This Article is From Oct 21, 2011

Michael Jackson self-injecting propofol a 'crazy scenario'

Michael Jackson self-injecting propofol a 'crazy scenario'

Highlights

  • The claim that Michael Jackson could have self-injected enough propofol to kill himself was a "crazy scenario," the last prosecution witness at the trial of the pop icon's doctor has said.
  • Anesthesiologist Steven Shafer added yesterday that Jackson, who died of acute propofol intoxication, must have had much more of the powerful sedative in his system than the 25 mg which accused doctor Conrad Murray admitted giving him.
  • Murray's lawyers, who started the five-week manslaughter trial claiming that Jackson could have caused his own death by self-administering propofol, said last week they would no longer claim he could have drunk it.
London: The claim that Michael Jackson could have self-injected enough propofol to kill himself was a "crazy scenario," the last prosecution witness at the trial of the pop icon's doctor has said.

Anesthesiologist Steven Shafer added yesterday that Jackson, who died of acute propofol intoxication, must have had much more of the powerful sedative in his system than the 25 mg which accused doctor Conrad Murray admitted giving him.

Murray's lawyers, who started the five-week manslaughter trial claiming that Jackson could have caused his own death by self-administering propofol, said last week they would no longer claim he could have drunk it.

But they have left open the possibility that the star, suffering from chronic insomnia and desperate for rest after a sleepless night, self-injected it via an intravenous (IV) dripin his leg while Murray was out of the room.

"People don't just wake up from anesthesia hell bent to pick up a syringe and pump it into the IV," Shafer said yesterday, adding: "It's a crazy scenario."

"Michael Jackson received more than 25 milligrams" of the drug, he added.

Shafer was the last witness for the prosecution in the five-week trial, which began on September 27. After him the defence is due to call witnesses, possibly as early as today,and could finish presenting its case next week.

The anesthesiologist said Wednesday that Murray behaved like the pop star's obedient "employee" and not his doctor, granting his every request for drugs which led to his death.

In court again on yesterday he questioned a claim by Murray's team that Jackson took eight tablets of the anti-anxiety medicine lorazepam in the hours leading up to hisdeath on June 25, 2009.

A defence study had miscalculated the amount of lorazepam by not taking into account a metabolite created in the liver, he said. There was actually a "rather trivial amount of lorazepam," a tiny fraction of a 2 mg tablet.

Murray, who was looking after Jackson as he rehearsed for a series of comeback concerts in London when the singer died, claims he was only out of the room for two minutes when he returned to find the singer not breathing.
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