/2009, rendering this life-saving
object useless and likely unused), why Murray was seen toting
oxygen tanks which without sufficient equipment were insufficient
to treat apnea from propofol administration, why he performed
CPR in a bed, why he did not get Jackson to the hospital when
he was merely 4 minutes away, why he did not call 911 upon discovering
Jackson yet had been using a cell phone that morning, why Jackson
did not recover from the apnea when most people recover in less
than 3 minutes, why there were "multiple opened bottles
of propofol found, with small amounts of remaining drug",
etc.? These are all questions desperately needing answers.
Murray also withheld information from paramedics, UCLA staff,
and for two days, police. Admitting to only administering Ativan
and saline prevented health care staff from determining what
they were really treating. Treatment for propofol intoxication
would likely have only been supportive/symptomatic but Murray
should have been honest about what he had been administering
Jackson, especially if some sort of accident (and should have
administered appropriate supportive/symptomatic care to Jackson
himself). Why lie, then, and how does a patient get denied such
elementary care when a doctor is present and getting paid $150,000
a month to make sure the patient remains alive? How does one
fail a patient like Murray failed Jackson when he has been a
physician for 20 years? Murray deliberately, for whatever reasons,
made no attempt to revive or save Jackson's life regardless
of whom or what administered the medications based on information
we know. In addition, by him refusing to declare Jackson deceased
at the residence he delayed making the residence a crime scene
which has without a doubt compromised this case and allowed
room for corruption (see).
Discussion Regarding TMZ Live's Video Aired on 04/05/2010
Which Discusses the "Suicide Theory":
Please
view the video
Experts' Analysis Against Self-Administration:
From the autopsy report on page 11, in regard to the support
of homicide, statement number four states, "(t)he circumstances
do not support self administration of propofol."--Dr. Christopher
Rogers and Dr. Lakshmanan Sathyavagiswaran
From Dr. Selma Calmes' report contained within the autopsy
report:
"Could the decedent have given propofol to himself? It
is unknown where the propofol physically came from. It would
have been difficult for the patient to administer the drugs
(others besides propofol were administered) to himself, given
the configuration of the IV set-up. The IV catheter was in the
left leg. The injection port of the IV tubing was 13.5 cm from
the tip in the catheter. He would have had to bend his knee
sharply or sit up to reach the injection port and push the syringe
barrel, an awkward situation, especially if sleep was the goal.
If only bolus injections via a syringe were used, sleep would
not have been maintained, due to the short action of propofol.
Someone with medical knowledge or experience would have started
the IV. Anyone could have drawn up and administered the medications
after the IV was started."
Please keep in mind that anyone could administer the drug but
the IV configuration limited if not completely barred Jackson
from being capable of giving it to himself nor was he skilled
at IV injections. Also, the autopsy report says, "(l)ividity
was consistent with a supine position" meaning when he
expired and as fluids settled it was consistent with him lying
down on his back. Dr. Calmes said he would either have to have
bent his knee sharply or sat up in order to inject himself--his
knee was not bent nor does lividity in the supine position support
him expiring while sitting up and being left in this position.
Murray could have placed his body in the supine position before
lividity set in, but if this were the case, would that not mean
Murray likely was in Jackson's presence during a time in which
he should have saved his life and failed to do so? It could
also mean Jackson remained in the supine position throughout
Murray's medical "care" that night, further supporting
that Murray was the only one to administered drugs to Jackson.
Syringe Size Debacle:
Perhaps one of the most pivotal errors in this defense is the
claim that Jackson injected himself with the remaining contents
of a 20 mL bottle of propofol. Only 10 mL syringes were available
and used. This means Jackson could only inject 100 mg (10 mL)
in one inoculation because of the very rapid onset of action
of propofol. This dose should have in fact rendered him unconscious,
unable to subsequently inject the remaining 75 mg (7.5 mL) until
the preceding dose of propofol had worn off. He would have then
had to have awaken to have injected the remaining 75 mg, representing
another bout of unconsciousness only as long as 75 mg would
keep him unconscious. It is impossible that Jackson gave
himself 175 mg of propofol at one time based on medical supplies
available. If Jackson was given more than 100 mg at one
time then someone else had to do it to him as an unconscious
man cannot manually administered drugs to himself.
