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Michael Jackson Trial: 5 Newest Developments in the Case Against AEG

By Pamela Chelin | The Wrap – 1 hour 44 minutes ago
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The Katherine Jackson vs. AEG trial entered its second month in a downtown Los Angeles courtroom on Tuesday.
Among the day's court proceedings was the first appearance of AEG Live Co-CEO and former Jackson tour manager Paul Gongaware, who is being sued along with AEG and AEG Live's CEO and President Randy Phillips. Gongaware testified during a tense courtroom examination by Jackson attorney Brian Panish. Janet Jackson, who showed at court for the first time since the trial began, was seated next to her mother Katherine.
Also read: Michael Jackson Wrongful Death Trial: 5 Developments From Day One
The ongoing trial is over a wrongful death lawsuit filed by Katherine Jackson and Michael's children, Paris, Prince and Blanket, against concert promoter AEG. The suit claims AEG was responsible for negligently hiring Dr. Conrad Murray, currently serving four years for involuntary manslaughter over Jackson's death on June 25, 2009 from a fatal dose of Propofol. AEG contends that they never hired the doctor, claiming he was employed by Jackson himself.
Here's a look at the 5 latest developments in the Michael Jackson Estate vs. AEG trial:
1. Emphasizing AEG's "honesty" and "transparency," Gongaware denied to Panish that he had ever tried to deceive Michael Jackson. However an email that Gongaware wrote and sent to AEG executives in 2008, which was displayed on screens in the courtroom, said, "Net to Mikey 132 million..It's a big number but this is not a number MJ will want to hear. He thinks he's so much bigger than that. If we use show income it's over a quarter of a billion dollars. His net share works out to be 50 percent after local venue and ad costs which is quite good. His gross is half a billion. Maybe gross is a better number to throw around if we need to use numbers with Mikey listening."
In an email Gongaware sent in March, 2009 to his assistant Kelly DiStefano, her instructions were to alter Jackson's schedule to make it look like his schedule wasn't as grueling. "Change the color for the actual shows to something like first one you used like a light tan or something. I don't want the shows to stand out so much when MJ looks at it... Figure it out so it looks like he's not working so much." When queried by Panish over why he gave such instructions to his assistant, Gongaware, who claimed during his deposition that he had no knowlege of his motivation, said, "I didn't want him to misread it so he thought he was working more than he was. I was trying to present it in the best possible light."

2. Upon viewing some of his own emails which he couldn't recall writing or sending, Panish asked Gongaware, "Sir, have you have been having a problem with identity theft? Is someone writing emails under your name?" During his deposition, Gongaware denied any written connection to a "This Is It" press conference in which Jackson was set to introduce the film to critics and media. Jackson was also scheduled to introduce the "This Is It" tour in London. Gongaware wrote, "We can not be forced into stopping this which MJ will try to do because he's lazy and constantly changes his mind to fit his immediate wants." Gongaware testified Tuesday that "lazy" was a "poor choice of words" and he had just meant to convey that Jackson didn't like doing promotion. As to Gongaware's inability to recall certain emails that he had written and sent, he said, "Those were written three and a half years ago and I was doing hundreds of emails a day."
3. Despite an email sent to "This is It" tour business manager Timm Woolley by Gongaware which approved tour charges, including a house for Dr. Murray in London, he claims budget approvals by him were merely a "technical" task included in his job "but that he had never read any of it at the time." Jackson attorney Panish pounced, asking: "Your custom of practice when reviewing budgets on a $34 million project is that you don't review them?" Gongaware said he didn't feel it was necessary to respond given that Woolley and he both reached an understanding of the process. When asked pointblank if it was his job to approve budgets, Gongaware gave an evasive answer saying, "It's my job to get the show on the road." His answer prompted Panish to repeat the question. Gongaware conceded that it's his job to approve budgets, but explained that budgets are constantly in flux during production and are only adjusted and settled once a tour is over.

4. Gongaware repeatedly denied having employed Dr. Murray, saying "I never hired him" and "Michael asked me to retain him." Gongaware was then shown a video of an interview (which he claimed he's never seen prior to Tuesday) in July 2009 in which AEG CEO/President Randy Phillips talked about Dr. Murray to Sky News saying, "We just felt this is his personal doctor and he wants him 24/7 and he's willing to leave his practice for a very large sum of money." As to why a background check was not run on Dr. Murray, Gongaware justified it by saying, "Michael Jackson insisted on him, recommended him, and that was good enough for me. It's not for me to tell Michael Jackson who his doctor should be....he wanted a doctor and I wanted him to be healthy for this tour." When quizzed on whether he had the authority to hire or fire Dr. Murray, Gongaware said, "I don't think so. He worked directly for Mr. Jackson." However Panish reminded the courtroom that Gongaware had actually terminated Jackson's nanny and so it would seem he could equally have terminated Dr. Murray too if he wanted to do so.
5. The court reviewed a June 2009 meeting held at Jackson's Carolwood home with Michael Jackson, Dr. Murray, AEG CEO/President Randy Phillips, Frank DiLeo (Jackson's former manager) and "This Is It" tour director Kenny Ortega. Gongaware stressed that the meeting was not about Jackson's health, but just to make sure that Dr. Murray had everything he would need to care for Jackson properly. But his testimony during Conrad Murray's criminal trial seem to contradict the statements he made to the court on Tuesday. Gongaware testified at Michael's criminal trial, in Sept. 28, 2011, that "This is It" tour director Kenny Ortega had requested the meeting over concerns about Michael's absences from rehearsal, as well as his health. Additionally, a police report filed after Gongaware was interviewed by Los Angeles Police Department references the meeting, saying that Gongaware told police the main topic of the meeting was "Jackson's overall health - diet, stamina and his weight. Jackson had missed a rehearsal and was thought to be dancing at home. However they discovered he was only watching video. Doctor Murray was receptive to their concerns and indicated he would take care of the situation." When Panish showed the police report on screens in the courtroom, Gongaware flat out denied having said that to police and said, "I think the police have it wrong."

http://movies.yahoo.com/news/michael-jackson-trial-5-newest-developments-estates-case-040218840.html
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 19 - May 29 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

AEG exec's memory strained about Michael Jackson's last days
By Alan Duke, CNN
updated 5:50 PM EDT, Wed May 29, 2013

AEG Live co-CEO Paul Gongaware says he can't remember key details of e-mails he sent about Michael Jackson's ill-fated tour.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
AEG Live exec struggles to explain "smoking gun" e-mail
Paul Gongaware: "I have no idea" why he wrote AEG was paying Dr. Conrad Murray
Jackson lawyers argue e-mail shows the concert promoter hired the doctor
Gongaware's repeated "I don't recall" answers draw laughs in court
Los Angeles (CNN) -- The phrase most spoken by AEG Live's co-CEO during his testimony in the Michael Jackson wrongful death trial was: "I don't recall."
Paul Gongaware, who was in charge of producing and promoting Jackson's ill-fated comeback concerts, testified this week that he couldn't remember sending key e-mails or approving budgets that included $150,000 a month for Dr. Conrad Murray.
Gongaware also denied thinking that Jackson's health was frail in the last days of his life, despite e-mails from others in the production suggesting the singer needed help.
Jackson's mother and three children are suing AEG Live, contending the concert promoter is liable in the pop icon's death because it negligently hired, retained or supervised Murray.
AEG's lawyers argue it was Jackson who chose, hired and supervised Murray -- and their company only dealt with Murray because Jackson demanded they pay for him to be his "This Is It" tour doctor.
Murray was convicted of involuntary manslaughter in Jackson's drug overdose death and he is serving a prison sentence.
Gongaware seemed to dance around some questions like Jackson doing a "Moonwalk," including when he explained an e-mail to his boss' assistant in which he said he was having nightmares and cold sweats about the concerts.
It was not an admission that he was concerned about Jackson's ability to do the show, he said. "It was just playing around, joking," with AEG President Tim Leiweke's assistant, Carla Garcia, he testified.
"Carla is an absolute babe and I was just chatting her up," he said.
While that testimony drew laughter in the court, it was unclear how jurors and the female judge viewed it, because Gongaware also acknowledged his girlfriend worked at AEG.
Gongaware's repetition of "I don't recall" several dozen times under questioning by Jackson lawyer Brian Panish eventually drew laughs from jurors, including when Panish began answering for him with that phrase.
AEG exec called Jackson "freak" before signing concert contract
The 'smoking gun'
Panish questioned Gongaware about an e-mail Jackson's lawyers call the "smoking gun," which they argue shows AEG Live executives used Murray's fear of losing his lucrative job as Jackson's personal physician to pressure him to have Jackson ready for rehearsals despite his fragile health.
Show director Kenny Ortega e-mailed Gongaware 11 days before Jackson's death expressing concerns that Murray had kept Jackson from a rehearsal the day before. Ortega also raised his own concerns about Jackson's health. Gongaware testified on Wednesday that he thought Ortega was "over-reacting."
His e-mail reply to Ortega read: "We want to remind (Murray) that it is AEG, not MJ, who is paying his salary. We want to remind him what is expected of him." Gongaware, in a video deposition played in court on the first day of the trial, said he could not remember writing the e-mail.
Panish on Wednesday played for jurors a section of Gongaware's deposition, recorded in December, in which Jackson lawyer Kevin Boyle questioned him about what he meant when he wrote to Ortega, "We want to remind him that it is AEG, not MJ, who is paying his salary."
Boyle: "Based on the assumptions that AEG is your company and MJ is Michael Jackson, do you have an understanding of what that means?"
Gongaware: "No, I don't understand it, because we weren't paying his salary."
Boyle: "So why would you write that?"
Gongaware: "I have no idea."
Boyle: "Now, let's go on to the next sentence. When you say 'his salary,' who are you talking about?"
Gongaware: "I don't know."
Boyle: "Oh, but how do you know you weren't paying his salary if you don't know who we're talking about?"
Gongaware: "I don't remember this e-mail."
Boyle: "Didn't you just testify that 'we weren't paying his salary'?"
Gongaware: "AEG?"
Boyle: "Yes. No. You just testified 'we weren't paying his salary.' You just testified to that a few seconds ago, right?"
Gongaware: "I guess."
Boyle: "Well, whose salary were you referring to? Dr. Murray?"
Gongaware: "Yes."
After Gongaware began recalling in court Wednesday what he meant in the e-mail, Panish suggested it may be a case of "repressed memories" where "someone doesn't remember something for three or four years."
"You didn't have any psychotherapy to remember what you wrote here?" Panish asked. "You didn't like get put to sleep? (Judge Yvette Palazuelos injected: "Hypnotized?") to see if you remembered this?
"No," Gongaware answered.
Sweet controversy at Jackson death trial
The Elvis connection
Gongaware's career as a concert promoter started with Elvis Presley's last tour. He testified that he met Jackson when he was with Presley manager Col. Tom Parker in Las Vegas.
Elvis' name came up in the trial on Tuesday as Panish questioned Gongaware about his knowledge of drug use during concert tours. He should have been able to recognize red flags signaling Jackson's drug use because of his experience with Presley and his time as Jackson's tour manager in the 1990s, the Jacksons contend.
An e-mail to a friend two weeks after Jackson's death supports their argument, the Jackson lawyers contend.
"I was working on the Elvis tour when he died so I kind of knew what to expect," Gongaware wrote. "Still quite a shock."
AEG lawyer Marvin Putnam later told reporters that Gongaware was referring to the public reaction to Jackson's death, not saying he expected Jackson would meet the same fate as Presley.
Presley collapsed in the bathroom of his Memphis, Tennessee, mansion -- Graceland -- on August 16, 1977, at age 42. While his death was ruled the result of an irregular heartbeat, the autopsy report was sealed amid accusations that the abuse of prescription drugs caused the problem.
Jackson died on June 25, 2009, at age 50. The coroner ruled his death was caused by a fatal combination of sedatives and the surgical anesthetic propofol. Murray told investigators he gave Jackson nightly infusions of propofol to treat his insomnia. He was convicted of involuntary manslaughter, sentenced to four years in prison and stripped of his medical license.
Gongaware -- who has worked as a tour promoter for 37 years for bands including Led Zeppelin, the Grateful Dead and many others -- testified that the only artist he ever knew who was using drugs on tour was Rick James.
Gongaware is currently the tour manager for the Rolling Stones North American tour.
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 19 - May 29 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

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After lunch break, Brian Panish resumes questioning of Paul Gongaware. Katherine Jackson and daughter Rebbie are in the courtroom.

