A
jury on Wednesday dismissed a lawsuit brought by Michael Jackson's family
seeking massive damages from tour promoter AEG Live, who they accused of
negligence linked to the music star's death.
A California jury on Wednesday
rejected a lawsuit brought by the late music legend Michael Jackson’s mother
claiming that negligence by the tour operator AEG Live
led to the death of her son in 2009.
The jury decided that Conrad Murray,
the doctor who killed Jackson with an overdose of an anaesthetic the singer
used as a sleep aid, was not incompetent to perform his duties involving
Jackson.
“That doesn’t mean we felt he was
ethical,” jury foreman Gregg Barden said after the verdict was read, acknowledging
many would be surprised and disagree with the ruling.
Murray, who was hired by AEG Live to
take care of Jackson, was convicted in 2011 of involuntary manslaughter after
giving star the fatal overdose as he prepared for a series of comeback shows
billed under the name “This Is It”.
The ruling on the competence of
Murray ended any further consideration of possible damages and who was at fault
for the death.
A victory could have meant hundreds
of millions of dollars in damages for Katherine Jackson and the singer’s three
children.
Chronic pain
The five-month trial provided the closest look yet at Jackson’s drug use and his battles against chronic pain and insomnia.
The five-month trial provided the closest look yet at Jackson’s drug use and his battles against chronic pain and insomnia.
Witnesses at the trial said Jackson
saw the concerts as a chance for personal redemption after being acquitted of
child molestation.
But as the opening date of “This is
it” approached, associates admitted that Jackson had bouts of insecurity and
agonised over his inability to sleep.
They said he turned to the drug
propofol and found Murray, who was willing to buy it in bulk and administer it
to him nightly even though it is not meant to be used outside
operating rooms.
The defence also laid out Jackson’s
troubled medical history, presenting testimony about his use of drugs,
including the powerful painkiller Demerol, for pain stemming from an accident
that occurred decades ago while he was filming a Pepsi commercial.
(FRANCE 24 with wires)
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