What is a "Massive Overdose" and how Likely is
Suicide/Accidental Overdose with Propofol?
Harvey Levin states that the bottle (a 20 mL bottle) was a "massive
overdose". This is far from being true. Death from excessive
propofol abuse by Iwersen-Bergmann, et al. states, "
(t)he risk of death due to a self-administered propofol intoxication
is very low, primarily due to the low concentration found in
commercial ampoules (20 mL containing 200 mg). This is equivalent
to a standard dose of 2-2.5 mg/kg body weight for the induction
of general anesthesia within 1-2 min after injection and arousal
after 5-10 minutes. The fast-acting narcotic effect of propofol
prevents the self-injection of more than one ampoule at one
time." Thus, 200 mg would almost certainly not result in
death due to an overdose, especially not in a healthy adult
patient like Jackson even if he was thin. The only way this
may have presented a problem is if the benzodiazepines in Jackson's
system were in fact sedating him and causing some respiratory
depression. This would also mean Jackson was in fact unconscious.
As mentioned in the previous paragraph, Jackson could not have
administered the entire ampoule himself due to the small size
of the syringes and subsequent loss of consciousness after receiving
100 mg (10 mL), the maximum amount one syringe could hold assuming
no lidocaine was added. Sedation can be achieved from doses
of 100 mg and less. In fact, 25 mg and 50 mg are typical bolus
doses for induction of sedation according to Lexicomp and can
cause sedation, albeit for a matter of minutes, if subsequent
sedation is not continued with propofol or another substance.
The only way 200 mg theoretically kills a typical adult is to
give it too rapidly (and to subsequently not have anyone there
to render aid)--this itself is a rare event as death from propofol
is infrequent even from people who abuse many times a day for
months or in some rare cases years. Death from propofol almost
always initially suspects third-party involvement, too, until
proven otherwise. Death from Propofol: Accident, Murder or
Suicide? by Kirby, et al. states, "Whether suicide
is possible with propofol has been debated. Some investigators
historically said no, because the maximum that was thought to
be injectable, before the individual lost consciousness and
was incapable of injecting more, was one vial (200 mg). This
amount is equivalent to a standard anesthetic induction dose
of 2.5 mg/kg to a healthy 80 kg individual." Jackson's
weight was determined to be 136 lbs or 62 kgs. That means a
standard dose for approximately 10 minutes of unconsciousness
would have been 125-155 mg, slightly less than the supposed
175 mg self-administered (200 mg minus the 25 mg Murray admits
to giving). Such a dose should not have been an overdose in
Jackson. As discussed previously it is also impossible for Jackson
to have over-rapidly injected propofol himself, too, based on
IV configuration. The syringe size also limited Jackson to what
amount he could have self-injected if able to defy the IV configuration.
That leaves only Murray either lying about the amount he gave
Jackson or possibly over-rapidly injecting him with a large
amount of the drug and then failing to render appropriate aid
while present.
Healthy patients who receive propofol for short-term procedures
(ex. cardioversion, dental procedures, etc.) do not have to
be intubated though propofol is almost always used with a patient
intubated and having their breathing supported. Jackson, a healthy
patient, had received propofol legitimately in the recent past
by Dr. David Adams for dental work (Anesthesiologist
calls Murray's statements false) and had no problems. Cardiopulmonary
equipment, such as an Ambu-bag and an oxygen with oxygen or
a ventilator is on standby as a precaution any time propofol
is given. Death after excess propofol abuse further states,
"Hypotension and apnea are relevant side effects...and
are probably dependent on dose and speed of propofol administration.
Apnea during anesthesia induction occurs more frequently with
propofol than with other anesthetics. The apena duration is
usually short but it can persist for up to 3 minutes."
Three minutes of cessation of breathing does not typically result
in death, nor is this length of apnea common even from 200 mg.
