The King of Pop is dead!!!

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The King of Pop is dead!!!

Postby myjanuarypink » Sat Jun 27, 2009 9:24 am

Dear all,

As the cliche goes, when America sneezes, the world catches cold. And then, when the King of Pop is dead, the whole world mourns.

I was totally shocked and devastated the moment I heard the news last night! OMG! Michael Joseph Jackson is dead! I can't believe it! He is still in his prime. He could have been 5=1 this August 29.

I was barely three years old, when I heard the song "Ben". My mum usually sang it for me or eventually I was listening to it as I grow older. One of our neighbours favourite. Over the years, it was followed by "Beat It", "Thriller", ""Rock It". "Man in the Mirror", etc. Oh yeah, his signature moves that is moonwalking and his white mittens. They are soo cool.

I became one of his million of fans and in fact, when he had a concert here in the Phils. last December 1996, I watched him together with my younger brother, Glenn, who is also a fan of MJ. We took the long walk along the CCP open grounds. And its worth it. We saw him at last and we are very happy!!! The concert was not enough as we wanted more but of course, it has to end and ever since then on, we hope and prayed that someday, he will be back here in our country and charm us once again.

All the news about it whether good or bad, I am affected. Why? It's because I can relate to him. Once you are famous and popular, you are alone at the top. And some people around him took advantage of him and how my heart was torn!!!

Now, that he is gone, he has left a legacy to the world and that is his music. To you my dear idol, Michael Joseph Jackson, who will be ALWAYS definitely missed and remembered.

Maryjane Girlie D. C. Sevilla
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Re: The King of Pop is dead!!!

Postby maynayz » Sun Jun 28, 2009 12:13 pm

RIP: Michael Jackson - King of Pop, Master of Moves, Break-dancing Bravado. My inspiration to sing and dance and learn to excel at both even if I do not make a career of it. He was not a molester. He was accused and acquitted but he was taken advantage of for his lost childhood and his overt kindness. I hope those who lied and hurt him are now rejoicing at his passing. Everything comes back to those who wrong others. He may have been strange and eccentric but he was no monster and not a pedophile. Rest In Peace Michael Jackson. 1958 - 2009. :|
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Re: The King of Pop is dead!!!

Postby jadegil6 » Thu Jul 02, 2009 10:57 pm

LOS ANGELES – The investigation of Michael Jackson's death is widening as questions intensify about the drugs he took, the doctors who provided them and the actions of police.

Why didn't police seal the mansion where he had been living? Why were moving vans seen at the home, and were any items removed before police wrapped up their search? Why didn't they get immediate search warrants? Why did they tow away a doctor's car right after the death but not declare the home a crime scene?

Los Angeles police say proper procedures were followed based on the circumstances officers encountered when they were called to the home at 12:21 p.m. on June 25. A doctor was attending to Jackson and stayed with him when he was placed in an ambulance at 1:07 p.m. There was no sign of foul play.

Others say police should have assumed it was possible a crime occurred and taken precautions to ensure the scene was not disrupted so evidence wasn't lost or tainted.

"If I was the chief detective on the case, I would have said, 'We don't know what's going on. We should seal the scene,'" said defense attorney Harland Braun, who has represented celebrities including Robert Blake, Roseanne and Gary Busey. "You always have to think of the worst-case scenario and you have to think fast. I would have sealed the scene just because it was Michael Jackson."

Whether the Jackson probe turns into a criminal investigation hinges on what evidence emerges involving the drugs. Charges could be brought if authorities determine Jackson had been overly prescribed medications, if he had been given drugs inappropriate for his medical needs, or if doctors knowingly prescribed Jackson medications under an assumed name.

It's still not known what caused Jackson's death at age 50. The pop star went into cardiac arrest in his bedroom and his personal physician, Dr. Conrad Murray, performed CPR while an ambulance was called, according to Murray's lawyers. Murray has spoken to police and authorities say he is not a suspect, though his actions have come under scrutiny because his own lawyers acknowledge it may have taken up to a half-hour for an ambulance to be summoned.

An autopsy was conducted but results are not expected for several weeks. The Jackson family had a second autopsy performed and those results also are pending.

On Wednesday, The Associated Press learned Los Angeles police asked the Drug Enforcement Administration to assist in the investigation.

DEA agents participated in the investigation of the 2007 overdose death of Anna Nicole Smith at a Florida hotel. California Attorney General Jerry Brown investigated her former boyfriend and two of her doctors.