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"What I really wanted was to meet with him about was in Kenny's email, nutritionist, that kind of stuff," Gongaware said about the email.

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About AEG paying Dr. Murray's salary, Gongaware said he wrote that in the email, would be paying his salary if MJ would've signed off on it.

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"We expected him to take care of his patient," Gongaware said. "We certainly weren't controlling the doctor."

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Panish: Why are you going to remind someone what to do when they are doing their job? Gongaware: I don't know

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"I've taken this very seriously, I've been sued for billions of dollars personally," Gongaware said.

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Panish asked Gongaware who told him he was being sued for billns of dollars and he told his lawyers told him.

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Panish: Do you know how much money MJ would earn in the future? Gongaware: Nobody knows that

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"I spent as much time as I could preparing for it," Gongaware explained, saying he's currently on tour with The Rolling Stones.

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Panish: Is it more important to work for AEG than to prepare for this case, right? Gongaware: I think they are both equally important

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Panish: How many artist's doctor you requested a face-to-face meeting? Gongaware: None that I can recall

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"His health was going to be discussed at the meeting," Gongaware said about asking Dr. Murray to be present.

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Gongaware said he suggested to his boss, Randy Phillips, to bring the doctor. It wasn't an order.

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Email on 6/20/09 from Gongaware to Phillips: Take the doctor with you. Why wasn't he there last night?

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"This is talking about a problem they had that night with Michael," Gongaware explained.

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Gongaware: "It appears that Michael was sick that night, so where was the doctor? That was my question."

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Panish: Why are you telling the CEO to take the doctor with you? Gongaware: Meeting was going to be with Michael

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Panish: Because you were controlling him, right? Gongaware: We were not controlling him

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"Dr. Murray was in charge of MJ's health," Gongaware testified.

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Email on 6/19/09 from John Hougdahl to Gongaware and Phillips Subject: Trouble at the front

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Email: Paul/Randy I'm not being a drama queen here... Kenny asked me to notify you both. MJ was sent home without stepping foot on stage.

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Email cont'd: He was a basket case and Kenny was concerned he would embarrass himself on stage, or worse yet - get hurt.

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Email cont'd: The company is rehearsing right now, but the DOUBT is pervasive. Time to circle the wagons. Bugzee

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"All I know is that I had only one meeting with Dr. Murray," Gongaware said, but he doesn't know what day it was.

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Gongaware said he didn't know what Bugzee meant when he wrote "time to circle the wagons."

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Back in session after a break.
 
Emails reflect AEG's fears about Jackson's health
By ANTHONY McCARTNEY | Associated Press – 5 mins ago
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Associated Press/Joel Ryan, File - File - In this March 5, 2009 file photo, US singer Michael Jackson announces at a press conference that he is set to play ten live concerts at the London O2 Arena in July …more
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LOS ANGELES (AP) — Jurors hearing a lawsuit against concert giant AEG Live LLC have been shown emails in which top company executives expressed fears about Michael Jackson's health and the amount of time they had to get the singer prepared for his ill-fated series of comeback tours.
The messages were displayed Wednesday during testimony from AEG Live co-CEO Paul Gongaware, who at one point sent his boss' assistant a message stating the show was giving him nightmares and causing him to break out in cold sweats at night.
Gongaware testified that he was joking, but it was just one of several messages expressing concerns about Jackson's health. Another message from Randy Phillips, the top-ranking executive at AEG Live, wrote after one of Jackson's missed rehearsals that, "we are running out of time.
"That is my biggest fear," Phillips wrote to Gongaware and the CEO of AEG Live's parent company, Anschutz Entertainment Group, on June 20, 2009, five days before Jackson's death.
Gongaware said he didn't agree with Phillips' assessment. "He may have said that, but I didn't agree with that," Gongaware testified.
His testimony came under questioning by an attorney for Jackson's mother, who is suing AEG Live and claims it failed to properly investigate the doctor convicted of causing her son's death. Gongaware and Phillips are also named as defendants in the case.
AEG denies that it hired former cardiologist Conrad Murray, or could have foreseen the singer's death. The company's defense attorneys have not yet questioned Gongaware on the stand.
The company's defense attorney, Marvin S. Putnam, said outside court that the emails reflect the company was concerned about Jackson's health, and expressed those concerns to Jackson's lawyer and manager before his death.
Jurors have seen numerous emails throughout the trial, including several sent by people working on Jackson's "This Is It" comeback shows in which they expressed concerns about Jackson's health. Production manager John "Bugzee" Hougdahl, wrote Phillips in the last week of the singer's life that Jackson was on a downward slide.
"I have watched him deteriorate in front of my eyes over the last 8 weeks" Hougdahl wrote.
Katherine Jackson's attorney questioned Gongaware about whether the company put too much emphasis on the showbiz maxim, "The show must go on."
Gongaware denied that was the case.
He told the jury that he was concerned about Jackson's health, but that he thought "This Is It" tour director Kenny Ortega may have been overstating concerns about the singer's wellbeing.
Phillips also expressed concerns about Ortega, writing to Gongaware's private email address, "This guy is really starting to concern me."
Gongaware testified Wednesday that he wasn't sure who Phillips was referring to, and his boss may have been expressing concerns about Jackson or Murray.
Six weeks before Jackson's death, Gongaware sent an email to an assistant for the CEO of AEG in which he urged her to, "Pray for me. "This is a nightmare. Not coincidentally, I have them now every night. Cold sweats, too. Life used to be so much fun..."
Gongaware said he was joking in the message. "I don't have cold sweats," he said. "I don't have nightmares. I sleep great."
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 19 - May 29 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

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Response from Phillips on Jun 20: Bugzee, I know because I just got Kenny's message on my vm.

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Email cont'd: What did he do when he got there and what happened between him and KO? I have a meeting with MJ tomorrow morning.

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From Hougdahl (Bugzee)to Phillips, cc'd Gongaware: MJ came out and watched all the pyro demonstration and endorsed the all the effects

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Email cont'd: then went into his room and asked Kenny "you aren't going to kill the artist, are you?"

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Email cont'd: We assumed this was reference to pyro, but Kenny said he was shaking and couldn't hold his knife and fork.

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Email cont'd: Kenny had to cut his food for him before he could eat, and then had to use his fingers ...

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Email cont'd: I don't know how much embellishment there is to this, but (Kenny) said repeatedly that MJ was in no shape to go on stage.

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Email cont'd: He kept going on and on how no one was taking responsibility for "getting him ready".

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Email cont'd: We might be getting beyond ... damage control, here.

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"I didn't worry about, it sounded like he was sick and they were going to talk about it next morning," Gongaware explained.

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Phillips replied: Tim and I are going to see him tomorrow, however, I am not sure what the problem is. Chemical or physiological?

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Gongaware said he was at a family wedding and wasn't really paying attention to this. This was 1st time he heard something was wrong with MJ

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Gongaware responds: Take the doctor with you. Why wasn't he there last night?

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"Yes, if he (MJ) was sick, why wasn't he (the doctor) there?" Gongaware said he meant in the email.

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Phillips responded and added Tim Leiweke in the chain: He is not a psychiatrist so I'm not sure how effective he can be at this point.

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Email cont'd: Obviously, getting him there is not the issue. It is much deeper. "I think Randy is stating his opinion," Gongaware said.

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Panish asked if Gongaware inquired what Phillips meant by "the issue... It's much deeper." He said no.

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Gongaware: Well, there was going to be a meeting that day to discuss it Panish: We're you concern? Gongaware: Not necessarily

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Panish: Nobody told you anything where Dr. Murray was? Gongaware: No P: And never sought to find out? G: No

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Response from Hougdahl to Phillips, about needing trainer/therapist: I've watched him deteriorate in front of my eyes over the last 8 weeks.

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Email cont'd: He was able to do multiple 360 spins back in April. He'd fall on his a** if he tried it now.

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"There was a meeting on June 20th. I wasn't there, I was back East," Gongaware recalled.

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Email from Phillips: Unfortunately, we are running out of time. That's my biggest fear. "He was afraid of that, I wasn't," Gongaware said.

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Gongaware agreed that in this business, the show must go on.

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Gongaware said AEG has a policy that they check people out either by knowing them, by being known in the industry or recommend by the artist
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Gongaware testified he didn't know when Dr. Murray's contract was to begin.

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"That contract was for London and the shows for London, I believe," Gongaware said.

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Email on 6/20/09 from Phillips to LeiwekeComm and Kazoodi: This guy is really starting to concern me.

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Email cont'd: Read his email and my response. Dr. Murray and I are meeting with MJ at 4pm today at The Forum.

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Phillips sent this email to Leiweke and Gongaware's private email accounts. "Kazzodi" is a private email address that belongs to Gongaware.

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"The artist's health is paramount. Without the artist, there's no show. The artist if the most important thing," Gongaware testified.

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Email on 6/19/09 from Phillips to Leiweke: We have a real problem here.

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There was a meeting that was going to happen the next day, Gongaware said, and he waited to see what would come out of it.

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Email on 6/19/09 from Leiweke to Phillips: Let's set up a time for your and I to meet with him. I want Kenny in the meeting as well.

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Ortega wrote back: I will do whatever I can to be of help with this situation. My concern is now that we've brought the Doctor into the fold

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Email cont'd: played the tough love, now or never card, is that the Artist may be unable 2 rise 2 the occasion due 2 real emotional stuff

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Email cont'd: He appeared quite weak and fatigued this evening. He had a terrible case of the chills, was trembling, rambling an obsessing.

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Email cont'd: Everything in me says he should be psychologically evaluated. If we have any chance at all to get him back in the light

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Email cont'd: it's going to take a strong Therapist to help him through this as well as immediate physical nurturing.

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Email cont'd: I was told by our choreographer during the artists costume fitting w/ his designer tonight they noticed he's lost more weight

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Email cont'd: As far as I can tell, there's no 1 taking responsibility (caring) for him on a daily basis. Where was his assistant tonight?

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Email cont'd: Tonight I was feeding him wrapping him in blankets to warm his chill, massaging his feet to calm him and calling his doctor.

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Email cont'd: There were four security guards outside his door, but no one offering him a cup of hot tea.

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Email cont'd: Finally, it's important 4 every1 2 know I believe he really wants this. It would shatter him break his heart if we pulled plug

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Email cont'd: He's terribly frightened it's all going to go away. He asked me repeatedly tonight if i was going to leave him.

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Email cont'd: He was practically begging for my confidence. It broke my heart. He was like a lost boy.

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Email cont'd: There still may be a chance he can rise to the occasion if we get him the help he needs.

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Phillips responded: Kenny, I will call you when I figure this out,we have a person like that, Brigitte, who's in London advancing his stay.

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Email cont'd: We will bring her back asap and Frank, too, however, I'm stymied on who to bring in as a therapist

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Email cont'd: and how they can get through to him in such a short time.

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Gongaware said Brigitte is a lawyer who was in charge of accommodations for MJ in London.

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Side note: it's super hot in the courtroom. Air condition not keeping up. Attorneys said they will bring fans to help cool the room down.

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Mrs. Jackson did not return after the afternoon break.

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"This all happened prior to the meeting, and I was waiting to understand what the situation was," Gongaware explained.

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"I think they are special," Gongaware said about artists.

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Gongaware: He was obviously concerned Panish: Seriously concerned, right sir? Gongaware: Seemed to be

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Email response from Philips to Kenny urging him, and everyone else, not to become amateur psychiatrists or physicians on 6/20/09.

