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Doc's Defense: Demonizing Michael Jackson?

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  • Doc's Defense: Demonizing Michael Jackson?

    Doc's Defense: Demonizing Michael Jackson?

    E! Online
    August 14, 2009

    by Gina Serpe and Art Harris

    For Dr. Conrad Murray, the best defense may be a no-holds-barred smear
    campaign against Michael Jackson.

    Celebrity defender extraordinaire Mark Geragos, who successfully
    repped Jackson during his 2004 child-molestation trial, spoke to E!
    News yesterday, explaining why he rejected an overture to defend
    Murray, why he thinks the doctor may wind up charged with murder, and
    what exactly he believes the embattled medico will use as a defense
    strategy.

    Which, in a word, would be Jackson himself. (And all the
    controversies, mysteries, trials and, per Geragos, general "weirdness"
    that will forever be part and parcel with the King of Pop.)

    "Ultimately, that may be¦what the defense is, to say things about
    Michael I'm just not going to say," Geragos said. "Whatever is
    required by somebody who is going to defend the doctor, is not
    something I can do ethically."

    Or personally.

    "I've been approached," he said in reference to the possibility that
    he would join Murray's defense team. "But clearly I have a conflict of
    interest.

    "I represented Michael and I would not want to be in a position where
    I was deprecating Michael in any way, shape or form."

    Part of that defensive deprecation may come in the form of rehashing
    Jackson's drug addictions and his alleged doctor shopping'some reports
    claim the star sought prescriptions under 19 different aliases'which
    investigators are currently sussing out. (A copy of the search warrant
    executed this week shows officials were seeking proof that Murray
    bought propofol at a Las Vegas pharmacy.)

    A source told E! News that three prescription medications, including
    Xanax, were found in Jackson's system at his time of death, and
    Geragos said that he suspects detectives' efforts at tracking down the
    source of the drugs is the reason for the indefinitely delayed
    toxicology tests.

    When the results do finally come in, expect the pointer fingers'and
    the legal action'to fly.

    "I can ima is," Geragos said, adding that someone will likely need to
    be "blamed" for the death and that a wrongful death lawsuit would not
    be unexpected.

    "Whether it's against doctors, whether it's the Jacksons against AEG,
    or AEG against the estate¦Anytime you've got the kind of money
    that's at stake here, there will be lawyers, and where there's
    lawyers, there's lawsuits."

    And where there's Murray, there's likely a criminal charge¦though
    not, Geragos suspects, involuntary manslaughter, which is what he is
    currently under investigation for. Instead, Geragos believes attorneys
    may have the upper hand if they try to nail him for murder.

    "It's one of the most bizarre things," he said. "It's literally easier
    if you look at jury instructions, to get a jury to convict on
    second-degree (murder) than involuntary manslaughter."

    As for Jackson, the attorney has high hopes for his legacy. When asked
    what he hoped people would remember most about the star, Geragos said
    he wanted people to think of "all the greatness¦and forget all the
    weirdness."

    Too bad a lot of it's one and the same.


    http://www.eonline.com/uberblog/b139396_do cs_defense_demonizing_michael_jackson.html?utm_sou rce=eonline&utm_medium=rssfeeds&utm_campai gn=rss_topstories
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