Furthermore, if Jackson had had his breathing assisted during
the period of apnea with something like an Ambu-bag and oxygen,
then there is no reason he should not have recovered fully.
Jackson would still be alive today.
What about the Arm?
TMZ's video states Jackson had a "huge amount" in
his arm. This has never been stated before nor have I found
it stated anywhere else for that matter. This could all be a
misunderstanding by the staff at TMZ given they do not have
sufficient medical knowledge. Could Murray have administered
this into his arm because the IV catheter tubing was no longer
viable or desirable or the amount was too small to give via
tubing? Jackson was essentially immobile with the IV catheter
in his leg--was the propofol, syringes and needles within arm's
reach to self-inject in the arm? Which arm had more propofol
as Jackson being right-handed he would not inject into his right
arm? Was Jackson even capable of injecting himself in the first
place as he was not a trained medical professional? Was there
any evidence of injection of propofol into his arm such as skin-popping?
If in fact he had a higher concentration of propofol in his
arm, could this indicate Jackson had limited-to no-circulation
in his body (he was deceased or almost deceased) and the last
dose essentially stalled within the circulatory system where
administered, meaning Jackson was unconscious and it was given
by Murray with Jackson in a grave state? I simply do not know
what to make of this comment. I think it is better left for
experts to examine or disregard.
Preparing the Syringe:
Another aspect of this case that bars Jackson from self-administering
is the time frame he had in which to do it. It would indeed
take many minutes, not seconds, to draw up and administer this
medication, especially drawing the entire contents out of the
glass bottle which wages a war with the syringe--it is difficult
to get the medication into the syringe as it tries to continuously
return to the bottle, even when air is misplaced for the liquid.
Unless trained in giving IV drugs or preparing them it is a
time-consuming task to draw up any large amount of contents
from a glass bottle. Lack of training and experience often results
in some loss of the drug when the syringe is removed from the
bottle, too. In other words, using a syringe to pull medication
from a glass bottle has a tendency to "spray" the
contents out either from the bottle and/or syringe. Unless someone
is highly trained or they have a vented needle these issues
are almost inevitable. It does not appear that Murray had any
vented supplies. Lidocaine was also found in the syringe, too,
and would have needed to have been withdrawn from its glass
bottling as well. I do not believe Jackson, within two minutes
or less, could draw out propofol and /or lidocaine from glass
bottling after just arousing from being sedated, self-injecting,
then being in such a severe state that when Murray came back
that he was not able to be revived. To further hint that Jackson
was able to prepare not one but two syringes containing propofol
and lidocaine, self-inject against all likelihood, and then
be in such a shape he was not revivable--all in less than two
minutes--is impossible.
Other Fallacies:
The mentioning of 10:00 p.m. in the TMZ video is false. Jackson
was at rehearsals well past midnight that night per many witnesses.
Furthermore, it makes no sense that Jackson was able to sleep
on Ativan and Versed the night before (June 23rd) then suddenly
on June 24th-25th Ativan, Versed and Valium could not induce
sleep or apparently even drowsiness (though again Murray said
he was "keeping him sedated"). An examination of Table
3A is not consistent with abuse or addiction to benzodiazepines,
either. There is also an issue with Murray administering parenteral
(through the skin) benzodiazepines when he had readily-available
oral Valium and Ativan he could have given Jackson to try to
induce sleep. A man who is sedated cannot swallow tablets, however.
If Jackson really wanted to sleep, why not simply grab or ask
for these tablets and take them in excess and wash them down
with the water or orange juice on the bedside table? Why did
Murray not continue giving Jackson benzodiazepines until he
was sedated? If Jackson was overdosed on benzodiazepines, Murray
could have remedied this with the flumazenil he had available.