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Email: "You cannot imagine the harm and ramifications of stopping this show now"

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Panish: Can you name a single person at AEG who checked Dr. Murray out? Gongaware: I don't know if anyone did

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"I didn't know anything about him," Gongaware said about Dr. Murray.

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"Some people work for reasons other than money," Gongaware opined, but said he didn't know whether Dr. Murray was in that category.

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"I believe every doctor is unbiased and ethical," Gongaware said. "I think it's a natural assumption on my part."

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Gongaware: I never checked any doctor that I used. I just go by recommendation, never checked anyone's financial situation.

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Gongaware said everyone thought MJ had all the money in the world, and it was not unusual for him to see people asking for a lot of money.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Panish: He knew MJ's health was declining based on what the doctor told I'm, right? Gongaware: Based on what his doctor told him, yes

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts48s
"I did talk to him and he said the meeting went well," Gongaware recalled.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Gongaware said he never heard before today anything about Dr. Murray's financial conditions.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts59s
"This guy is starting to concern me," Phillips wrote in an email to Leiweke, Gongaware and Frank DiLeo.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
"It is not clear to me who 'this guy' is," Gongaware said.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts48s
"I don't know what Randy meant here," Gongaware explained. "I can easily take 'this guy' is MJ here."

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts36s
Gongaware said he was in a family wedding, hadn't seen the family for a long time and was not paying attention to work.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Gongaware said he produced every email he had related to this case.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts31s
Email on 6/22/09 from Hougdahl (Production Manager, known as Bugzee) to Gongaware: Further to the earlier email...

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts48s
Email cont'd: Let's keep our 2 docu people out of here today, unless they stay in the dressing room area only. Tomorrow is another story...

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts24s
Panish: Sir, Michael was sick this time, wasn't sir? Gongaware: I don't know, he showed up next day and was great!

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Panish: But you were not at the rehearsal, sir? Gongaware: I saw reports

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts51s
Panish talking about June 24th rehearsing: "He appeared to me to be fully engaged," Gongaware said.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
"I recall seeing Thriller because it was the first time they were rehearsing with the costume and I wanted to see it," Gongaware said.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts16s
That ended Day 19 of testimony. Paul Gongaware resumes tomorrow morning. They hope to be done with him by Friday. See you all tomorrow!
 
AEG email: Murray works for us, not Jackson

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CAPTIONS
1/18
By Jeff Gottlieb
May 29, 2013, 3:55 p.m.
An email from a ranking AEG executive that was shown in court Wednesday could be among the most telling pieces of evidence in answering a central question in the Michael Jackson wrongful death suit: who employed Dr. Conrad Murray?

“Frank and I have discussed it already and have requested a face-to-face meeting with the doctor, hopefully Monday," AEG Live co-CEO Paul Gongaware wrote on June 14, 2009, 11 days before Murray administered a fatal dose of the anesthetic propofol to the singer.

"We want to remind him that it is AEG, not MJ who is paying his salary. We want him to understand what is expected of him."

FULL COVERAGE: AEG wrongful death trial

One of driving questions in the wrongful death case is whether it was concert promoter AEG or Jackson who hired and controlled Murray, who is now serving time for involuntary manslaughter,

Confronted with the email as he sat on the witness stand Wednesday, Gongaware said he didn't recall writing it.

“I don’t understand it because we weren’t paying his salary," Gongaware said.

PHOTOS: Michael Jackson | 1958-2009

“So why were you writing it?" asked Brian Panish, the Jackson family's attorney.

"I have no idea," Gongaware replied.

The AEG executive later said the email was "shorthand" between him, tour director Kenny Ortega and Jackson's manager Frank Dileo. “I was going through hundreds of emails a day. If I knew lawyers four years later were picking everything apart, I may have been more careful choosing my words,” Gongaware testified.

Gongaware also testified that in response to concerns over Jackson's health from Ortega, he was trying to find the singer a nutritionist and physical therapist.

Ortega replied in a June 15, 2009, email , "Super. Not a minute too soon. Let’s turn this guy around!”

Asked by Panish if Oretga raised his concerns about Jackson's health, Gongaware replied, "Perhaps."

"I was never concerned about Michael Jackson. I knew when the houselights went off, he would be there and on."

In their lawsuit, Jackson's mother and three children contend that AEG negligently hired and supervised Murray, who was supposed to be paid $150,000 a month. AEG says that any money it was supposed to pay the doctor was an advance to Jackson.

In another email exchange, this one with the assistant to Tim Leiweke, then chief executive of parent company Anschutz Entertainment Group, Gongaware wrote that he couldn't tell her which day the "This Is It" concerts would open in London because Jackson hadn't shown up to rehearsal.

“Pray for me," he wrote May 5, 2009. "This is a nightmare. Not coincidentally, I have them now every night. Cold sweats, too. Life used to be so much fun…"

Gongaware testified that he was joking in the email.
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 19 - May 29 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

Promoter grilled about 'smoking gun' e-mail in Michael Jackson death trial
By Alan Duke, CNN
updated 8:41 PM EDT, Wed May 29, 2013

AEG exec confronted at Jackson trial
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
AEG Live exec struggles to explain "smoking gun" e-mail
Paul Gongaware: "I have no idea" why he wrote AEG was paying Dr. Conrad Murray
Jackson lawyers argue e-mail shows the concert promoter hired the doctor
Gongaware's repeated "I don't recall" answers draw laughs in court
Los Angeles (CNN) -- The phrase most spoken by AEG Live's co-CEO during his testimony in the Michael Jackson wrongful death trial was: "I don't recall."
Paul Gongaware, who was in charge of producing and promoting Jackson's ill-fated comeback concerts, testified this week that he couldn't remember sending key e-mails or approving budgets that included $150,000 a month for Dr. Conrad Murray.
Gongaware also denied thinking that Jackson's health was frail in the last days of his life, despite e-mails from others in the production suggesting the singer needed help.
Jackson's mother and three children are suing AEG Live, contending the concert promoter is liable in the pop icon's death because it negligently hired, retained or supervised Murray.
AEG exec probed at Jackson death trial
AEG's lawyers argue it was Jackson who chose, hired and supervised Murray -- and their company only dealt with Murray because Jackson demanded they pay for him to be his "This Is It" tour doctor.
Murray was convicted of involuntary manslaughter in Jackson's drug overdose death and he is serving a prison sentence.
Gongaware seemed to dance around some questions like Jackson doing a "Moonwalk," including when he explained an e-mail to his boss' assistant in which he said he was having nightmares and cold sweats about the concerts.
It was not an admission that he was concerned about Jackson's ability to do the show, he said. "It was just playing around, joking," with AEG President Tim Leiweke's assistant, Carla Garcia, he testified.
"Carla is an absolute babe and I was just chatting her up," he said.
While that testimony drew laughter in the court, it was unclear how jurors and the female judge viewed it, because Gongaware also acknowledged his girlfriend worked at AEG.
Gongaware's repetition of "I don't recall" several dozen times under questioning by Jackson lawyer Brian Panish eventually drew laughs from jurors, including when Panish began answering for him with that phrase.
AEG exec called Jackson "freak" before signing concert contract
The 'smoking gun'
Panish questioned Gongaware about an e-mail Jackson's lawyers call the "smoking gun," which they argue shows AEG Live executives used Murray's fear of losing his lucrative job as Jackson's personal physician to pressure him to have Jackson ready for rehearsals despite his fragile health.
Show director Kenny Ortega e-mailed Gongaware 11 days before Jackson's death expressing concerns that Murray had kept Jackson from a rehearsal the day before. Ortega also raised his own concerns about Jackson's health. Gongaware testified on Wednesday that he thought Ortega was "over-reacting."
His e-mail reply to Ortega read: "We want to remind (Murray) that it is AEG, not MJ, who is paying his salary. We want to remind him what is expected of him." Gongaware, in a video deposition played in court on the first day of the trial, said he could not remember writing the e-mail.
Panish on Wednesday played for jurors a section of Gongaware's deposition, recorded in December, in which Jackson lawyer Kevin Boyle questioned him about what he meant when he wrote to Ortega, "We want to remind him that it is AEG, not MJ, who is paying his salary."
Boyle: "Based on the assumptions that AEG is your company and MJ is Michael Jackson, do you have an understanding of what that means?"
Gongaware: "No, I don't understand it, because we weren't paying his salary."
Boyle: "So why would you write that?"
Gongaware: "I have no idea."
Boyle: "Now, let's go on to the next sentence. When you say 'his salary,' who are you talking about?"
Gongaware: "I don't know."
Boyle: "Oh, but how do you know you weren't paying his salary if you don't know who we're talking about?"
Gongaware: "I don't remember this e-mail."
Boyle: "Didn't you just testify that 'we weren't paying his salary'?"
Gongaware: "AEG?"
Boyle: "Yes. No. You just testified 'we weren't paying his salary.' You just testified to that a few seconds ago, right?"
Gongaware: "I guess."
Boyle: "Well, whose salary were you referring to? Dr. Murray?"
Gongaware: "Yes."
Watch more of Gongaware's testimony here
After Gongaware began recalling in court Wednesday what he meant in the e-mail, Panish suggested it may be a case of "repressed memories" where "someone doesn't remember something for three or four years."
"You didn't have any psychotherapy to remember what you wrote here?" Panish asked. "You didn't like get put to sleep? (Judge Yvette Palazuelos injected: "Hypnotized?") to see if you remembered this?
"No," Gongaware answered.
Sweet controversy at Jackson death trial
The Elvis connection
Gongaware's career as a concert promoter started with Elvis Presley's last tour. He testified that he met Jackson when he was with Presley manager Col. Tom Parker in Las Vegas.
Elvis' name came up in the trial on Tuesday as Panish questioned Gongaware about his knowledge of drug use during concert tours. He should have been able to recognize red flags signaling Jackson's drug use because of his experience with Presley and his time as Jackson's tour manager in the 1990s, the Jacksons contend.
An e-mail to a friend two weeks after Jackson's death supports their argument, the Jackson lawyers contend.
"I was working on the Elvis tour when he died so I kind of knew what to expect," Gongaware wrote. "Still quite a shock."
AEG lawyer Marvin Putnam later told reporters that Gongaware was referring to the public reaction to Jackson's death, not saying he expected Jackson would meet the same fate as Presley.
Presley collapsed in the bathroom of his Memphis, Tennessee, mansion -- Graceland -- on August 16, 1977, at age 42. While his death was ruled the result of an irregular heartbeat, the autopsy report was sealed amid accusations that the abuse of prescription drugs caused the problem.
Jackson died on June 25, 2009, at age 50. The coroner ruled his death was caused by a fatal combination of sedatives and the surgical anesthetic propofol. Murray told investigators he gave Jackson nightly infusions of propofol to treat his insomnia. He was convicted of involuntary manslaughter, sentenced to four years in prison and stripped of his medical license.
Gongaware -- who has worked as a tour promoter for 37 years for bands including Led Zeppelin, the Grateful Dead and many others -- testified that the only artist he ever knew who was using drugs on tour was Rick James.
Gongaware is currently the tour manager for the Rolling Stones North American tour.
 
Jacksons vs AEG - Day 20 - May 30 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

Jacksons vs AEG - Day 20 - May 30 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

Use this thread to post any and all news stories from day 20 of Katherine Jackson vs. AEG trial.

Daily news threads are merged into the main News thread in the stickies

Please help the staff by posting all the news stories as well as tweets from media you see.

Please Don't post updates or tweets from Fans in news thread
 
Michael Jackson feared for his safety during ‘This Is It’ tour, emails reveal
'You aren't going to kill the artist, are you?' the King of Pop purportedly asked producers during his 'This Is It' tour.

