41°F
weather icon Clear

Michael Jackson’s doctor posts video

LOS ANGELES -- The doctor who was with Michael Jackson when he died and is now the center of a manslaughter probe posted a short video today thanking his supporters.

In the one-minute video, posted on YouTube, a weary-looking Dr. Conrad Murray thanks friends and patients and refers to his two interviews with Los Angeles police detectives. It was the first time Murray had spoken publicly since Jackson died June 25.

“I have done all I could do,” a solemn-sounding Murray says as he looks into the camera. “I told the truth and I have faith the truth will prevail.”

The video was recorded last week at a private residence in Houston, said Miranda Sevcik, the spokeswoman for Murray’s lawyer.

After Jackson died, Murray received death threats, hired a body guard and was forced into seclusion at his Las Vegas home, Sevcik said. He also has received many calls from patients, former patients and strangers offering him support.

“Because of all that is going on, I am afraid to return phone calls or use my e-mail,” Murray says. “I recorded this video to let all of you know that I have been receiving your messages ... Your messages give me strength and courage and keep me going. They mean the world to me.”

Since Jackson’s death, Murray has not worked and has closed his Las Vegas practice.

The doctor was in dire financial shape when he signed on with Jackson earlier this year at $150,000 a month, owing at least $780,000 in judgments and outstanding payments.

Sevcik said the only reason Murray made the video was to address supporters, but she added Murray told her he misses being able to work.

“He says he wants to get back to work, he really does genuinely care about the people he works with,” Sevcik said. “He has to just wait, he’s in limbo.”

Gregory D. Lee, a retired supervisory agent with the Drug Enforcement Agency, said he thought Murray wanted to improve his image.

“This doctor has been demonized,” Lee said. “This is an attempt to humanize him and possibly sway any potential jury pool out there.”

Murray told investigators he administered Jackson a powerful anesthetic along with multiple sedatives in the hours before the singer died, a law enforcement official told The Associated Press. Investigators think Murray left the room where Jackson was sleeping for a few minutes to make phone calls and returned to find the pop icon not breathing.

The official requested anonymity because the investigation is ongoing.

The Los Angeles coroner’s office has said it has completed its work determining Jackson’s cause of death but won’t be releasing results until the police investigation is complete.

MOST READ
Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
DOJ says members of Congress can’t intervene in release of Epstein files

U.S. Rep. Ro Khanna, a California Democrat, and Rep. Thomas Massie, a Kentucky Republican, say they have “urgent and grave concerns” about the slow release of only a small number of millions of documents that began last month.

Keebler tweaks popular cookie recipe following fan backlash

Keebler said, it’s trying to make it right with consumers, revealing on Friday that it has reformulated the cookies’ recipe yet again to deliver “improved taste.”

Las Vegas heat islands to get $500K for tree planting

The Southern Nevada Water Authority minted a deal to put up to $500,000 toward tree planting in the Las Vegas Valley amid community concern that mandated grass removal is killing off existing canopy.

MORE STORIES