LOS ANGELES (AP) — The doctor charged in the death of Michael Jackson tried to change his story about his actions involving the pop star, telling his own experts in the upcoming trial a different story than he told police, prosecutors said Monday.
Deputy District Attorneys David Walgren and Deborah
Brazil filed a motion asking a judge to bar new claims made by defendant Dr.
Conrad Murray.
They said he apparently made the new assertions in
conversation with two doctors who will testify on his behalf in the case.
The accounts were revealed in letters from the
experts, Dr. Paul White, an anesthesiologist, and Dr. Joseph Haraszti, a
psychiatrist and hospital director.
Prosecutors believe Murray spoke to the experts after
a preliminary hearing in January that focused on his statements to police after
Jackson's death in June 2009.
The motion quoted Murray as telling the experts he
left Jackson's bedroom to make a phone call, even though he initially said he
left Jackson to go to the bathroom.
Experts also said Murray claimed to have experience
using propofol — the powerful anesthetic that killed Jackson — as a sedative,
even though Murray didn't make such a claim in police interviews.
The motion also says Murray claims for the first
time that Jackson took propofol in fruit juice while the doctor wasn't looking.
The prosecutors said that was speculation.
Murray had forgotten some details when he spoke to
police, Flanagan explained, adding his client had decided to make some phone
calls after going to the bathroom.
In addition, the time sequence of events was
slightly different when Murray thought about it later, Flanagan said.
Murray has pleaded not guilty to involuntary
manslaughter. A coroner found that Jackson died of an overdose of propofol and
other sedatives.
Prosecutors called the new statements about
Murray's actions "a backdoor attempt to introduce the defendant's new,
self-serving statements without being subject to cross-examination."
"Such information conflicts with what the
defendant told the police in his prior interviews," the motion states.
The only way the statements would be admissible,
prosecutors said, is if Murray testifies in his own defense and is subject to
cross-examination. They said the reports from both doctors contain numerous
examples of new statements in conflict with Murray's previous accounts.
A hearing on motions is scheduled for Thursday.
Jury selection resumes on May 4.
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press.
(AP Photo/Irfan Khan, File)