BY NANCY DILLON / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

THURSDAY, MAY 30, 2013, 8:54 AM
22
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0

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HO/REUTERS

Emails shown in court during Jackson trial reveal the singer raised concerns about the safety of stage pyrotecnics during his doomed ‘This Is It’ tour.
Michael Jackson made a haunting remark about his mortality after watching some stage pyrotechnics for his doomed "This Is It" tour less than a week before his death, a jury heard Wednesday.

"You aren't going to kill the artist, are you?" the King of Pop purportedly asked producers after viewing and "endorsing" a test of the combustible special effects, a production manager recalled in a June 19, 2009, email revealed in court.

Concert production manager John "Bugsy" Houghdahl relayed the quote to his boss Randy Phillips, the CEO of concert giant AEG Live, as part of an explanation of the "Thriller" singer's sick and disoriented demeanor at the June 19 rehearsal in Los Angeles.


Houghdahl said he assumed the comment was a passing reference to the pyrotechnics, but he also said show director Kenny Ortega later observed Jackson acting like "a basket case."

"Kenny said (Jackson) was shaking and couldn't hold his knife and fork. Kenny had to cut his food for him before he could eat, and then had to use his fingers," Houghdahl wrote in the email. "I don't know how much embellishment there is to this, but (Kenny) said repeatedly that MJ was in no shape to go on stage."

The email was one of several in a dramatic chain that lawyers for Katherine Jackson used to grill AEG Live's co-CEO Paul Gongaware in the matriarch's ongoing negligence lawsuit against the No. 2 concert promoter.


Katherine, 83, is suing for damages estimated at more than $1 billion, claiming AEG negligently hired and failed to property supervise the doctor convicted of overdosing her son.

AEG has denied any wrongdoing, saying Michael personally hired his death doctor and kept his use of the intravenous anesthetic that killed him a closely guarded secret.

Katherine's lawyer Brian Panish said outside court that he thought the Houghdahl email showed Michael was shaken by the pyrotechnic display after having suffered serious burns from an explosion on the set of a 1984 Pepsi commercial.


A lawyer for AEG said that wasn't the case.

"It may seem chilling in retrospect, but (Houghdahl) believed (Michael) was making a joke at the time. Michael Jackson wasn't afraid of the pyrotechnics. He wanted them," AEG lawyer Marvin Putnam told the News.

Panish needled Gongaware repeatedly Wednesday, asking what steps AEG took to address Ortega's concerns and why some messages about Michael's meltdown were sent by Phillips to his personal email address, not his business account.

Gongaware said he didn't know why Phillips used different email addresses for him but that he believed everyone wanted what was best for Michael.

His lawyer said in opening statements that no one at AEG knew the pop icon was getting dangerous drug infusions from his doctor leading up to his June 25, 2009, death.

"The artist's health is the most important thing, I agree with that," Gongaware testified Wednesday. "The artist is the most important thing."



Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/entertai...emails-reveal-article-1.1358353#ixzz2UnRLMX00
 
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 9m
The questioning about insurance prompted a lengthy sidebar in the judge’s chambers.
She just came back on the bench.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 10m
Panish said that Gongaware, a named defendant, is personally shielded from losses. AEG would pay any judgment, Panish said.
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 10m
Panish then started asking Gongaware about whether he had any insurance to cover any losses if AEG loses the trial.
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 10m
Panish asked Gongaware whether he thought the email was funny. Gongaware said yes. He also said he wasn’t concerned about Jackson’s health.
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 11m
Bugzee email: “He needs some cheeseburgers with a bunch of Wisconsin cheesehead bowlers... and a couple of brats and beers.”
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 11m
Hougdahl, in response to concerns expressed by Travis Payne about Jackson’s weight, wrote singer needed a new diet.
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 11m
This morning, Panish asked Gongaware about an email sent a few days earlier (June 20, 2009) by Hougdahl.
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 11m
Hougdahl wrote an email 5 days before Jackson died expressing alarm about the singer’s health, said he’d been deteriorating over 8 weeks.
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 11m
The production manager’s name is John “Bugzee” Hougdahl. He was at rehearsals and Gongaware said he knew a lot about how Jackson appeared.
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 12m
Plaintiff’s attorney Brian Panish started out by asking Gongaware about emails from a production manager who wrote about Jackson’s condition
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 12m
Trial is back in session in Katherine Jackson vs. AEG Live. AEG executive Paul Gongaware remains on the stand.
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 20 - May 30 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

Tweet Taj

Taj Jackson ?@tajjackson3 2h

There is no $ amount large enough to equal the value of my uncle's life. MJ was not only taken from our family, he was taken from THE WORLD.
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 20 - May 30 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts 15m
Day 20 of Jackson Family vs AEG trial is underway. Brian Panish resumed questioning of AEG's executive and co-defendant Paul Gongaware.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts 13m
Gongaware said he met with his attorneys again yesterday to refresh his recollection.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts 12m
Panish asked if AEG was concerned about Mr. Jackson's health.
"When he was sick we obviously had a concern," Gongaware responded.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts 12m
Gongaware said he understood MJ was sick from reading the chain of emails shown yesterday.


ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts 12m
But Gongaware told the jury he didn't have any particular concern about Michael Jackson.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts 12m
Other than on June 19th, no one told Gongaware about being concerned with MJ's health.


ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts 11m
Panish: Was Mr. Hougdahl joking about it?
Gongaware: A little bit

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts 11m
Talking about the email Hougdahl sent saying MJ was deteriorating quickly, Gongaware explained: "I didn't see it the way he saw."

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts 10m
Hougdahl wrote in another email to Gongaware that MJ needed some cheeseburgers, a couple of brats and beers.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts 10m
Panish inquired whether Gongaware had indemnity clause in his contract.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts 10m
"I haven't read my contract in 12/13 years, I don't know what it says," Gongaware said.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts 10m
Panish asked if he AEG would cover for Gongaware should they be found guilty.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts 7m
"I've been assuming that," Gongaware responded, adding that depending upon the size of the judgment, AEG could go after him.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts 7m
Panish asked how much AEG would be able to afford, and Gongaware said he didn't know.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts 7m
Panish emphasized there are various ways for AEG to pay a judgment, and Gongaware mentioned they had some sort of cancellation insurance.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts 6m
Lunch break is almost over. We'll tweet more updates as soon as we can.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts 2m
If it feels like they were jumping from one subject to another, it's because they were. We're told Panish is almost done.
 
AEG email: Footage of a 'skeletal' Jackson ordered deleted

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CAPTIONS
1/17
By Jeff Gottlieb
May 30, 2013, 2:03 p.m.
About six weeks after Michael Jackson’s death, an AEG executive told a producer for the “This Is It” documentary to delete footage of the singer looking too “skeletal.”

Witnesses in the Jackson family’s wrongful-death suit have testified that they were worried about the singer’s health and dramatic weight loss in the day before his scheduled comeback tour and had expressed concerns to tour officials.

The paramedic who came to Jackson’s Holmby Hills home after the 911 call on June 25, 2009, testified that the singer was so emaciated that he thought Jackson was an end-stage cancer patient who had come home to die.

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FULL COVERAGE: AEG wrongful death trial

“Make sure we take out the shots of MJ in that red leather jacket at the sound stage where the mini-movies were being filmed,” AEG Live president and co-chief executive Randy Phillips wrote.

“He looks way too think (sic) and skeletal.”

Phillips sent the email to Paul Gongaware, who was back on the witness stand Thursday for his third straight day of testimony. Gongaware, co-chief executive of AEG Live, was a producer of the documentary.

PHOTOS: Michael Jackson | 1958-2009

Gongaware replied to Phillips, his boss, “ok will have a look when it comes on screen.”

In another email, Gongaware wrote, “We are ok with the band, singers and dancers doing inteviews now. The only thing we ask is that they keep it positive and stress that MJ was active, engaged and not the emaciated person some want to paint him as being.”

Answering questions from Jackson family attorney Brian Panish, Gongaware said he was not trying to control the film’s message. “We’re asking them to keep it positive,” he said.

Gongaware said nothing was taken out of the documentary, which included rehearsals for the scheduled 50 concerts in London.

Gongaware’s testimony again emphasized the contrast between the answers he gave during his deposition under oath in December 2012 and his responses in the courtroom.

In testimony Wednesday, he agreed that Phillips meant “thin” in his email, instead of the word he typed, “think.”

Asked during the deposition what Phillips meant, he replied, ”I don’t know what he meant.”

The wrongful death case was brought by Jackson’s mother and three children against AEG, the promoter and producer of the London concerts.

The family contends that AEG negligently hired and supervised Conrad Murray, the doctor who gave Jackson the fatal dose of the anesthetic propofol. AEG says that the doctor worked for Jackson, and that any money the company was supposed to pay Murray were advances to the singer.
 
Michael Jackson concert performers were instructed to not say King of Pop looked 'emaciated’ before his death, says exec
Concert exec testifies he made request in email two weeks after singer's death

BY NANCY DILLON / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

THURSDAY, MAY 30, 2013, 5:51 PM
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LEONHARD FOEGER/REUTERS

Performers were told not to say Jackson looked ‘emaciated’ before he died.

RELATED STORIES
Michael Jackson feared for his safety during ‘This Is It’ tour, emails reveal
Michael Jackson wrongful death trial: Voicemail reveals manager urged Dr. Conrad Murray to run blood tests on ailing singer
Michael Jackson wrongful death trial: Katherine Jackson leaves courtroom before jury is shown photo of pop star's corpse
Manhattan Dr. David Slavit is facing a court challenge related to a Feb. 2009 examination he did of Michael Jackson; an enterntainment firm being sued by the Jackson family says the doc has ignored a subpoena for records

Two weeks after Michael Jackson's death, the performers on his "This Is It" concert series were urged to avoid saying he looked "emaciated" before his overdose, a concert exec grudgingly testified Thursday.

Tour honcho Paul Gongaware made the request in an email shown to jurors during his testimony in the negligence lawsuit brought by Jackson's mom Katherine against his company AEG Live.

"We are ok with the band, singers and dancers doing interviews now. The only thing we ask is that they keep it positive and stress that MJ was active, engaged and not the emaciated person some want to paint him as being," the July 9, 2009, email to music coordinator JoAnn Tominaga read.

"You're telling them what not to say, aren't you sir?" Katherine's lawyer Brian Panish asked Gongaware.

"I'm asking them to keep it positive," Gongaware replied from the witness stand.

"And not say he was emaciated," Panish shot back.

"Yes …we did ask them to keep it positive," Gongaware said.


GUS RUELAS/REUTERS

Michael Jackson's mother Katherine Jackson is suing concert giant AEG.

"So you were controlling the message as a producer of that documentary," Panish said, referring to the follow-up "This Is It" movie that included taped interviews.

"I don't think so," Gongaware replied.

Panish also grilled Gongaware over an email sent by his boss Randy Phillips a month later asking him to scrap footage of Michael that made him look ill.

"Make sure we take out the shots of MJ in the red leather jacket at the soundstage where the mini movies were being filmed. He looks way too think (sic) and skeletal," read the Aug. 9 email, previously mentioned during the trial.

Gongaware promised in a follow-up email to Phillips that he'd "have a look," but he testified Thursday that he never dumped any footage.

"We didn't keep anything out based on what Randy wrote," Gogaware told jurors.

Katherine, 83, is suing for damages estimated in the billions, claiming AEG negligently hired the doctor who overdosed Michael.


KEVORK DJANSEZIAN/AP

Katherine Jackson charges AEG was negligent in hiring Dr. Conrad Murray.

AEG adamantly denies any wrongdoing, saying Michael personally hired Dr. Conrad Murray and kept his use of the intravenous anesthetic that killed him a closely guarded secret.

Earlier Thursday, Gongaware confirmed he received an email from "This Is It" tour production manager John Hougdahl "joking" that the skinny singer needed junk food and beer to gain some much-needed weight.

"He needs some burgers with a bunch of Wisconsin cheesehead bowlers…and a couple of brats and beers," read the June 15, 2009, email projected on a screen for jurors.

