Jacko's doc gets four years

30 November 2011 - 02:09 By Reuters
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Dr Conrad Murray blows a kiss to an unidentified member of the Los Angeles courtroom audience after he was sentenced to four years in county jail for his involuntary manslaughter conviction of pop star Michael Jackson in 2009
Dr Conrad Murray blows a kiss to an unidentified member of the Los Angeles courtroom audience after he was sentenced to four years in county jail for his involuntary manslaughter conviction of pop star Michael Jackson in 2009
Image: MARIO ANZUONI

Michael Jackson's personal physician, Dr Conrad Murray, has been sentenced to four years in jail and denied probation for his conviction on a charge of involuntary manslaughter in the pop star's death.

Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor gave Murray the maximum sentence and said Murray engaged in "money for medicine madness that is simply not acceptable to me."

Murray, 58, dressed in a grey suit and purple paisley tie, sat emotionless throughout much of his sentencing in the trial that captured the world media's attention.

Just before he was led out of the courtroom, he blew kisses at an unidentified woman who shouted "we love you" to the convicted killier.

Thriller singer Jackson, who rose to fame in the late 1960s and 1970s as a member of the Jackson Five and had a stellar solo career in the 1980s, died of a drug overdose in June 2009, principally from the use of the surgical anaesthetic propofol as a sleeping aid.

That drug had been obtained and administered to Jackson by Murray at the singer's rented home.

Earlier this month, a jury convicted Murray of involuntary manslaughter, or gross negligence, in his treatment of Jackson after witnesses testified propofol should not be administered at home and, if it is, must be given only with the proper life-monitoring equipment on hand. It was not.

Dr Murray had agreed to care for Jackson ahead of the singer's comeback concerts in London and had negotiated a salary of $150000 a month to care for the singer.

At the sentencing, which was attended by members of the Jackson family, including his mother, Katherine, and several siblings, Deputy District Attorney David Walgren argued that Murray should not be given any leniency in his sentencing.

Walgren argued, as he did during Murray's six-week trial that ended early this month, that the doctor was negligent from the moment he began to care for Jackson by ordering huge quantities of propofol, administering it at home without the proper equipment, failing to quickly call paramedics when he found Jackson lifeless on June 25 2009, hiding evidence to cover up the propofol and lying to doctors about its use.

"The defendant was playing Russian roulette with Michael Jackson's life every single night," Walgren said.

Defence attorney Ed Chernoff asked for leniency, saying the crime was Murray's first and the doctor had a long history of quality treatment to patients.

He asked the judge to look at Murray's "book of life" and not just the one chapter regarding his treatment of Jackson.

Chernoff said he believed Murray should be asked to work in the community because he would do no good in a jail cell.

But Judge Pastor disagreed and said Murray engaged in a "pattern of lies" that the judge characterised as a "disgrace to the medical profession."

Murray was ordered to pay some court fees, and another hearing was set for prosecution claims that he might owe more than $100-million in restitution to Jackson's family.

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