Michael Jackson’s father Joe said on Thursday he will begin selling the much-delayed fragrance that honors his pop star son later this month — without using the name Michael.

Joe Jackson, who was left out of the “Thriller” singer’s will on his 2009 death, first promoted the “Jackson’s Tribute” and “Jackson’s Legend” fragrance line at the Cannes film festival in May.

But the launch was scrapped when the company that owns the commercial rights to sell products under Michael Jackson’s name filed a lawsuit seeking to ban sales and asking for damages.

Joe Jackson and his partner, Julian Rouas Paris, said on Thursday they will launch the line in Las Vegas on Jan 21. Called The JRP/Jackson Perfume Collection, it will be sold from a booth in the gambling city’s Fashion Show Mall.

“We don’t use Michael’s name. We don’t use his image,” Rouas told Reuters.

Rouas said the family “want to stay private” by selling the line through small outlets in U.S. shopping malls rather than through established stores.

The description of the fragrances given back at the Cannes film festival said the they were “inspired by Michael’s story”. Thursday’s statement from the fragrance makers said the scents, which will sell starting at $59, “honor the greatest superstar that has graced the world.”

Jackson, 50, died on June 25, 2009 in Los Angeles from an overdose of sedatives and the powerful anesthetic propofol. His personal physician Dr. Conrad Murray is serving a four-year jail sentence for involuntary manslaughter in the singer’s death.

 

Michael Jackson’s doctor on Tuesday asked for a publicly-funded lawyer to handle his appeal on a manslaughter conviction in the pop star’s death, saying he could not afford to pay for one himself.

Dr. Conrad Murray, serving a four-year jail term for the involuntary manslaughter of Jackson in 2009, filed papers with Los Angeles Superior Court saying he was unable to fund his legal help any longer.

“The defendant is indigent and respectfully requests the appointment of counsel on appeal,” the court papers said.

Murray said he wished to appeal both his conviction and his sentence but so far has not filed formal papers with the California appeals court.

The 58-year-old cardiologist had hired two lawyers for his six-week trial, but he was convicted in November of involuntary manslaughter, or gross negligence, after admitting he gave the “Thriller” singer nightly doses of the surgical anesthetic propofol to help Jackson sleep.

Jackson, 50, died on June 25, 2009 of an overdose of propofol and sedatives, just weeks before a series of planned comeback concerts.

 

Murray was given the maximum penalty for the involuntary manslaughter of Jermaine’s brother Michael – who died from acute Propofol intoxication in 2009 – but the musician’s sibling believes Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor was too lenient with his ruling today.

As he left the courtroom, following the verdict in Los Angeles, Jermaine told E! News: “It wasn’t enough time.”
However, his sister LaToya was happy, saying: “Justice was served. Now we just have to deal with the jail overcrowding.”

Longtime family friend Kathy Hilton, who accompanied LaToya to court, added: “They were complaining about [Murray] being in an eight-foot jail cell, Michael is in a box forever.”

It is unclear how long Conrad will actually serve with District Attorney Steve Cooley commenting: “This is one of the great mysteries of life: What amount of time is someone going to actually do when they’re sentenced to do so by a judge?”

Los Angeles Sheriff spokesman Steve Whitmore, explained: “As far as the Sheriff is concerned, after the state takes away two years and he gets credit for time served, he will do a little less than two years.”

 

A probation report says the doctor convicted of killing Michael Jackson was listed as suicidal in jail records before his sentencing. But a spokesman for Dr. Conrad Murray says the physician remains resilient.

The report was released Tuesday after Murray was sentenced to four years behind bars. It states that jail records showed the 58-year-old doctor was classified as “mentally disturbed” and “suicidal.”

The doctor was not interviewed by probation officers.

Murray’s spokesman Mark Fierro says a defense attorney visited the cardiologist in jail last week and found him upbeat.

He says the doctor may have been distraught after a jury convicted him of involuntary manslaughter, but that time is behind him.

Sheriff’s officials say Murray will serve a little less than two years in a one-man cell.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below.

The doctor convicted in the overdose death of Michael Jackson was sentenced to the maximum four years behind bars Tuesday by a judge who denounced him as a reckless physician whose actions were a “disgrace to the medical profession.”

Dr. Conrad Murray sat stoically with his hands crossed as Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor repeatedly chastised him for what he called a “horrific violation of trust” while caring for Jackson.