"Was he joking around about this situation?" Panish asked Gongaware, referring to Hougdahl.

"I think he was," Gongaware replied.

"Did you think that was funny?" Panish asked.

"I did," Gongaware admitted.

Gongaware said he once observed Michael looking "slow" and possibly intoxicated after a visit to his dermatologist but he didn't believe the singer had any serious health problems — even after Jackson appeared weak and disoriented at a June 19 rehearsal.

"My observation of Michael Jackson was that he was healthy," Gongaware said. "They had a meeting to discuss (the June 19 incident), and he took a couple days off and he came back strong."



Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/entertai...***-emaciated-article-1.1359115#ixzz2UpBpWmlu
 
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP17m
After the sidebar, plaintiff’s attorney Brian Panish was able to ask Gongaware about his exposure if AEG is found liable for Jackson’s death

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP17m
Gongaware said it was his understanding that he wouldn’t be personally responsible financial if the jury sided with Jackson family.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP16m
About to go back in session, I'll have other updates at the lunch break.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP4m
We're on the afternoon break in Jackson vs AEG Live. AEG defense attorney Marvin S. Putnam is now questioning Paul Gongaware.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP2m
After lunch, the court spent more than 20 minutes on issues outside the presence of the jury.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP2m
There was an argument over when attorneys would hand over documents to opposing counsel.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP54s
Plaintiff’s counsel Brian Panish called AEG’s lawyers disingenuous about when they were giving documents to plaintiff's attorneys.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP1m
This issue was all about documents that are being introduced as evidence (so everyone's seen them before.)

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP1m
Lots of bickering back and forth, and the judge summed up the discussion: “This is really a time-waster, really.”

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP1m
The court also heard an update on efforts to get emails and any other records from a computer used by Jackson’s former manager Frank Dileo.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP46s
Apparently an LA attorney has a copy of Dileo's computer hard drive. Attorneys are working to get a copy of the HD to both sides.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP1m
The copy was revealed during a deposition of Dileo’s widow earlier this week in Pennsylvania, plaintiff’s lawyer Brian Panish said.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP1m
After the discussions, the jury was brought into the courtroom and Brian Panish concluded his questioning of AEG executive Paul Gongaware.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP1m
Before lunch, Panish asked Gongaware whether “This Is It” was intended to be a multi-city tour. Gongaware said no, it was ... (cont)

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP1m
(cont) ... just going to be the 50 shows at London’s O2 arena.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP1m
After lunch, Panish read a portion of Gongaware’s testimony at Conrad Murray’s involuntary manslaughter trial.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP1m
During Murray’s trial, Gongaware testified that 250k people still wanted tickets. He told that jury “This Is It” would be a multi-city tour.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP1m
Panish: “Did you tell the truth when you testified in this case sir?” Yes, Gongaware replied.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP1m
When AEG defense attorney Marvin Putnam took over, he asked Gongaware about some of the emails shown to jurors yesterday.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP1m
Putnam was trying to show that not all the contents of the emails had been shown to jury. Some email addresses had been redacted.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP1m
Attorney Brian Panish objected to the redactions, and got testy with the judge. It prompted another lengthy sidebar.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP3m
When attorneys returned from the judge's chambers, Putnam resumed questioning Gongaware about email sent to his private account.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP2m
He presented Gongaware a document that indicated the private email account had been closed at the time a message sent him an MJ-related msg.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP2m
The email in question was titled "trouble at the Front" and included concerns about Michael Jackson's health.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP1m
Gongaware had testified that he'd never seen it. Putnam used the closed email account to try to show Gongaware's testimony was truthful

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 26m
A lot of Gongaware's afternoon testimony was biographical details: how he got started in concert business, other acts he worked with.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 25m
His first big show was in Colorado -- he got The Grateful Dead to perform at Folsom Field in Boulder, Colo.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 25m
He said he didn't know the band or any of its managers, but asked them to come to Colorado. They did, and the show was a hit.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 24m
After that, Gongaware listed some of the other acts he worked with, including Bad Company, Led Zeppelin, the Beach Boys, Eric Clapton.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 24m
He also worked with Jackson on the "Dangerous" and "HIStory" tours. More testimony about that expected tomorrow.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 23m
He talked a little bit about how he came to work with Elvis. He was working for a promoting company that assigned him to Col. Parker.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 22m
Colonel Parker was Elvis' manager.
Gongaware said he would update Parker on ticket sales for Elvis' shows.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 21m
Gongaware was asked about a couple emails in which he referenced working with Elvis when he died. Emails were sent after MJ's death.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 20m
A couple of Gongaware's friends sent him condolence emails after Michael Jackson's death in June 2009.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 20m
Gongaware's response: "I was working for Elvis when he died so nothing came at me that I didn’t expect. Still, quite a shock."

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 20m
AEG defense attorney Marvin Putnam asked Gongaware whether he meant that he expected Jackson to die.
Gongaware said no.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 19m
Gongaware said he was referring to people working on the tour who would lose their jobs, and the estate taking control over MJ's legacy.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 18m
When one of his friends asked about his plans after MJ's death, Gongaware replied he was "trying to recover our losses from the show."

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 17m
AEG attorney Marvin Putnam: "Did you mean that you were expecting Michael Jackson to die?"
Gongaware said no.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 16m
Putnam also asked Gongaware whether he'd ever heard of propofol before Jackson's death.
His answer was no.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 15m
Paul Gongaware was also asked about doctors on the "Dangerous" tour. He said he never saw their actual treatments of MJ.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 15m
Here's what Gongaware had to say about the role of the estate after Elvis died (and what he expected after Jackson's death.)

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 14m
Gongaware: "Then the estate takes over, and everything’s different. You have nothing to say about anything."

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 12m
AEG attorney Marvin Putnam told Gongaware while he was on the stand that the company handed over 13,000 of his emails to Jackson lawyers.
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 20 - May 30 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts6m
Just want to remind everyone that we are not allowed to live tweet, per judge's order. We have to do it during breaks

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Email 6/15/09 from Hougdahl to Gongaware He needs some cheeseburgers w/ bunch of Wisconsin cheesehead bowlers and couple of brats and beers

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Gongaware said he does not know how many pages his employment agreement is.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts41s
Panish asked about indemnity in Gongaware's contract. The exec said indemnity means that someone else is taking on the responsibility.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts16s
Panish: That means if you did something wrong... Gongaware: They would be responsible

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts48s
Panish went back to discuss the email from Randy Phillips where he wrote Dr. Murray didn't need the gig and was unbiased and ethical.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts40s
Panish: Is Mr. Phillips unbiased and ethical, sir? Gongaware: I think he is

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts44s
Panish asked if it was ethical for Phillips to represent to Ortega that the doctor is 'extremely successful' and 'we checked everyone out'

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Gongaware responded that he didn't know what Phillips knew at the time.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Panish: Is number one priority 'the show must go on'? Gongaware: I don't know if that's number one P: What's number one? G: Getting it right

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts2m
Panish showed the email John Branca, Michael's attorney, saying he had the right therapist for MJ and asked if substance abuse was involved.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts3m
"This is referring to the meeting that was going to happen and I was waiting to see the results of it," Gongaware said.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts3m
"I didn't believe there was a substance abuse issue," Gongaware testified.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts3m
"In the entire time I was dealing with him in this tour, I saw it once when he came back from his doctor," Gongaware testified.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts2m
Gongaware said that was the only time he saw Michael with slurred speech and under the influence of something.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts2m
Gongaware said he didn't know what Dr. Klein was giving Michael Jackson.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
When Panish asked Gongaware if he checked Dr. Klein out, he replied: "No, he was Michael's doctor and it was none of my business."

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Gongaware talked about the meetings he attended at MJ's house. He couldn't remember how many, but said one w/ Dr. Murray was in June.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
On June 24th, Gongaware saw MJ rehearse the song 'Thriller'. He said he thought Michael was engaged and alert.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts7m
As to insurance issues, Gongaware said he was involved only peripherally.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts6m
On June 25, Gongaware sent an email saying that if they didn't get sickness coverage in the insurance, they would be dropping the policy.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts6m
Gongaware said he didn't know why he was pressing for sickness insurance on the day MJ died.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts4m
Bob Taylor, the insurance broker, wrote back that it was always down to the medical issued from the word go.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Regarding Randy Phillips asking for life insurance the day MJ died, Gongaware said he didn't pay much attention to insurance, didn't recall

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts28s
The day MJ died, Gongaware said Phillips called him and told him to get over to the house right away, there seems to be a problem.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts19s
Randy followed the ambulance to UCLA. "The second call was that he informed me that he had died," Gongaware remembered.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts7m
On June 25, Gongaware said he went to the rehearsal at the Staples Center and talked to Kenny Ortega.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts7m
Panish: Were you sad Mr. Jackson died? Gongaware: Very much so

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts7m
He was a business associate, Gongaware said about MJ. They did not didn't hang out as friends,

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts5m
Panish asked about Phillips' email directing Gongaware to remove thin, skeletal footage of MJ in red jacket from This Is It documentary.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts4m
Gongaware testified today he remembered receiving the email. In his deposition played in court, Gongaware said he didn't recall the email.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts4m
Panish: Did you change your testimony? Gongaware: No. I saw the email as part of my prep

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts4m
Gongaware said he didn't try to control any of the messages about MJ after his death to reflect he was fully engaged in rehearsals.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts3m
Panish asked about an email from Gongaware okay'ing the band, singers and dancer to give interviews but asked them to keep it positive.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courtsnow
Email: The only thing we ask is that they keep it positive and stress that MJ was active, engaged & not emaciated person some want to paint

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Panish: You were controlling the message as producer of that documentary, sir? Gongaware: I don't think so

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Gongaware said there were 15,000 tickets per show, $1.5 million in tickets per show, $47 million for all 31 shows.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts43s
Tickets were selling at lightening fast, Gongaware said. "As fast as the system can sell."

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts17s
The tickets were sold in March, Gongaware said. It was held by the arena, AEG had control of the money.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts57s
Gongaware said merchandising was another way of making money. The building, which is owned by AEG, would keep the revenue of beverage sold.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts35s
Gongaware said the beverage money would offset the arena rent, which Michael would not have to pay.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Gongaware: His (MJ) potential was great Panish: Unlimited ceilings? Gongaware: If he was willing to work that hard, he would've done well

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts33s
"The only thing we knew was 50 shows in London. Michael had not agreed to anything else," Gongaware explained.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts24s
Katherine Jackson was in court wearing an electric blue jacket. Rebbie accompanied her, wearing a dark blue with white square strips jacket.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Since the courtroom has been so hot, several fans have been placed around in an effort to cool the room off. It worked, partially.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts49s
After lunch, attorneys spent about 20 minutes discussing the contents of Frank DiLeo's computer. Panish said an attorney in LA has copy.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Judge urged both sides to work with this newly-discovered attorney in order to get copies of DiLeo's emails.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Panish asked Gongaware by the time the show was sold out, how many people were in the queue to buy tickets.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
"250,000 people were still in the queue, which would be enough to sell another 50 shows," Gongaware answered

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Panish: Did you tell the truth when you testified in this case, sir? Gongaware: Yes Panish then concluded his questioning of Gongaware.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts15s
AEG's attorney, Marvin Putnam, did the questioning of Gongaware on behalf of the defendants.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts45s
Putnam: Have you ever been sued personally for the wrongful death of anyone? Gongaware: No

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts55s
Putnam: How are you feeling? Gongaware: It's difficult, it's very stressful P: Are you nervous? G: Yes

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts30s
Putnam asked about Gongaware's memory and he said it's okay.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts44s
Putnam said Gongaware handed over more than 13,000 emails in discovery from the "This Is It" period.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts48s
Putnam inquired about Gongaware's Kazoodi personal email account. On 6/20/09, the chain of emails with "Trouble at the Front" was sent there