Brown handed the investigation over to the Los Angeles district attorney's office, which filed charges of conspiring to provide Smith with prescription drugs.

Brown said the suspects broke the law because Smith was a "known addict." The former boyfriend and doctors denied the charges.

The DEA also probed whether painkillers found in actor Heath Ledger's system after his death last year were obtained illegally. Federal prosecutors did not charge anyone.

Jean Rosenbluth, a University of Southern California law professor, said the agency's involvement in the Jackson case suggests authorities are looking into whether drugs came from out of state. Murray lives in Las Vegas and is licensed to practice in Texas, Nevada and California.

Federal drug regulations include controls over whether and how frequently a doctor can write prescriptions over the phone, and DEA agents could be looking to see if these rules were broken, Rosenbluth said.

"You can't just get on the phone and continue to prescribe something for someone without having seen them for a long period of time," she said.

Jackson had a well-known history of using prescription medications, especially painkillers. Following his death, Cherilyn Lee, a registered nurse who had worked for Jackson, told the AP she repeatedly rejected his demands for the drug Diprivan, also known as Propofol. It's a potent anesthetic used in operating rooms and it would be highly unusual to have it in a private home.

Uri Geller, a former Jackson confidant, said he tried to keep Jackson from abusing painkillers and other prescription drugs, but others in the singer's circle kept him supplied.

"When Michael asked for something, he got it," Geller said in a telephone interview from his suburban London home.

Jackson had multiple doctors and many others like Geller who came in and out of his life. Which people are being interviewed by police is unclear because the LAPD has said virtually nothing about the probe.

"I am not going to make any comments on the investigation," Commander Patrick Gannon, the designated police spokesman on the Jackson case, said by e-mail Thursday.

Any evidence would be turned over to the district attorney's office, which has final say on criminal charges.

One of the key questions is why it took four days for police to issue a search warrant and remove medications from Jackson's home.

Although the home wasn't declared a crime scene, police did tow Murray's car the evening of the death to look for potential evidence.

Vernon J. Geberth, former commanding officer of the Bronx Homicide Task force in New York, said police should have known they were dealing with an extraordinary situation.

"If it's a high-profile person, you have to do more than you would do ordinarily," he said.

Still, Geberth, who now acts as a private forensic consultant, said he believes the LAPD acted appropriately.

"Having a doctor present altered the equation. It was not a homicide scene. It was an emergency medical scene," he said.

Police spokesman Lt. John Romero declined to comment when asked if the LAPD was reviewing its handling of the investigation.

Rosenbluth said if the case ends up as a criminal prosecution, any defense attorney would seize on the LAPD's failure to immediately seal Jackson's home.

"If you can get even one juror think, I don't know, maybe somebody fiddled with the medicine before the police came in and collected it, that's reasonable doubt," she said. "All that the defense attorney needs is one juror."
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Re: The King of Pop is dead!!!

Postby Durwood » Sat Jul 11, 2009 5:03 pm

Why anyone is boo hooing over an alledged (yes, i did say alledged) pedaphile is beyond me. All the talent in the world doesn't make up for perverse acts. Sorry i'm such a hard butt on this but........

p.s. great website and forum btw.

Durwood
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Re: The King of Pop is dead!!!

Postby longhorn1 » Mon Jul 27, 2009 8:32 pm

Associated press release on July 27, 2009:

LOS ANGELES – Michael Jackson's personal doctor administered a powerful anesthetic to help him sleep, and authorities believe the drug killed the pop singer, a law enforcement official told The Associated Press on Monday.

The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the investigation is ongoing, also provided a glimpse inside Jackson's rented mansion, describing the room Jackson slept in as outfitted with oxygen tanks and an IV drip. Another of his bedrooms was a shambles, with clothes and other items strewn about and handwritten notes stuck on the walls. One read: "children are sweet and innocent."

The official said Jackson regularly received propofol to sleep, relying on the drug like an alarm clock. A doctor would administer it when he went to sleep, then stop the intravenous drip when he wanted to wake up. On June 25, the day Jackson died, Dr. Conrad Murray gave him the drug through an IV sometime after midnight, the official said.

Though toxicology reports are pending, investigators are working under the theory propofol caused Jackson's heart to stop, the official said. Jackson is believed to have been using the drug for about two years and investigators are trying to determine how many other doctors administered it, the official said.

