Jury selection
began on Tuesday for a long-awaited trial in which Michael Jackson's mother is
seeking billions of dollars from tour promoters she blames for her son's 2009
death.
Katherine
Jackson, 82, accuses AEG Live of negligently hiring doctor Conrad Murray to
look after her son as he rehearsed in Los Angeles for a doomed series of London
shows.
Murray, jailed
after being convicted of involuntary manslaughter in 2011 for giving the singer
an overdose of the drug Propofol, could be called to testify, although he may
refuse to do so.
Jackson died aged
50 at his LA mansion on June 25, 2009, from an overdose of the powerful
sedative Propofol, administered by Murray to help the "Thriller"
legend deal with chronic insomnia.
At the time of
his death, he was rehearsing for a series of 50 shows in London, organised with
Anschutz Entertainment Group in what was seen as an attempt to revive his
career, and also ease his financial woes.
Jackson's mother
claims that AEG Live pushed her son too hard to prepare for the London
shows.
But AEG claims
that Jackson had a history of drug abuse long before the singer met Murray,
hired to care for him before and during the shows at London's O2 Arena.
The wrongful
death trial on Katherine Jackson's civil lawsuit was put off until after
Murray's 2011 criminal trial was over, and legal wrangling also delayed a
scheduled September start.
Lawyers have
notably argued over what should and should not be admitted in evidence in the
LA Superior Court.
Judge Yvette
Palazuelos has granted an AEG demand for testimony about the child molestation
charges to be heard – which Katherine Jackson says are irrelevant – claiming it
could explain the star's stress and medical woes.
But she has
refused to allow testimony notably about the parentage of Jackson's three
children, or a bizarre incident in which his mother was allegedly kidnapped by
family members and taken to Arizona last year.
Murray may be
called from prison to give a deposition, but only with the jury out of the
courtroom. And he may invoke his Fifth Amendment right to decline to testify in
case it might incriminate him further.
But even before
the trial proper gets under way, Murray was expected to speak in an interview
with CNN, to be aired on Tuesday evening, details of which were not immediately
available before broadcast.
AEG says it was
not responsible for hiring and supervising Murray, who treated Jackson with
Propofol and other drugs to tackle his insomnia as he rehearsed in LA.
"He was
chosen by Michael Jackson, to be there at Michael Jackson's behest, to be
Michael Jackson's doctor alone. This was only being done because Michael
Jackson asked for it," AEG lawyer Marvin Putman told CNN.
"Michael
Jackson was the only person who could get rid of him."
According to
celebrity news website TMZ, Jackson's mother and his three children – Prince,
16, Paris, 14 and 11-year-old "Blanket" – want more than $40 billion
from AEG for loss of future earnings and other damages.
AEG claims the
figure is "preposterous" because Jackson's career was in a downward
spiral following the child molestation allegations, as well as self-imposed
exile in the Middle East, TMZ reported.
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