However, Pastor conceded his sentence was constrained by a recent change in California law that requires Murray to serve his sentence in county jail rather than state prison.

Sheriff’s officials later said Murray will serve a little less than two years behind bars while housed in a one-man cell and kept away from other prisoners.

“This is going to be a real test of our criminal justice system to see if it’s meaningful at all,” District Attorney Steve Cooley said.

Cooley said he was considering asking the judge to modify the sentence to classify the crime as a serious felony warranting incarceration in state prison.

The judge was relentless in his bashing of the 58-year-old Murray, saying he lied repeatedly and had not shown remorse for his actions in the treatment of Jackson. Pastor also said Murray’s heavy use of the powerful anesthetic propofol to help Jackson battle insomnia violated his sworn obligation.

“It should be made very clear that experimental medicine is not going to be tolerated, and Mr. Jackson was an experiment,” Pastor said. “Dr. Murray was intrigued by the prospect and he engaged in this money for medicine madness that is simply not going to be tolerated by me.”

Pastor also said Murray has “absolutely no sense of fault, and is and remains dangerous” to the community.

The judge said.one of the most disturbing aspects of Murray’s case was a slurred recording of Jackson recovered from the doctor’s cell phone.

“That tape recording was Dr. Murray’s insurance policy,” Pastor said. “It was designed to record his patient surreptitiously at that patient’s most vulnerable point.”

Defense attorney J. Michael Flanagan said after the sentencing that he was surprised the judge focused on the recording. The lawyer also contended that nothing said during the hearing would have changed the judge’s mind about the sentence.

Michael Jackson’s family told Pastor in a statement read earlier that they were not seeking revenge but wanted Murray to receive a stiff sentence that served as a warning to opportunistic doctors.

It included elements from Jackson’s parents, siblings and his three children.

“As his brothers and sisters, we will never be able to hold, laugh or perform again with our brother Michael,” the statement said. “And as his children, we will grow up without a father, our best friend, our playmate and our dad.”

The family told The Associated Press after the sentencing that they were pleased with the results.

“We’re going to be a family. We’re going to move forward. We’re going to tour, play the music and miss him,” brother Jermaine Jackson said.

Murray was convicted of involuntary manslaughter after a six-week trial that presented the most detailed account yet of Jackson’s final hours but left many questions about Murray’s treatment of the superstar with propofol.

The jury heard the recording of Jackson during the trial but defense attorneys never explained in court why he recorded the impaired singer six weeks before his death.

“We have to be phenomenal,” he was heard saying about his “This Is It” comeback concerts in London. “When people leave this show, when people leave my show, I want them to say, `I’ve never seen nothing like this in my life. Go. Go. I’ve never seen nothing like this. Go. It’s amazing. He’s the greatest entertainer in the world.’”

Before sentencing, lead defense attorney Ed Chernoff attacked Jackson, as he and his team frequently did during the doctor’s trial. “Michael Jackson was a drug seeker,” he said.

Murray did not directly address the court. After sentencing, he mouthed the words “I love you” to his mother and girlfriend in the courtroom.

Murray’s mother, Milta Rush, sat alone on a bench in the courthouse hallway after the sentencing.

“My son is not what they charged him to be,” she said quietly. “He was a gentle child from the time he was small. ”

Of her son’s future, she said, “God is in charge.”

Jackson’s death in June 2009 stunned the world, as did the ensuing investigation that led to Murray being charged in February 2010.

Murray told detectives he had been giving the singer nightly doses of propofol to help him sleep as he prepared for the series of comeback concerts.

Propofol is supposed to be used in hospital settings and has never been approved for sleep treatments, yet Murray acknowledged giving it to Jackson then leaving the room on the day the singer died.

Murray declined to testify during his trial but did opt to participate in a documentary in which he said he didn’t consider himself guilty of any crime and blamed Jackson for entrapping him into administering the propofol doses. His attorneys contended throughout the case that Jackson must have given himself the fatal dose when Murray left the singer’s bedside.

In their sentencing memorandum, prosecutors cited Murray’s statements to advocate for the maximum term. They also want him to pay restitution to the singer’s three children – Prince, Paris and Blanket.

The exact amount Murray has to pay will be determined at a hearing in January.

“Anything over a couple of dollars, he’s not going to be able to pay anyway,” Flanagan said.

Murray was deeply in debt when he agreed to serve as Jackson’s personal physician for $150,000 a month, and the singer died before Murray received any money.