This video mentions a drip of propofol again. There was no
propofol drip. There was no manual/electronic pump. If the tubing
used to administer propofol was 13.5 cm that is not long enough
to hold up a glass bottle for a gravity drip, either. Furthermore,
you would need vented tubing (which has never been said to have
been found) for fluid to actually flow from the bottle. There
was likely no vented tubing available based on evidence found
at the scene. Given the finding of syringes with propofol and
lidocaine, this seems to be the method Murray used to administer
propofol to Jackson--via bolus injections which would place
Murray there witnessing Jackson's response to the medications.
No reports have ever said that Murray was giving propofol for
60 days (eight weeks). Some say six weeks, some say two weeks.
Thus far only one receipt has been discussed in the California
search warrant. A receipt from 05/12/2009 shows what was purchased
by Murray himself through Applied Pharmacy Services in Las Vegas.
Multiple bottles of propofol, two vials of midazolam, one vial
of flumazenil and one container of lidocaine cream were purchased.
This receipt does not completely correlate with what was said
to have been found at the residence so where did the remaining
supplies come from and when? How many bottles of propofol did
Murray buy during his duration of "care" of Jackson?
One must understand a 20 mL vial only gives approximately 10-15
minutes of sedation if given via bolus (syringe). A 1000 mg
bottles would give approximately an 60-90 minutes of sedation
if given via boluses. If Murray was using propofol regularly
on Jackson, whether one week or six weeks, then he would have
needed numerous bottles of propofol, not just 5 or so bottles,
regardless of size. Further examining the California search
warrant also seriously questions the doses Murray claims to
have given Jackson the day he died. Many vials, including vials
of propofol, midazolam, lidocaine and lorazepam were empty.
Empty vials do not correlate with Murray's small amounts stated
as being administered on 06/25/2009. Either Murray was a vial
hoarder, he wasted the medications to stage repetitive use of
the drugs or he is lying about how much he administered of various
medications to Jackson. Hair samples from Jackson could clarify
this discrepancy in better detail.
"Dr. Murray's Defense--Jackson Killed Himself"
Please read the following link: TMZ
Synergism Denied:
First off, the likelihood of the administration of three benzodiazepines
failing to sedate Jackson is slim if not impossible. However,
if they were not sedating him as Murray claims then a synergistic
effect would be null as propofol would not suddenly cause the
benzodiazepines to sedate Jackson--they either would or would
not sedate him and propofol would take an effect independently.
Propofol decreases the clearance of midazolam by inhibiting
CYP3A4: An in vivo and in vitro study by Hamaoka, et al.
states that midazolam (Versed) may be cleared at a slower rate
when given with propofol but propofol's clearance is not affected.
Propofol inhibits midazolam from being metabolized from possible
competition of CYP3A4. This mean that if the midazolam had in
fact been sedating Jackson the effects would have been prolonged
but propofol's duration of action would not be effected. But,
Murray claims Jackson was not sedated. Thus, once the propofol
wore off within minutes as it normally would then Jackson would
have awoke again as the benzodiazepines are said to have had
no initial effect. If Murray is lying and Jackson was sedated,
whether fully or partially on midazolam, then the midazolam
had a longer duration of action than one would expect (the half-life
of midazolam is prolonged by approximately 61%).
Insinuating Jackson was out an hour on 25 mg of propofol in
conjunction with non-sedating doses of Ativan and Versed (which
also wears off fast) is impossible. Plus, this does not match
with the story Murray told detectives that is contained in the
search warrant. Murray said he gave 25 mg, observed Jackson
for 10 minutes then left no more than two minutes to use the
restroom. I do not believe 25 mg of propofol is capable of keeping
someone out for 10 minutes. If not previously sedated, which
Murray claims he was not, then he would have woke up while Murray
was monitoring him, before he went to the restroom.