Murray, 51, has been identified in court papers as the subject of a manslaughter investigation and authorities last week raided his office and a storage unit in Houston. Police say Murray is cooperating and have not labeled him a suspect.

Using propofol to sleep is a practice far outside the drug's intended purpose. One doctor said administering it in a home to help a person sleep would constitute malpractice.

Murray's lawyer, Edward Chernoff, has said the doctor "didn't prescribe or administer anything that should have killed Michael Jackson." When asked Monday about the law enforcement official's statements he said: "We will not be commenting on rumors, innuendo or unnamed sources."

Murray became Jackson's personal physician in May and was to accompany him to London for a series of concerts starting in July.

He was staying with Jackson in the Los Angeles mansion and, according to Chernoff, "happened to find" an unconscious Jackson in the pop star's bedroom the morning of June 25. Murray tried to revive him by compressing his chest with one hand while supporting Jackson's back with the other.

It's unclear how long it took for someone at Jackson's home to summon paramedics, though Murray's own lawyers have said it was up to a half-hour. Paramedics arrived about three minutes after they were called and tried to revive the music superstar for another 42 minutes before sliding him into the ambulance and racing with lights flashing and siren blaring to UCLA Medical Center, where Jackson was pronounced dead.

Authorities arrived at the singer's house after the death and found a chaotic scene. The top floor had been all but sealed off, with only Jackson, his children and Murray allowed upstairs, the official said. Jackson's bedroom was a mess, with items seemingly thrown about and some 20 handwritten notes stuck on the walls.

A porcelain girl doll wearing a dress was found on top of the covers of the bed where he slept, the official said.

The temperature upstairs was stiflingly hot, with gas fireplaces and the heating system on high because Jackson always complained of feeling cold, the official said.

Police found propofol and other drugs in the home. An IV line and three tanks of oxygen were in the room where Jackson slept and 15 more oxygen tanks were in a security guard's shack, the official said.

Propofol can depress breathing and lower heart rates and blood pressure. Because of the risks, propofol is only supposed to be administered in medical settings by trained personnel. Instructions on the drug's package warn that patients must be continuously monitored, and that equipment to maintain breathing, to provide artificial ventilation, and to administer oxygen if needed "must be immediately available."

Dr. Zeev Kain, who heads the anesthesiology department at the University of California, Irvine Medical Center, said he has never encountered a situation where propofol was given in a home to help someone sleep. Such a situation would constitute malpractice, he said.

Cherilyn Lee, a registered nurse who gave Jackson nutritional counseling and vitamins earlier this year, said he complained of insomnia and asked her repeatedly for Diprivan, the brand-name version of propofol. Lee said she warned him of the drug's dangers and rejected his requests.

Los Angeles police interviewed Murray twice soon after Jackson's death. Last week, detectives flew to Houston and, along with federal drug agents, searched a medical clinic he ran and a storage unit he rented. They seized a long list of items, including the contents of three computer hard drives, two e-mails from his administrative assistant at the Las Vegas practice Murray ran and various other documents.

A sealed search warrant approved by a Houston judge and later made public allowed authorities to seek "property or items constituting evidence of the offense of manslaughter that tend to show that Dr. Conrad Murray committed the said criminal offense."
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Re: The King of Pop is dead!!!

Postby Komputer » Mon Jul 27, 2009 10:22 pm

About time that PERVERT was gone.
Many boys will not be molested now that he is gone.
Has nothing to do with his music of which I have almost all of his CDs,
As a human being, he failed! A male adult does not sleep with some one else's children, ie boys, Just not right in my book.
Hey I call it as I see it.
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Re: The King of Pop is dead!!!

Postby crisipicada » Mon Jul 30, 2012 8:55 pm

This is reality,there is time to be born and there is time to be dead. What is important in life is how we spend it. Is it a fulfilling life or not. It is important to make right choices in life that would enhance others lives too. Think about how you live?
Nothing can separate us from the love of God
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Re: The King of Pop is dead!!!

Postby Edwin » Tue Jul 31, 2012 12:07 am

This is very true, Crisi, that there is a time to be born and a time to die. Carol is a firm believer in that. She believes if someone dies, it was there time to go. I want to be careful not to get an earlier time to die. This is like the people used to talk about your angels going with you keeping you safe as you drive, and someone said that the guardian angel gets out as you exceed the speed limit! I don't know about that, but it is an interesting thought anyway! :D :D
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