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Gongaware said he didn't remember receiving this email.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Gongaware said he had more than one "Kazoodi" email account. He said he was not using the account the email was sent to on 6/20.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts44s
"The account was closed at the time," Gongaware testified, saying he never received the email. But he said he never denied it was sent.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts43s
Gongaware claimed yesterday was the first time he saw the chain of email subject Trouble at the Front.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts19s
Gongaware said he was receiving hundreds of email a day at the height of 2008/09 tour preparation.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Gongaware testified he didn't read all of them because of time factor or it was something it didn't have to do with him.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Gongaware said he doesn't have an office at AEG, and that he works in his own projects. He has an office at his house.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts5m
Gongaware is the Co-CEO of AEG Live Concerts West with John Meglen. He said he was the co-founder of the company. Phillips is AEG Live CEO.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts4m
Gongaware explained be has been testifying about what he could recall. If he didn't remember, he said he told the jury he couldn't recall.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts4m
Gongaware testified he looked at the emails after his deposition because he wanted to put everything together and see the bigger picture.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts4m
Putnam: Did you try to give your best testimony? Gongaware: Yes, I did

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts3m
Regarding the phone call between Gongaware and Dr. Murray where the doctor asked about $5 million, Gongaware said he remembers that call.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts2m
The next call between the two, it was the $150,000 call, where Gongaware offered the doctor $150k.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts3m
Gongaware said those were the only two calls he had with Dr. Murray.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts2m
Gongaware said the 1st time he met Dr. Murray was a meeting at MJ's Carolwood house. He said MJ, Kenny, Randy, Frank, Dr Murray were present

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts2m
Gongaware recalled the other meeting with Dr. Murray was an encounter with him at The Forum. He remembers saying hello to him.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Gongaware said he's sure he didn't meet with Dr. Murray other than on those two occasions.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Break down: Gongaware said he spoke with Dr. Murray on the phone two times and met with him two times.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts50s
Gongaware said he promoted couple of shows/dances in college. He graduated in '69 from Waynesboro College in Pennsylvania in Accounting

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts2m
Gongaware worked for Arthur Andersen in NYC after college as auditor. He said one needed two years of experience in order to get CPA license

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
The company ended up shutting down after being involved in the Enron scandal, Gongaware explained.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Gongaware said there's a continuing education requirement in order to maintain his CPA license, but he hasn't kept current.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
"I didn't like that work," Gongaware said about leaving the practice. "I wanted to do things and not just being an accountant."

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Gongaware said he ski bummed for a winter and would do bookkeeping to pay for his lodge.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts55s
After, he promoted the Grateful Dead at Folsom Field in Boulder, CO. Gongaware said he didn't know the band, cold called them & got the work

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts19s
The concert was sold out, Gongaware said, and he became an independent promoter.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Around 1975, he met Terry Bassett who worked at Concerts West and Gongaware went to work for them in their Seattle's office.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts41s
He worked for them for about 10 years. Gongaware said he went to work for the company because the money was steady.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts53s
At Concerts West, Gongaware worked with Bad Company, Led Zeppelin, Beach Boys, Chicago, Eric Clapton, among others.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts37s
This Concerts West is not the same he is the currently the co-CEO.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts32s
Jerry Weintraub was Elvis' promoter and Concerts West assigned him to work with Colonel Parker, Elvis' manager.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts36s
On Jun 25, 2009 Gabriel Sutter (a tech guy) wrote Gongaware a condolences email.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts28s
"It was such an incredible shock to go through that experience," Gongaware explained.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts15s
Gongaware's response on July 5, 2009: I was working on the Elvis tour when he died so I kind of knew what to expect. Still, quite a shock.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts33s
"You have all these people out of work," Gongaware explained. "At the Elvis some were without jobs permanently."

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts23s
Putnam: When you wrote the email, did you expected MJ to die? Gongaware: No, not all P: Did you ever consider the idea MJ would die? G: No

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts5s
"MJ died of overdose of Propofol," Gongaware testified.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts33s
He didn't die of being sick or malnutrition, Gongaware said. "It was overdose of Propofol."

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts39s
Gongaware said he had no idea of what Propofol was.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts26s
Gongaware was in his 20s when he worked w/ Elvis. He said when they'd announce Elvis concert, there would be lines at the box office 4 days

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts5s
Gongaware said Colonel would buy ads on every radio station and promote the show.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts30s
When tickets went on sale, Gongaware was to report to Colonel every hour regarding the ticket sales.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts47s
Gongaware said Elvis died of a heart ailment. ((On Tuesday, Gongaware testified Presley died of drug overdose))

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts21s
Gongaware said he never met Elvis. At a point, Gongaware said Elvis was not performing. "The Colonel was keeping Elvis from work."

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts15s
Gongaware said he came to find out later, after Elvis' death, that the artist had drug problems.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts12s
Gongaware said he worked on MJ's memorial service. He was in charge of the tickets and worked closely with the family.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts29s
He said he didn't charge for his work. Putnam: Why did you work at the memorial service? Gongaware: It was the right thing to do

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts35s
Gongaware left Seattle and came to LA to work at Concerts West. He then went to Warner Miller Films. The company did primarily ski movies

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts17s
Around 1992, Gongaware went to work on the "Dangerous" tour with MJ. This was his first time working with Michael Jackson.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts19s
He worked with the Jacksons in 2000. But he remembered working on a tour with the Jacksons prior to 92 and said MJ was part of the group.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts19s
"I was the tour manager, handled the logistics and travel for the B party," Gongaware said, adding he worked for MJ but not for A party.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts11s
A party - artist B party - band and administration C party - crew D party - documentary people

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts8m
Gongaware said there were several legs on Dangerous tour. It was a worldwide tour. He never met MJ on that tour, saw him on stage few times

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts8m
The first time Gongaware met MJ was in Las Vegas when he was visiting Colonel Parker.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts8m
Steve Wynn's brother called and said MJ wanted to meet Colonel. Gongaware stayed and met MJ.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts8m
Putnam: Were there any doctors in that tour? Gongaware: Yes, two

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts8m
Gongaware said Dr. Forecast was MJ's personal doctor. He didn't think Dr. Forecast treated anyone else, so they had Dr. Finkelstein also

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts7m
Dr. Finkelstein, a general practitioner, was in the B party. They went to places where they didn't know the quality of local healthcare.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts6m
Gongaware explained Dr. Finkelstein treated B, C and D parties. Gongaware said he did not see any doctor treat MJ.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts6m
Dr. Finkelstein told Gongaware he treated MJ two times. Dr. Forecast wasn't in Bangkok yet, so Dr. Finkelstein treated him when he needed.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts6m
The King of Thailand said MJ would have to do the second show because his friends were attending, Gongaware recalled.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts5m
Gongaware said the King put armed guards outside their doors to make sure they didn't leave.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts6m
Putnam: During the Dangerous tour, have you come to have an understating that MJ had a problem with drugs or painkillers? Gongaware: No

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts5m
The Dangerous tour in 93 was cut short in Mexico City, Gongaware said. He learned it had to do with drug addiction because MJ announced it.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts4m
"My friends and doctors advised me to seek professional guidance immediately in order to eliminate what has become an addition," MJ said.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts4m
Putnam played the audio with MJ's statement.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts4m
After that, judge adjourned the trial until tomorrow morning. Gongaware is to resume his testimony and expected to last all day.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts3m
Judge said there will be only four hours of trial tomorrow, from 9 am to 1 pm PT. We hope to see you all tomorrow.
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 20 - May 30 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

What killed Elvis? It's a question at Michael Jackson's death trial
By Alan Duke, CNN
updated 11:04 PM EDT, Thu May 30, 2013
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
AEG Live Co-CEO promoted last tours of Elvis and Michael Jackson
Jackson lawyers say his experience with Elvis should've prepared him for MJ
AEG's lawyer works to rehab witness after repeated "I don't recall" answers
Paul Gongaware wrote 'smoking gun' e-mail
Los Angeles (CNN) -- Elvis Presley's death became a controversy at the Michael Jackson wrongful death trial as a man who promoted both artists' last tours testified.
AEG Live Co-CEO Paul Gongaware testified Wednesday that Presley died of a drug overdose, but when his own lawyer questioned him Thursday he changed his testimony to say Elvis died of a heart ailment.
Presley collapsed in the bathroom of his Memphis, Tennessee, mansion -- Graceland -- on August 16, 1977, at the age of 42. While his death was ruled the result of an irregular heartbeat, the autopsy report was sealed amid accusations that abuse of prescription drugs caused the problem.
How Presley died is relevant because Jackson lawyers argue Gongaware's experience as Elvis's promoter should have made him more aware of drug abuse by artists, including Michael Jackson.
He was in charge of producing Jackson's "This Is It" concert when Jackson died on June 25, 2009, at the age of 50. The coroner ruled his death was caused by a fatal combination of sedatives and the surgical anesthetic propofol.
Dr. Conrad Murray told investigators he gave Jackson nightly infusions of propofol to treat his insomnia. He was convicted of involuntary manslaughter, sentenced to four years in prison.
Jackson's mother and children are suing AEG Live, contending the concert promoter is liable in his death because it negligently hired, retained or supervised Dr. Murray.
AEG Live lawyers argue their executives had no way of knowing -- or reason to suspect -- that Jackson was abusing drugs as he prepared for the "This Is It" concerts they were promoting and producing.
"I had no idea" Jackson was using propofol in the weeks before his death, Gongaware testified.
Although he worked advance promotion on Elvis Presley's last tours -- under the direction of Presley manager Colonel Tom Parker -- Gongaware testified he never met Presley.
"Did you understand he had a problem with drugs?" AEG lawyer Marvin Putnam asked.
"I understood that later," Gongaware said. "There was a period of time when we didn't work. I didn't understand at the time, but I learned that it was a drug problem and the Colonel said he couldn't work."
Jackson lawyer Brian Panish confronted Gongaware with two e-mails he sent two weeks after Jackson's death in response to condolence messages from friends. They both read: "I was working on the Elvis tour when he died so I kind of knew what to expect. Still quite a shock."
But under questioning from Putnam, Gongaware said he didn't mean that he expected Jackson to die like Elvis. He was referring to the trauma of people losing their jobs because a tour is canceled, he said.
'I don't recall'
AEG's lawyer tried to rehabilitate Gongaware's credibility with jurors, who sometimes laughed at his repetition of "I don't recall" several dozen times under questioning by Panish.
After the jury left the courtroom Wednesday, Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Yvette Palazuelas commented on the number of "I don't recall" responses. "We've had a lot of that," she said. "How much more of that?"
"Why could you not recall e-mails?" Putnam asked him Thursday.
"I had not reviewed them and had not seen them in years," Gongaware answered.
Some of the e-mails were new to him because he was so busy putting Jackson's tour together that he never read them, he said. "Mostly, it was just a time factor if it was something that didn't have to do with me."
Outside of court, Panish suggested it was Putnam's job as Gongaware's lawyer to prepare him by having him review e-mails before questioning.
CNN exclusively obtained video of Gongaware's deposition recorded in December and played this week for jurors.
Gongaware struggled in the deposition when Panish asked him about the e-mail Jackson lawyers call their "smoking gun" -- because it contradicts AEG's argument that they never hired or supervised Dr. Murray.
They say Gongaware's e-mail, sent 11 days before Jackson's death, shows AEG Live executives used Murray's fear of losing his lucrative job as Jackson's personal physician to pressure him to have Jackson ready for rehearsals despite his fragile health.
It was Gongaware's reply to an e-mail from show director Kenny Ortega expressing concerns that Murray had kept Jackson from a rehearsal the day before. Ortega also raised his own concerns about Jackson's health.
"We want to remind (Murray) that it is AEG, not MJ, who is paying his salary. We want to remind him what is expected of him," Gongaware wrote. But in his video deposition he said he could not remember writing it.
After conceding that he wrote it, Gongaware then seemed unable to explain what he meant by the e-mail.
"He needs cheeseburgers"
AEG Live's production manager for Jackson's tour e-mailed Gongaware 10 days before Jackson's death that perhaps what the singer needed to turn around his deteriorating health was to be feed some junk food: "He needs some cheeseburgers with a bunch of Wisconsin cheesehead bowlers... and a couple of brats and beers. Jeez."
John "Bugzee" Houghdahl wrote a more serious assessment of Jackson's condition four days later: "I have watched him deteriorate in front of my eyes over the last 8 weeks. He was able to do multiple 360 spins back in April. He'd fall on his ass if he tried now."
Gongaware testified that he disagreed with Houghdahl's opinion, saying he had no "particular concern" about Jackson's health and ability to perform.
MJ looked 'Skeletal'
AEG Live President Randy Phillips sent Gongaware an e-mail after Jackson's death to make sure he did not use certain rehearsal video in the "This Is It" documentary because it made Jackson look too thin:
"Make sure we take out the shots of MJ in that red leather jacket at the soundstage where the mini-movies were being filmed. He looked way too thin and skeletal."
Gongaware testified that he did not know why Phillips would ask that. "We didn't keep anything out based on what Randy wanted."
Another e-mail suggested Gongaware was concerned that musicians, dancers and singers who worked on the show might tell interviewers after Jackson's death that he was unhealthy at rehearsals.
"The only thing we ask is that they keep it positive and stress that MJ was active, engaged, and not the emaciated person some want to paint him as being," he wrote in an e-mail approving their interviews.
Gongaware is expected to remain on the witness stand through Monday.
 