(Lack of) Addiction vs. (Unintentional) Abuse:
Addiction to propofol is something I hope to speak about heavily
in the near future. For a short synopsis, please read this blog,
"Was Jackson an addict?". Please understand, one statement
that remains consistent across the board is Jackson wanted to
use propofol "to sleep". He did not wish to use it
for a "high" or euphoria as if this was the reason
for use then it would have been used in short bursts and Jackson
would not have desired to use it under a doctor's care for the
duration of the night with the anticipation of simply waking
up in the morning to start the day after getting a much desired
snooze. I cannot deny that using propofol for sleep is a form
of abuse. That makes Jackson's case unique in that he was not
abusing it for reasons of arrogance. Insomnia and fatigue can
be catastrophic and even fatal and there is no doubt Jackson
did in fact suffer from insomnia for years. Abuse and addiction
are not the same thing. Jackson's reported request for propofol
is a form of abuse that a lay person could naturally assume
as reasonable as Jackson, I promise you is not the first, not
the last or the only person to ever ask for propofol for sleep
because they were fatigued or unable to sleep. Jackson, as a
lay person, did not understand this drug did not render him
true sleep, that it put him at grave risk for infection and
apnea nor did he understand how it was administered or used
given when it was administered he was unconscious. It was the
duty of medical professionals to deny him of his what he likely
assumed to be a harmless request in which he could not seriously
consider the possibility of fatal consequences.
Enjoying Liquid Fire?
For TMZ to insinuate that Jackson "liked the sensation
of propofol being administer by IV, adding, "Jackson liked
to push it."--they should be sued for libel. Though not
everyone experiences a burn with propofol it seems likely Jackson
did given IV lidocaine was used. Many describe the administration
of propofol as the most painful experience of their life. Propofol
is only given by IV (peripheral, PICC or central line, etc.)
and saying he liked to push it, well, that is a difficult task
considering those receiving propofol become unconscious many
times within seconds of administration. If Jackson wanted to
abuse the propofol himself or thought that what he was doing
was in fact abuse he would not have had Conrad Murray there
to administer it and monitor him. Jackson did not think he was
abusing propofol, he thought a physician was treating his insomnia.
The Fallen Bottle:
Below are photos of the crime scene/bedroom for discussion about
the bottle found under the night stand:
http://www.intmensorg.info/images/mjdb.jpg
http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/2573786/Pictures-of-Jacksons-death-mansion.html
This particular bottle of propofol was the only bottle found
during the initial exam of the residence on 06/25/2009. It was
found on the floor under a night stand in the bedroom (see Table
3A of the autopsy report also for this information). This is
reported to be the bottle Jackson used to self-inject according
to Murray.
Medical supplies were on the gold table/trolley/night stand
seen in the photographs. He was lying on the left side of the
bed if you are visualizing this from the foot of the bed. He
was in the supine position. If Jackson was self-injecting he
would have the bottle in his left hand and the syringe in his
right hand as he was right-handed. He then likely would have
used two hands on the syringe to draw out the medication from
the bottle, likely suspending the bottle in the air with the
syringe. This is most easily done with two hands even for a
man with large hands. After withdrawal, he likely would have
left the bottle in the bed, to his left, as the syringe should
have stayed in his right hand. He would subsequently have pushed
the syringe with his right or both hands. Under no circumstances
does it make sense he would he have injected and then dropped
the bottle to his right on the floor. He had to have been using
his right hand to push in the contents of the syringe. The bottle
could only drop under the table if it was in his right hand
but this hand had to have been utilized to push the contents
of the syringe. This essentially rips Murrays notion that
the empty bottle under the table was dropped by a self-injecting
Jackson. Plus, was the bottle on the rug or hard floor? If it
had been tossed and hit the hard floor would it not have shattered?
If a bottle of propofol was on the floor to begin with, which
is possible, then Jackson could not have retrieved it with an
IV catheter in his leg. Anyone could have placed the bottle
under the night stand--including Murray. Whose fingerprints
are on the bottle? Fingerprints would not necessarily implicate
anyone but could rule out individuals--especially Jackson if
his fingerprints are lacking and if he accomplished self-administration
against all odds. I am sure he did not take the time to apply
gloves if he could even reach them. If Jackson's fingerprints
are lacking and Murray's present then that should answer the
question of who used the bottle. Have fingerprints been lifted
from the evidence? Would such occur for a involuntary manslaughter
case?