Prosecutors said the relationship of Jackson and Murray was corrupted by greed. Murray left his practices to serve as Jackson’s doctor and look out for his well-being, but instead acted as an employee catering to the singer’s desire to receive propofol to put him to sleep, prosecutors said.

Murray’s attorneys relied largely on 34 letters from relatives, friends and former patients to portray Murray in a softer light and win a lighter sentence. The letters and defense filings described Murray’s compassion as a doctor, including accepting lower payments from his mostly poor patients.

“There is no question that the death of his patient, Mr. Jackson, was unintentional and an enormous tragedy for everyone affected,” defense attorneys wrote in their sentencing memo.

 

Michael Jackson’s doctor will face the singer’s distraught family and ardent fans one more time when he returns to court for sentencing in the death of the superstar from an overdose of an operating-room anesthetic he was receiving to battle insomnia.

Dr. Conrad Murray’s sentencing Tuesday for involuntary manslaughter is the final step in the criminal case launched within days of Jackson’s unexpected death in June 2009.

Prosecutors want a judge to sentence the 58-year-old Murray to the maximum four-year prison term. Defense attorneys counter that Murray already faces a lifetime of shame and diminished opportunities and should receive probation.

How long Murray might remain behind bars depends on the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department, which would base the decision on good behavior and other factors.

Even without overcrowding and a new state law that will send Murray to county jail rather than prison, a four-year sentence could be cut in half by good behavior.

It remained unclear Monday whether Jackson’s family will speak during the sentencing hearing. His mother Katherine and several siblings routinely attended the six-week trial that ended with the conviction on Nov. 7.

Prosecutors portrayed Murray as an incompetent doctor who administered propofol – an extremely potent anesthetic normally used during surgery – in Jackson’s bedroom without adequate safeguards and botched his care when things went wrong.

The prosecution is also are seeking restitution for Jackson’s three children and filed a statement from the singer’s estate stating the cost of the singer’s funeral was more than $1.8 million. The letter also notes that Jackson would have earned $100 million if he had performed a planned series of comeback concerts in London.

The doctor’s fate lies with Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor, who will determine the sentence and had harsh words for Murray on the day he was convicted.

“Dr. Murray’s reckless conduct in this case poses a demonstrable risk to the safety of the public,” Pastor said before the Houston-based cardiologist was led from the courtroom in handcuffs.

Pastor also could address Murray’s decision to participate in a documentary that was filmed throughout the trial and aired days after Murray’s conviction.

Murray states in the film that aired on MSNBC, under the title “Michael Jackson and the Doctor: A Fatal Friendship,” that he doesn’t feel guilty about the singer’s death because he doesn’t think he did anything wrong.

Prosecutors cited Murray’s comments in their filing last week urging the judge to impose the maximum sentence.

“Finally, the defendant consistently blames the victim for his own death,” the prosecutors said, “even going so far as to characterize himself as being `entrapped’ by the victim and as someone who suffered a `betrayal’ at the hands of the victim.”

Murray’s attorneys are relying largely on statements from his former patients to portray Murray in a softer light and win a lighter sentence.

“There is no question that the death of his patient, Mr. Jackson, was unintentional and an enormous tragedy for everyone affected,” defense attorneys wrote in their sentencing memo. “Dr. Murray has been described as a changed, grief-stricken man, who walks around under a pall of sadness since the loss of his patient, Mr. Jackson.”

Pastor also will review a report by probation officials that carries a sentencing recommendation. The report will become public after Murray is sentenced.

The report may also feature input from Murray, who chose not to testify in his own defense during the trial but was heard in a lengthy interview recorded by police.

Murray’s trial was closely watched by Jackson’s fans in the courtroom, on social networking sites and via live broadcasts online and on television.

The trial detailed the final hours of Jackson and portrayed him as a talented genius suffering from debilitating insomnia.

The singer selected Murray as his personal physician, and the doctor began giving Jackson nightly doses of propofol two months before the singer’s death.

Several doctors who testified during the trial, including Murray’s own hired propofol expert, said they would not have given Jackson the treatments in his bedroom and that Murray violated the standard of care multiple times.

 

Michael Jackson’s life has certainly been clouded in controversy — with his tragic and mysterious death, child molestation trials and career meltdown it’s easy to forget he was once the biggest star in the world, if not in history. But amid the ever-growing media storm MJ’s former sound engineer, Bruce Swedien (who worked alongside Quincy Jones) is spreading the word in his new anecdotal narrative “In the Studio With Michael Jackson” as too why he truly was the one and only King of Pop.