Jacksons vs AEG - Day 21 - May 31 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

Jacksons vs AEG - Day 21 - May 31 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

Use this thread to post any and all news stories from day 21 of Katherine Jackson vs. AEG trial.

Daily news threads are merged into the main News thread in the stickies

Please help the staff by posting all the news stories as well as tweets from media you see.

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Doctor told AEG that Michael Jackson was a drug addict, lawyer says

The attorney for Michael Jackson’s family in its wrongful-death lawsuit said Thursday a doctor testified in a deposition that he injected Jackson with morphine while the singer was touring Asia and that he told a current AEG executive Jackson was a drug addict.

According to Brian Panish, the attorney for Jackson’s mother and three children, Dr. Stuart Finklestein said that while the Dangerous tour was in Bangkok, Thailand, in 1993 he couldn’t give Jackson an injection of morphine in his buttocks because there was too much scar tissue from previous shots. Instead, according to Panish, Finklestein said he gave the singer an IV drip of the drug for 24 hours.

Paul Gongaware, now co-chief executive of AEG Live/Concerts West was manager of the worldwide tour.

Finklestein "told Gongaware that it was his opinion [Jackson] had an opiate addiction,” Panish said.

Gongaware testified Thursday that he did know then that Jackson had problems with drugs or painkillers until the singer made a public announcement. Jackson cut the tour short in Mexico City when Elizabeth Taylor flew down to accompany him to a rehab facility in London.

“Everyone knew Michael had a problem,” Jackson’s longtime makeup artist and hairstylist, who was on the tour, testified earlier in the trial.

Gongaware testified that Jackson was scheduled to give two shows in Bangkok but that the second was canceled. He said Jackson performed the first concert in 100-degree heat with 100% humidity.

Gongaware said that another doctor was on the Dangerous tour to treat Jackson, and that Finklestein treated the band and crew. He said Finklestein told him he treated Jackson twice.

Gongaware has testified that Finklestein is his regular doctor.

A deposition is given under oath, just like testimony in a courtroom.

Panish, who spoke outside the courtroom, also said that Gongaware warned Finklestein, “Don’t be a Dr. Nick,” a reference to a doctor who supplied Elvis Presley with prescription drugs that led to his death.

“He’s telling him, 'Don’t kill him,’” Panish said.

Finklestein is expected to testify is the case.

In an email to The Times, AEG attorney Marvin S. Putnam blasted the Jacksons' attorneys, saying that "throughout this trial, they have shown that their search is for something else entirely, and certainly not the truth."

He went on to say that shortly before the third leg of the tour, Jackson underwent painful scalp surgery after suffering severe burns while filming a Pepsi commercial.

"Mr. Gongaware was aware that because of that surgery, Michael Jackson received pain medication at times during the tour. Mr. Gongaware never learned Mr. Jackson developed any problems with that medication until after the tour ended, when Mr. Gongaware -- like the rest of the world -- heard Mr. Jackson's public announcement that he was entering rehab."

The Jacksons are suing AEG, Gongaware and AEG Live Chief Executive and President Randy Phillips, saying they negligently hired and supervised Conrad Murray, the physician who gave the singer a fatal dose of the anesthetic propofol.

The defendants say that Jackson hired Murray and that any payments the company was supposed to give him were advances to Jackson.

Murray was convicted of involuntary manslaughter.

LATIMES
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 21 - May 31 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts15h
Here's the text of MJ's announcement in 1993: My friends and doctors advised me to seek professional guidance

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Cont'd: immediately in order to eliminate what has become an addiction. It is time for me to acknowledge my need for treatment

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Cont'd: in order to regain my health. I realize that completing the tour is no longer possible and I must cancel the remaining dates.

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Cont'd: I know I can overcome the problem and will be stronger from the experience.

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Good morning from the courthouse in downtown LA. Apologies for not tweeting entire MJ message yesterday, but we reached twitter limit! ;)

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You now have the complete text of the announcement. Paul Gongaware back on the stand. Details of his testimony coming as soon as we can.

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Marvin Putnam resumes questioning of AEG's Paul Gongaware. Katherine Jackson is wearing an orange jacket and Rebbie is in a black jacket.

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Putnam asked Gongaware if he had any understanding as to why MJ was taking painkiller.

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Gongaware: Before 3rd leg of Dangerous tour started, he had scalp surgery, hit nerve or something it was very painful; was treated for that

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"When he did the Pepsi commercial, his hair was burn at the top," Gongaware explained, saying they did surgery so hair would look natural.

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"I didn't know it was an addiction," Gongaware said, and that he learned MJ had drug problems after Mexico City.

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Gongaware did a Rod Stewart tour in North America after Dangerous tour. He next worked with Michael in the "HIStory" tour in 1996/97.

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Gongaware said he did not have a general concern with MJ having a drug addiction.

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After shows ended in Hawaii, Michael had lost $27 million, was in debt $11 million to lighting and sound, Gongaware testified.

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He switched managers to fixed things up in yhe second half of the tour, Gongaware explained.

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Gongaware said he had to cut lot of expenses. They wanted to give Michael the same show, but he said there was so much excess to be trimmed

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Second half of the tour, Gongaware was the tour executive and he worked directly for MJ. It netted$14 million, $11 million paid vendors.

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We got the tour to break even, Gongaware testified, saying he worked closely with Jackson on the second half of the tour.

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Putnam: Was there an ongoing concern Mr. Jackson was having problems with painkillers during the HIStory tour? Gongaware: No, not at all

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Gongaware said he didn't see anything that would suggest Michael was addicted to painkillers.

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The exec testified MJ didn't have doctor traveling with him on the second half of the tour and there was no tour doctor with the tour.

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Putnam: How was MJ on the HIStory tour? Gongaware: Great! He was sensational!

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Gongaware said MJ only missed one show on HIStory tour when Princess Diana died. "He went to bed, knew about the accident."

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MJ was told Diana was going to be okay and next morning he learned she died, Gongaware described. "That affected him greatly."

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Gongaware said he missed shows in Dangerous tour but not in HIStory tour.

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Putnam asked if there were signs MJ was using painkillers during HIStory tour. "No indication at all. I didn't think he was," Gongaware said

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Gongaware said he would certainly notice if there was any problem during that tour.

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Gongaware said HIStory tour was pretty smooth. It ended in 1997. Right after, Gongaware said Michael called him as asked him to work for him

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"He liked my work, he liked what I did," Gongaware said, adding that MJ wanted him to be his business manager.

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Gongaware said he didn't accept the offer and decided to go out on his own to promote concerts.

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He was tempted, Gongaware said, but he had lined up what he wanted to do. He worked with Yani next.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts37m
Gongaware and his partner, John Meglen, created Concerts West in the late 90s.

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Concerts West started out with concerts of Andrea Bocceli, Mariah Carrey, Eagles and Millennium at Staples Center.

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AEG acquired the assets of Concerts West around 2000, Gongaware said, and Concerts West became AEG Live. Randy Phillips is AEG's CEO.

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Gongaware said he made a deal that requires him to work only half time starting this year.

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Gongaware said AEG Live is the second largest concert promoter company. Live Nation is the first.

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"Our philosophy is different," Gongaware said, adding they choose what they want to do, whereas Live Nation has to meet their quota.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts34m
Putnam: Wounded you like to be number 1? Gongaware: No. It's so much bigger, it gets so much more complex. I'm happy being a good number 2
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 21 - May 31 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Next time Gongaware worked with MJ was in "This Is It" tour. Peter Lopez, MJ's attorney, called Gongaware's partner in 2007, asked to meet

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
From 97 to 2009, MJ did not do any touring, only a couple of shows.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts33s
Gongaware said he went to Vegas to meet with Michael in 2007. The meeting was to discuss how AEG did tours, didn't talk about MJ touring.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts35s
They met again in 2008 also in Vegas. "Paul Gongaware! I knew that if you came, things were going to be ok," Michael said about him.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts52s
Mikey was not meant as insult, Gongaware said. He was not trying to mock him, would use Mikey in person with MJ.

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Putnam: Did he seem thin in 07? Gongaware: Yes, he was always thin

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Putnam: Did he seem to have a problem with painkillers? Gongaware: No P: Did he seem to be under the influence? G: No

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts2m
Gongaware said MJ was alert, engaged, interested on what was going on in the meeting in 2007. He wanted to do a King Tut mini-movie.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts2m
Gongaware said when he went on tour with MJ in HIStory, he wasn't on any drug.

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The next meeting with MJ was in NY. Gongaware didn't remember what they discussed.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Sometime in 08, they began discussion of MJ going back on tour. Dr. Tohme, MJ's manager, approached AEG.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Randy Phillips was primarily the one involved in the discussions with Dr. Tohme and Peter Lopez regarding the comeback tour.

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The meeting in 2008 began with discussion of a possible MJ exhibit at the Hilton in Las Vegas.

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Colony Capital is an investment company that bought the note of Neverland, Gongaware said. By 'note' he meant the 'mortgage'.

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Neverland was MJ's residence in Santa Barbara, Gongaware explained. "They (Colony) were trying to figure out what to do with Neverland."

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Gongaware talked about being at MJ's house at Carolwood when the singer signed the contract with AEG for the "This Is It" tour.

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Michael read everything in the contract, Gongaware said. He remembered MJ being engaged, alert and paying attention. "He was good."

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"I felt great about it," Gongaware said. "It was a MJ tour, it was a great thing."

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts3m
Gongaware said he watched Michael pretty carefully in the meetings, he knew MJ went to rehab, but he didn't see any signs of drug problems.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts3m
Gongaware said he was aware of the physical exam done on Jackson after the signing of the tour.

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Email on 2/11/09 from Bob Taylor to Gongaware: Thanks Paul. I now have the medical and blood reports. Look good.

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Email cont'd: I now need more info of what is available. This will help with the presentation to the insurers.

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Another request from insurance broker: I would like to offer insurers a medical update say every 21 days.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts47s
Response from Gongaware: I'm not ready to put anything in writing. Gongaware said it was because he didn't have the answers.

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Gongaware said he did not have concerns with MJ abusing prescription drugs.

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"It just confirmed what I believed, that he was fine. He wasn't doing any drugs," Gongaware said about the results of Mj's physical exam.