The Broken Syringe:
One of the two syringes collected was a broken syringe discovered
on 06/25/2009. This broken syringe contained propofol and lidocaine
only. This syringe was apparently not hidden in a closet like
the remaining supplies (including multiple empty bottles of
propofol) listed on Table 3A as collected on 06/29/2009. Was
this syringe found in the bed, on the floor, on the night stand,
etc.? If it was used to self-inject it should have either been
in the bed or attached to the tubing that was subsequently hidden.
Did this syringe even contain a needle or was a needle found
used to withdrawal propofol? Were fingerprints lifted off the
syringe? When did this syringe break? Was it broken by means
of the plunger (the part you push and pull) separate from the
barrel (what holds the contents)? If this is true, then this
syringe would not have been useable. Jackson could not have
used a broken syringe to have either drawn up or injected propofol.
He certainly could not have broken it after losing consciousness
either.
What does the tubing say about dosing?
I previously questioned the doses Murray claims to have administered
to Jackson due to numerous empty vials found. Murray claims
to have given only 25 mg (2.5 mL) of propofol to Jackson. The
tubing used to administer propofol was said to be 13.5 cm long
(approximately 5 inches long). Could 2.5 mL travel through the
tubing to reach Jackson? That seems unlikely unless Murray flushed
the line. Supplies to flush the line were apparently lacking
and he did not flush the tube before disconnecting it. The tubing
contained 0.47 g of liquid containing propofol, lidocaine and
flumazenil. If Jackson was given only 2.5 mL of propofol then
it seems this would have to have been given directly through
a vein, not the tubing as it would not have reached the blood
stream. If the tubing was used it seems that Murray had to have
given more than 2.5 mL. Regardless of which scenario this points
to Murray again lying about how much propofol he gave Jackson
that morning.
Clean Up Before They Come:
Murrays lawyer maintains that Murray did not do a "clean
up" before paramedics arrived. Really?
TMZ
TMZ
silive.com
In the autopsy report, an empty glass vial of propofol, an
empty glass vial of flumazenil, and the broken syringe with
only propofol and flumazenil are mentioned being found on 06/25/2009.
These items were not hidden.
Multiple bottles of propofol (some of which were used), another
syringe containing flumazenil, propofol, and lidocaine as well
as IV tubing also containing these three medications were found
on 06/29/2009 in a closet (radaronline).
Also found in a closet on 06/29/2009 were a blood pressure cuff
and pulse-ox--two items that should have been at the bedside
the entire time and caused no suspicion, whether giving propofol
or not. These two items, if used, would have helped keep Jackson
alive. These items were likely not used, for if they had been
used Jackson not only would likely be alive but they would have
alerted Murray of possible trouble and then later confirmed
that Jackson was deceased. All the mentioned items above were
indeed hidden, indicating a "clean up".
It has been stated that Alberto Alvarez was asked by Murray
to remove the IV tubing that contained "a white liquid",
that being propofol. Did paramedics take notice of the propofol
bottle and/or flumazenil bottle later found by detectives on
06/25/2009? Were these left accidentally on purpose in an attempt
to stage a scene? Possible alteration of the crime scene to
make it look like a suicide is highly possible given Murray's
defense. This, in turn, could indicate pre-mediated murder if
enough forethought was given to stage the scene in such a manner.
Murray's claim that he needed to go back to retrieve petty skin
creams (and having Jackson taken to the hospital instead of
being declared dead at the residence) also indicate he wanted
to go back to either alter the scene further or remove some
items from the scene. Why did Murray take the time to hide evidence
while insisting Jackson was alive and implied he could be saved?
Why would anyone who is responsible for keeping someone alive
take the time to hide evidence rather than render or seek aid
continuously? Why are Murray and his defense team lying about
a "clean up" when one is clearly evident?
Has anyone asked Murray what he did with the syringe when he
gave the supposed 25 mg? If Murray's syringe had been moved
from where he had left it prior to his restroom break, it would
have been apparent immediately to Murray because the propofol
bottle, syringe, etc. would all have been moved and placed in
such a matter supporting self-injection. Why not leave the area
as-is if it were an accident done by the victim himself? Murray
should have left everything in place as time was of the essence
and Jackson's life, according to Murray, was hanging in the
balance though reports do not support him being deceased. Why
essentially tear down an scene that really is an accident?
