Dr. Conrad Murray Sentenced to Four Years Behind Bars in Death of Michael Jackson
A Los Angeles judge sentenced Dr. Conrad Murray to four years in jail Tuesday for the involuntary manslaughter death of Michael Jackson.
A Los Angeles judge sentenced Dr. Conrad Murray to four years in jail Tuesday for the involuntary manslaughter death of Michael Jackson.
Dr. Conrad Murray did not call 911 when Michael Jackson stopped breathing because emergency responders would not have been able to get through the gate to the singer’s home, he said in a TV interview to be aired this week.
After 866 days of waiting for the trial of Dr. Conrad Murray to come to an end, the family of Michael Jackson could finally let out their collective breaths Monday when Murray was convicted of involuntary manslaughter. The trial has dominated the family’s collective consciousness and energies since the pop star passed away in June of 2009.?
Dr. Conrad Murray is currently being held in the medical ward at the L.A. County Men’s Central Jail — but it’s NOT because there’s anything wrong with him … TMZ has learned.
Conrad Murray was spending his first night in jail Monday on suicide watch after being found guilty of involuntary manslaughter in the death of pop star Michael Jackson.
If Michael Jackson’s doctor, Conrad Murray, is convicted of felony involuntary manslaughter and sentenced to the maximum — 4 years in state prison — he will not spend a single day in prison and could end up on house arrest.
A coroner who conducted the autopsy on Michael Jackson says there is no evidence supporting the theory by attorneys for Dr. Conrad Murray that Jackson gave himself a fatal dose of the anesthetic propofol.
Lab results failed to find Michael Jackson’s fingerprints on syringes, drug vials or other medical evidence taken from his mansion after his death, jurors were told Thursday during the manslaughter trial of the singer’s doctor Conrad Murray.
Prosecutors in the manslaughter trial against Michael Jackson’s personal physician are keeping jurors focused on the doctor’s phone records from the day the King of Pop died, attempting to show that Dr. Conrad Murray was trying to juggle his medical practice, personal life and superstar patient all at the same time.
A Los Angeles judge has ordered under penalty of contempt and other sanctions that both lawyers and their employees connected to the manslaughter trial against Dr. Conrad Murray may not publicly discuss the case.