“Michael never came late to the studio, if anything he was early,” Swedien told Tarts. “And he never recorded with the lyrics, he would instead be up all night memorizing every line. He was just so polite and easy-to-please, something you don’t see too often in this industry. His motto was ‘the quality goes in before the name goes on’. He lived by that.”

Speaking of his artistry, Jackson even had orders for Mick Jagger while recording “State of Shock” in 1984.

“He had Mick doing scales for over an hour to warm-up before he would even start,” said Swedien.

So was the “Rolling Stones” bad boy too happy about it?

“Let’s just say he did it,” Swedien responded.

And just days before his sudden death, that perfectionism was still pumping.

“Michael knew what he was doing, he wasn’t insecure,” said Swedien. “He didn’t respond to the pressure (of the “comeback tour”) and wasn’t afraid at all.”

However when it came to Jackson’s dark side, there were two things that caused him pain: his father and the press.

“There were times when Quincy (Jones) and I would have to escort Joe Jackson out of the studio because he would come and start bothering Michael,” said Swedien, adding that he used to get quite depressed over the press’ perception of him. “Michael always used to say ‘how can they say that about me? They don’t know me’ … I miss him.”

MJ’s Cause Of Death: Why Is It Taking So Long?

It has been almost three weeks since Jackson died and we still don’t officially know what caused his premature passing. So what is taking so long?

“The reason it takes so long is that the tissues such as the brain needs to be “fixed” in formalin or other preservatives for a period of time to harden the tissue to it can be grossly and microscopically examined. Some tissue such as the brain cannot be examined or test closely in the fresh state because the tissue is too friable and would break apart without fixing in formalin,” explained Gary Brazina, M.D., FACS, board certified Orthopedic surgeon in Marina del Rey, Ca. “Chemical tests can be performed such as chromatography to find metabolic by products of drugs and this is time consuming.”

So what is it that the doctor’s are examining?

“They are looking for tissue levels of any of a myriad of drugs such as opiates, benzodiazapenes, cocaine, barbiturates,” Brazina said. “They look for these drugs and their concentration in different tissues. Some medications are cardio toxic, liver toxic and toxic to kidneys. Different medications metabolize at different rates and are metabolized or are broken down in different tissues, at different times. The tissue can then be sliced to microscopic sections for close cellular examination, sometimes even using an electron microscope.”

(source)

 

While it was widely reported that Jacko’s brain was not in the casket with the rest of him, an insider claims, “The coffin was empty. There was no body there at all.” Another wag added, “There were two autopsies done but now there’s a criminal investigation. Why would they release the body in a week if there’s a criminal investigation? And if they charge someone with his death, that person will want his or her own autopsy done.” A rep for the Jacksons said, “I will try to find out,” but didn’t return calls.

 

Us Weekly magazine has obtained video it says shows never-before-seen footage of Michael Jackson’s head catching on fire during filming of his 1984 Pepsi commercial.

Jackson suffered severe burns after a pyrotechnics mishap caused his hair and scalp to catch afire. Still photos of the accident have been seen before, but the new video on Us Weekly’s Web site shows the moment Jackson’s hair caught on fire and the top of his head became engulfed in flames.

Jackson didn’t realize his hair was on fire. In the video, he’s still dancing as the flames are on his head. When he spins, the flames go out. People on the set tackle him to extinguish the fire, and his brother Jermaine Jackson, playing the guitar in front of him and oblivious to the commotion, turns around. When Michael Jackson emerges from the pile of people trying to help him, the top of his head is bald.

The accident, witnessed by thousands of stunned fans at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles, came at the height of Jackson’s fame, about a year after the release of his best-selling “Thriller” album. It marked what would be the beginning of serious, lifelong pain for Jackson, who had been treated for painkiller addiction and has been described by relatives and friends as being hooked on pain medication at the time of his death last month at age 50.

Jackson, who was photographed in an ambulance with a bandage on his head and his trademark sequined white glove on his right hand, required several surgeries and needed skin grafts to treat the injury.

In his autobiography, “Moonwalk,” he described the cause of the accident as “stupidity, pure and simple.”

