Monday, January 3, 2011

Michael Jackson doctor faces death charge in court

LOS ANGELES | Mon Jan 3, 2011 2:18pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Prosecutors this week begin offering evidence that Michael Jackson's doctor is responsible for the pop star's death in a case that could hinge on who gave the singer a fatal dose of a powerful drug he used for sleep.

Dr. Conrad Murray, Jackson's physician in 2009, has been charged with involuntary manslaughter in the death, and a Los Angeles judge on Tuesday starts the preliminary hearing -- largely seen by legal experts as a formality -- to determine if enough evidence exists to bring the physician to a full trial.

Jackson, one of the best-selling recording artists of all time who generated hits like "Thriller" and "Billie Jean," died of a prescription drug overdose on June 25, 2009, at age 50, after suffering cardiac arrest while in bed at his rented mansion.

Murray has admitted injecting Jackson with the powerful anesthetic propofol, which has been determined to be a key factor in his death. The drug is used mostly in hospital settings, but it was given to Jackson at home as a sleep aid.

Prosecutors hope to paint the doctor, who was hired by a concert promoter to care for Jackson before a series of performances, as a man who was in financial trouble and would irresponsibly give the singer drugs to keep his paycheck.

Murray has pleaded not guilty, and last week defense attorneys indicated they may focus on a mysterious syringe found near Jackson to explore whether someone other than Murray injected the singer with the fatal dose of propofol.

Some experts are skeptical about that possible defense, which is based on the assumption that Jackson, an admitted drug abuser, could have administered the propofol to himself.

"It plays to what people perceive Jackson was about and that he might have done it, but it's hard to see how it occurs without Murray having some role in it," said Laurie Levenson, a professor at Loyola Law School.

PRELUDE TO A TRIAL?

Last week, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor cleared the way for the defense to test residue from syringes and an intravenous tube used to administer drugs to Jackson.

Following Jackson's death, the Los Angeles County coroner determined that propofol and the sedative lorazepam were the main drugs that caused Jackson's death.

In their investigation, police and prosecutors focused on Murray and whether he had given Jackson too many drugs when the doctor should have known better.

Evidence in Jackson's death has been outlined in search warrant affidavits, but prosecutors will present more of their case against Murray in the preliminary hearing, which the doctor's attorneys say could last two weeks.

That would be even longer than the one-week preliminary hearing for football great O.J. Simpson's notorious 1995 trial on a charge he murdered his ex-wife, Levenson said. Most preliminary hearings in Los Angeles last a few hours at most.

In the end, the judge in the Murray case is largely expected to order a full trial because the burden of proof on prosecutors is low at a preliminary hearing.



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"Usual Suspects" star Pete Postlethwaite dies

LONDON | Mon Jan 3, 2011 7:31am EST

LONDON (Reuters) - Pete Postlethwaite, the Oscar-nominated British actor, has died, a spokesman said on Monday. He was 64. He died in hospital in Shropshire, western England, on Sunday after suffering from cancer.

"He had been unwell off and on for around two years and not worked as frequently as normal during the past year because of the cancer and its side effects," the spokesman said.

Postlethwaite had been described by director Steven Spielberg as "probably the best actor in the world today." The two worked together on the movies "The Lost World: Jurassic Park" and "Amistad."

He was nominated for an Oscar for his role in "In the Name of the Father," the 1993 film about the wrongful convictions of the so-called Guildford Four for an Irish Republican Army bombing.

Other notable film credits included "Brassed Off," "The Usual Suspects" and "Inception," while on stage he played the lead in "King Lear" in 2008 at Liverpool's Everyman, the northern English theater where he began his career.

Postlethwaite was well known for his political activism, appearing as front man in the climate change film "The Age of Stupid" and arriving at the 2009 London premiere on a bicycle.

Actor Bill Nighy, who performed with Postlethwaite at the Everyman in the 1970s, paid tribute to "a rare and remarkable man. I was honored by his friendship -- he is irreplaceable," Nighy was quoted as saying by the BBC.

One friend, who asked not to be named, paid tribute to "a man of enormous dignity and integrity.

"He was self-deprecating, enormously funny and had little time for fame or celebrity. The biggest love of his life was not acting, it was his family."

Postlethwaite is survived by his wife Jacqui and two children Will, 21, and daughter Lily, 14.

(Reporting by Paul Sandle and Mike Collett-White; Editing by Louise Ireland and Kate Kelland)



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Actress Zsa Zsa Gabor's lower leg to be amputated

LOS ANGELES | Mon Jan 3, 2011 12:29am EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Actress Zsa Zsa Gabor was admitted to hospital in Los Angeles on Sunday to undergo a partial amputation of her right leg, her husband told Reuters.

Gabor, believed to be 93 and in ill health since July when she broke her hip, has been infected by a lesion that turned gangrenous, her husband Frederic Prinz von Anhalt said.

After doctors warned she would die unless her leg was amputated above the knee, Gabor was "screaming and yelling" about wanting to spend New Year's Eve at home for her traditional celebration of champagne and caviar, he said.

She was finally admitted to UCLA Medical Center and was being prepared on Sunday evening for surgery, he said.

Gabor faces obvious complications because of her age but a successful operation could add a few years to her life, said her spokesman John Blanchette.

As an actress, the Hungarian-born Gabor is best known for her roles in the 1950s movies "Moulin Rouge" and "Lili."

Along with her sisters Eva and Magda, she was a fixture on Hollywood's social circuit where she called everyone "dah-ling" in her thick accent.

She has been married nine times and earned a degree of infamy in 1989 when she served a three-day jail term for slapping a Beverly Hills policeman who had pulled her over. Unbowed, she emerged from jail complaining about the food.

(Reporting by Dean Goodman; Editing by John O'Callaghan)



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Actor David Arquette in rehab: reports

LOS ANGELES | Mon Jan 3, 2011 7:14am EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Actor David Arquette, the estranged husband of former "Friends" star Courteney Cox, has checked into rehab to deal with alcohol and depression issues, according to news reports on Sunday.

Arquette, 39, and Cox, 46, announced in October that they were undergoing a trial separation after 11 years and one daughter together, but still loved each other "deeply."

Since then, both have been linked to other people, while Arquette has been unusually open about his marital woes and his subsequent sexual and drinking activities.

People magazine said Cox was supportive of her husband's decision to get help. "I really admire David and his choice to take charge and better his life," it quoted Cox as saying. "I love and support him."

The couple met on the set of the 1996 horror film "Scream," and married three years later.

But while Cox enjoyed a red-hot decade-long run on "Friends" as the fussy domestic diva Monica, Arquette failed to capitalize on the commercial success of the "Scream" series and on the critical acclaim for his 2001 Holocaust drama "The Grey Zone."

The couple will reunite on screen in April when "Scream 4" is due to hit theaters.

(Reporting by Dean Goodman; Editing by Will Dunham)



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