Tuesday, February 09, 2010
LOS ANGELES: Michael Jackson's doctor pleaded not guilty here Monday after being charged with involuntary manslaughter in connection with the pop superstar's death from a lethal cocktail of prescription drugs.
Conrad Murray, 56, appeared before a packed courtroom to deny a single charge of causing Jackson's death, the culmination of a painstaking seven-month probe which involved local and federal investigators.
Murray's defense attorney Ed Chernoff entered the not guilty plea before the physician was ordered to surrender his passport and post bail of 75,000 dollars ahead of a hearing on April 5.
Murray, the last person to see Jackson alive, has admitted administering drugs to the singer to help him sleep shortly before his death at a rented mansion in Los Angeles on June 25 last year.
The doctor, who could face up to four years in prison if convicted, has acknowledged giving the anesthetic propofol to Jackson following the singer's "repeated demands/requests" for the drug.
LOS ANGELES: Michael Jackson's doctor pleaded not guilty here Monday after being charged with involuntary manslaughter in connection with the pop superstar's death from a lethal cocktail of prescription drugs.
Conrad Murray, 56, appeared before a packed courtroom to deny a single charge of causing Jackson's death, the culmination of a painstaking seven-month probe which involved local and federal investigators.
Murray's defense attorney Ed Chernoff entered the not guilty plea before the physician was ordered to surrender his passport and post bail of 75,000 dollars ahead of a hearing on April 5.
Murray, the last person to see Jackson alive, has admitted administering drugs to the singer to help him sleep shortly before his death at a rented mansion in Los Angeles on June 25 last year.
The doctor, who could face up to four years in prison if convicted, has acknowledged giving the anesthetic propofol to Jackson following the singer's "repeated demands/requests" for the drug.
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