All the aforementioned statements above raise the question
of why did Murray tamper with the scene. If he genuinely did
not know what happened in that room while he was out he should
have left everything in exactly the same place as he found it
and focused on saving Jackson which did not require the removal
of items into closets and medical bags. There is no excuse for
the delay in calling 911 or not having proper resuscitative
equipment either as that is precisely why propofol is given
in a hospital setting only. Murray should have informed paramedics
of his suspicions, and been honest, instead of saying he had
only given Ativan to Jackson. Murray has been anything but honest.
Conclusion:
There has also been some mention that a 100 mL (1000 mg) bottle
was found in a closet with a large rip in it, indicating it
was used for some sort of make-shift drip. I have debated whether
or not this is true and lean towards it being false. If Murray
did not have some form of vented tubing there would have been
limited to no flow of liquid from the bottle as glass bottling
must be vented to flow. If Murray by some chance had some vented
supplies on hand and given it by gravity it would have killed
Jackson. He apparently would have also had to have held the
bottle attached to the 13.5 cm tubing which means he would have
witnessed what was occurring to Jackson. If he did in fact use
the 100 mL bottle that would also indicate he staged the scene
with the 20 mL bottle left behind in the room.
Death after excessive propofol abuse states, "After
a bolus injection, consciousness is lost in patients at propofol
blood concentrations of 1.3-6.8 mcg/mL Consciousness was regained
after 8-10 minutes at concentrations of 1-2.5 mcg/mL."
The article further states that in their patient case (a male
nurse who died from rapidly injecting multiple 200 mg doses
over a period of at least 6 hours based on urine samples) likely
died immediately after the final, rapid propofol injection due
to his blood level being 5.3 mcg/mL--compared to 4.1and 2.6
mcg/mL in Jackson, respectively. Both these levels are consistent
with Jackson not only being unconscious but would seem to indicate
he, too, may have died shortly after injection. We also, however,
still have to grapple with the information from the autopsy
report that states multiple bottles of propofol were found empty.
Keep in mind even though many bottles were empty, an enormous
amount of propofol is needed to keep someone sedated for any
length of time--200 mg (one 20 mL bottle) roughly gives 10 minutes
of sedation. How many bottles did Murray buy while Jackson was
under his care? How did Murray intend to keep this routine up
or was he inducing sedation with propofol then using benzodiazepines
to keep him sedated/asleep? How was Murray to receive propofol
in London? Did he intend on giving propofol to Jackson in London?
Was Jackson expected to live to see London?
Jackson's urinary propofol levels do not support him receiving
propofol for any serious duration of the night on 06/25/2009
(less than 0.10 mcg/ml and 0.15 mcg/ml versus 5.4 mcg/mL in
the male nurse who had been using the previous 6 hours before
his death). How much did Murray really give Jackson that morning
when Jackson should have been up and ready to begin his day?
Murray being a medical professional and by admitting he had
given propofol to Jackson before knew the possible consequences
of giving this drug too rapidly and knew how much to give as
well. He may have given bolus injections before on patients
for cardioversions. He also knew it was not a legitimate regimen
for insomnia, either, as it does not even induce true REM sleep
and can be fatal if given without respiratory assistance. He
knew how to do CPR, he knew Jackson was deceased at the house
and he knows what really happened. So why are people like me
and others having to try and piece this together when Murray
knows the truth?
If Jackson could not have injected the contents and killed
himself nor could he have completed this while Murray was out
of the room then Murray's defense is null and void . Evidence
certainly seems support this and likely if more evidence was
known then this could likely be established without reasonable
doubt. If that is then true that a much deeper analysis should
be completed regarding Jackson's death as pre-mediated murder
seems to be more likely than anything accidental.
Special thanks to "QuirkyDiana" for her contributions.
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