As he described the accident, he wrote: “… bombs went off on either side of my head, and the sparks set my hair on fire. I was dancing down this ramp and turning around, spinning, not knowing I was on fire. Suddenly I felt my hands reflexively go to my head in an attempt to smother the flames.”

As a result of the accident, Pepsi gave Jackson $1.5 million, which he donated to a burn center named after him.

A representative for Us Weekly had no immediate comment on where the video came from.

 

Shocking photos have emerged showing how drugs ravaged Michael Jackson’s legs as it was revealed that detectives are treating his death as homicide.

Bruises, needle marks and a gruesome black wound can be seen in the previously unseen images which were broadcast to millions by U.S. TV network ABC.

They had been released by the singer’s father Joe to show his son had vitiligo, the skin-whitening disease, which Jackson had always claimed he’d had.

However their release has raised more questions about the star’s drug use.

The black wound appears to have been caused where an intravenous line, fed into his leg, was removed and fluids dripped into his lower leg.

Normally, IV tubes go into the arms.

There are also puncture marks (circled in a picture below) peppering the skin on his legs which appear to have been caused by needlemarks.

Dr Debra Jaliman, a spokeswoman for the American Academy of Dermatology, told the ABC network: ‘It looks like there are multiple punctures from intravenous placement.

‘If the IV fluid went into his skin it may have destroyed it.’

The specialist said of the 2002 pictures it was ‘unusual’ to inject drugs into the legs, but that the measure would be taken if no veins in the upper body were accessible.

The blackness of the wound is believed to be the result of necrosis, the death of most or all the cells in tissue due to disease.

The website TMZ, which broke the news of Jackson’s death, reports that the initial investigation has pinpointed the anaesthesic Propofol as the primary cause of his death. Vials of Propofol were found in Jackson’s home after he died.

The site stated: ‘The evidence includes various items found in Jackson’s house, including the Propofol, an IV stand and oxygen tank.’

It also reported that the Los Angeles Police Department has had ‘multiple conversations’ with the L.A. County District Attorney’s office, although the case has not been formally presented to the district attorney who would decide on any prosecution.

The developments come as a Los Angeles coroner’s official visited the office of Jackson’s dermatologist to serve a subpoena seeking additional medical records.

Assistant Chief Coroner Ed Winter went to Arnold Klein’s Beverly Hills office and spoke afterwards to reporters.

He said Klein had been co-operating in the investigation. Craig Harvey, the coroner’s chief of operations, says it’s the second time coroner’s investigators have served Klein a subpoena.

They are focusing on the role drugs played in causing Jackson’s death.

Klein has recently given TV interviews saying he sedated Jackson for medical procedures. He denied ever giving the pop star an unnecessary dose of drugs.

Jackson was taking a combination of painkillers when he died on June 25 and had been regularly using the drugs since he burned his hair during the filming of a Pepsi advert in 1984.

Video footage of the star’s hair catching on fire, which it has never been seen before, has been obtained by magazine US Weekly, it claims.

The incident happened during the filming of a Pepsi commercial in 1984.

Jackson suffered severe burns after the pyrotechnics mishap.

Still photos of the accident have appeared, but the new video on the magazine’s website shows the moment Jackson’s hair caught on fire and the top of his head became engulfed in flames.

Jackson doesn’t appear to know his hair is on fire. In the video, he’s still dancing as the flames are on his head. When he spins, the flames go out. People on the set then tackle him to extinguish the fire. When Jackson emerges, the top of his head is bald.

Meanwhile, Jackson’s older brother Tito, 55, said the family once raided the singer’s former home Neverland looking for drugs.
Tito said his younger brother had ordered his bodyguards to prevent the family from visiting his California ranch without permission.

Tito told the Daily Mirror: ‘I never saw him on drugs. Not once. He deliberately did it away from us. He didn’t want his family to know anything about that part of him.

‘He did almost everything in his power to make sure we didn’t know.

‘We had to act. It was me, my sisters Janet, Rebbie and La Toya and my brothers, Jackie and Randy.

‘We bust right into the house and he was surprised to see us to say the least.

‘We kept asking him if it was true what we had heard that he was using drugs.

‘He kept denying it. He said we were over-reacting. We also spoke to a doctor and he assured us it was not the situation. He said he was there to make sure Michael was healthy.’

In a further development, the lawyer of Jackson’s former wife Debbie Rowe angrily denied claims she’d accepted $4million from the Jackson family in return for giving up custody claims for her and Michael’s children, Paris and Prince Michael.

(source)



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