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AEG produced/promoted TII tour. "We needed to front all the money," Gongaware said. "He didn't have the money, so he needed us to do it."

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Tohme, MJ's manager, told AEG about needing the money. Gongaware said Tohme emphasized several times that Michael needed to make money.

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Gongaware said MJ and Ortega figured out the creative elements they wanted and Gongaware had to figure out how to make those them happen

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Gongaware said the initial phase of rehearsal was done at Center Staging in Burbank, but venue didn't have room for production elements.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts35s
They moved rehearsals to The Forum, which didn't have high ceiling to hang the lights. Then they moved to Staples Center.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts41s
After the morning break, Gongaware said MJ chose "This Is It" tour as the name because it was going to be his last.

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Gongaware said they weren't sure how MJ tour would do. "Because of the kid thing, we wanted 2 go 2 the strongest market and that as London"

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Gongaware: You never know what kind of business a tour will do. We had no idea the demand, we wanted to make sure it was successful.

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Initially, they had 31 shows scheduled. Gongaware said Prince had done 21 shows at the O2 arena, and Michael wanted to do 10 more.

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"You didn't know what the ticket sales would be," Gongaware said. So they announced only 10 shows to test the waters.

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"Demand was there obviously in the presale," Gongaware said. He talked to Tohme, asked for more than 50 shows. Tohme said MJ would do 50.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts4m
On March 5, 2009, MJ held a press conference in front of O2 arena and announced the comeback tour. Gongaware was present.

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MJ was not on time, late a couple of hours. Gongaware said it didn't surprise him since MJ didn't like to do those things (press conference)

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Gongaware was a little annoyed but not surprised, he testified,

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"MJ came up to me, gave me big hug, whispered in my ear 'make sure the TelePrompTer has big words, I don't have my glasses'" Gongaware said

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Putnam: Did he seem inebriated? Gongaware: No P: Drunk? G: No P: Smelled like alcohol? G: No

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Gongaware thought the presser was great. "The reaction of the press was really good, I think people liked he was returning."

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Gongaware said they asked people to register on a website and only people registered could get into the presale to purchase tickets.

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He said that based on the response, they knew the tour was going to be a major successful.

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One day after that, Gongaware said MJ called him to discuss the tour. He said Michael chose Kenny Ortega to direct the show.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts45s
MJ liked special effects, Gongaware said. He put together presentation for Michael with latest effects and made MJ promise he would show up.

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Demonstration was on 3/16/09 at Sony Studios. It had 3D on LED that was never done before, pyro and new type of flame.

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Putnam showed clip of TII documentary where they ave the pyro effects that were going to be used.

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"Jackson loved it," Gongaware said, adding MJ didn't seem to be bothered with pyro usage.

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Gongaware said there was a pretty cool water fountain effect shown and not used. "It was messy," he described.

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In the demonstratiin, MJ was great, Gongaware said. "He was really engaged, as he saw all the effects he got really excited."

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Gongaware said he had no concern MJ had drug problems, didn't seem slow or lethargic in March of 2009.

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A meeting was scheduled for March 17, 09. Gongaware emailed MJ's assistant that only MJ and Kenny Ortega should be in that meeting.

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MJ and Ortega were the creative forces and needed to find the show's path before including everyone else, Gongaware explained.

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Regarding Kenny Ortega watching out for MJ's health, Gongaware said no one at AEG asked him to do that.

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Gongaware thought Ortega watched MJ out because they were friends and worked together.

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Judge then adjourned trial until Monday. We ended up having only the morning session. Gongaware expected on the stand Monday and Tuesday.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts41s
Gongaware will join The Rolling Stones tour this weekend, but will return on Monday to resume testifying.
 
This Is It' was to be Michael Jackson's final tour, AEG exec says

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By Jeff Gottlieb
May 31, 2013, 2:03 p.m.
The “This Is It” concert series in London — which was to have earned Michael Jackson millions and served as a triumphant comeback — was to be the performer’s final tour, a ranking concert promoter testified Friday.

Paul Gongaware, co-CEO of AEG Live/Live Nation, which was producing and promoting the concerts, said the English capital was chosen for the shows because of Jackson's enormous popularity there. During a previous tour, Jackson had sold out 10 shows at the 75,000-seat capacity Wembley Stadium, Gongaware testified.

The plan originally was for 10 shows, but it was bumped up to 31 and then 50 because of the enormous ticket demand, the AEG executive testified in a wrongful-death case filed by Jackson’s mother and children.

FULL COVERAGE: AEG wrongful death trial

Gongaware said he would have liked Jackson to have given even more performances at AEG's O2 Arena.

He said that at one point Jackson decided to do 31 because Prince had performed 21 concerts at O2.

Gongaware's recollection of events surrounding Jackson's London news conference announcing his first tour in more than a decade give a different perspective than the worried emails his boss sent at that time.

PHOTOS: Jackson-AEG wrongful death case

Gongaware said he was annoyed but not surprised when Jackson showed up a couple hours late.

“Michael really doesn’t like to do those things," Gongaware testified. "His schedules don’t always run like clockwork."

The tour announcement took place at the O2. When Jackson saw Gongaware backstage, "he came up to me and gave me a big hug and said, 'Make sure the teleprompter has big words. I don’t have my glasses.'”

Gongaware said Jackson did not smell of alcohol or appear drunk.

“He was good," the AEG executive testified. "I think he was excited."

But emails from Randy Phillips, AEG Live's chief executive and president, tell a different version. "MJ is locked in his room drunk and despondent," Phillips wrote. "I [am] trying to sober him up.

"I screamed at him so loud the walls are shaking," Phillips told him. "He is an emotionally paralyzed mess riddled with self-loathing and doubt now that it is showtime."

In a previous interview with The Times, AEG attorney Marvin Putnam said Phillips had exaggerated in his emails and that Jackson's behavior appeared to be a case of "nerves."
 
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP7h
Anyone catch a picture of the plane and banner flying over Downtown LA this morning? Was it a Jackson vs AEG message? #DTLA

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP6h
We're back in session at the Jackson vs AEG Live trial. AEG attorney has resumed questioning of Paul Gongaware.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP6h
Court is on a sidebar now - most of the questioning so far has been about Gongaware's history with Jackson. Will have updates later.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP26m
Apologies for the late tweets today on Jackson vs AEG trial -- had a mix of tech troubles and time I needed to spend on calls, other stories

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP25m
I'm just going to hit a few of the highlights from today's testimony by AEG executive Paul Gongaware.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP25m
Most of Gongaware’s early testimony today was about his role on Jackson’s tours, including the “HIStory” tour.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP25m
On the second leg of that tour, Gongaware said he worked directly with Jackson. He said he saw no signs of prescription drug abuse.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP25m
He said Jackson only missed one show on that _ it was the one scheduled for the day after Princess Diana died.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP25m
Gongaware also said he didn’t recall a doctor being on that tour, despite doctors being present on “Dangerous” tour.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP25m
Gongaware said after the tour, which featured budget overruns on its first leg, Jackson asked him to be his business manager. He declined.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP24m
Instead, Gongaware went on tour with Yanni. “It was tempting, but I wanted to do other things. I wanted to be out on my own,” he said.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP25m
AEG defense attorney Marvin Putnam then asked Gongaware to describe the founding of his company, and its purchase by AEG.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP24m
Gongaware had co-founded a new version of a company called Concerts West. After it was sold, it became AEG Live.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP24m
Putnam then asked Gongaware about plaintiffs’ contention that AEG was desperate for “This Is It” because it wanted to pass rival Live Nation

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP24m
“It’s so much bigger,” AEG Live exec Paul Gongaware said of Live Nation. “It is so much more complicated.”

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP24m
He said that Live Nation has to find artists to fill the many venues it owns, and that AEG Live doesn’t have that issue.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP24m
Gongaware was then asked about a series of meetings he had with Jackson beginning in '07. Touring wasn’t discussed at first couple meetings.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP23m
Gongaware said Jackson remembered him and told him re: “HIStory” tour, “Whenever I saw you, I knew things were going to be OK.”

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP23m
Putnam asked about Gongaware’s use of the term “Mikey” to describe Jackson. Gongaware said he used it with Jackson.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP23m
He described Jackson as getting in playful moods, and that’s when he would call Jackson “Mikey.” Said he wasn’t mocking him.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP23m
Gongaware was at the January 2009 meeting when Jackson signed the “This Is It” contract. He said Jackson read it all before signing.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP23m
Regarding initial tour negotiations, Gongaware said those were handled by AEG Live CEO Randy Phillips and Jackson’s manager, Tohme Tohme.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP23m
There was also discussion this morning about the tour cancellation insurance AEG got for Jackson’s shows, and Gongaware’s involvement.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP23m
A February 2009 email between him and the insurance broker showed that insurers wanted med checkups on Jackson every 21 days.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP23m
The broker also wanted details on the concert set, dates, and other details that Gongaware said weren't decided on yet.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP23m
“The back to back shows WILL be a problem,” the broker wrote Gongaware. Suggested adding them in after Jackson started performing shows.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP23m
These questions/statements from the insurance broker came after Jackson passed his initial physical exam. Insurers wanted 2nd exam in London

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP23m
One area Gongaware testified about that will get revisited next week is his description of Jackson at the “This Is It” press conference.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP22m
Gongaware said Michael Jackson was two hours late. He said when he arrived, he didn’t seem drunk or impaired.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP22m
Gongaware’s characterization contradicts an email from Randy Phillips about Jackson’s state earlier that day. The CEO wrote MJ was drunk.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP22m
Gongaware said Jackson hugged him and asked him to put words on teleprompter in large type. He says MJ told him he didn’t have his glasses.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP22m
Randy Phillips is expected to testify next week, so jury will hear more on differing descriptions of Jackson’s state before press conference

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP22m
The remainder of Gongaware’s testimony Friday focused on a few other meetings held before “This Is It.”

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP22m
Gongaware will return to the witness stand on Monday, and it sounds like his testimony will go through Tuesday at least.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP22m
Once again, apologies for the delayed tweets today. Will be back at the trial next week. Hope everyone has a good weekend.
 
Jacksons vs AEG - Day 22 - June 3 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

Jacksons vs AEG - Day 22 - June 3 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

Use this thread to post any and all news stories from day 22 of Katherine Jackson vs. AEG trial.

Daily news threads are merged into the main News thread in the stickies

Please help the staff by posting all the news stories as well as tweets from media you see.

Please Don't post updates or tweets from Fans in news thread
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 22 - June 3 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

AEG exec: I didn't know Michael Jackson abused drugs
By Alan Duke, CNN
updated 6:32 AM EDT, Mon June 3, 2013

Pop star Michael Jackson addresses a press conference in London on March 5, 2009.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
AEG LIve Co-CEO Paul Gongaware faces more grilling in Michael Jackson death trial
Gongaware worked closely with Jackson on "HIStory" tour
He was the top producer of Jackson's comeback tour
Jackson lawyers say Gongaware was aware of Jackson drug use
Los Angeles (CNN) -- Michael Jackson traveled with what amounted to a mini-clinic and an anesthesiologist who used a surgical anesthetic to put the singer to sleep after shows during his "HIStory" tour, sources close to Jackson told CNN just days after his death.
But Paul Gongaware testified Friday that he never saw indications Jackson used drugs or traveled with a doctor when he managed that tour in 1996 and 1997.
What Gongaware knew -- or didn't know -- about Jackson's drug use is a key issue as the Jackson wrongful death trial enters its sixth week Monday in Los Angeles.
The co-CEO of AEG Live -- the concert promotion company being sued by Jackson's mother and children -- returns for a fifth day of testimony Monday.
Searching for the smoking gun AEG exec confronted at Jackson trial Jackson family wants AEG to pay Van Halen on Michael Jackson: Sweet guy
The Jackson family contends AEG Live is liable in Jackson's 2009 death because it negligently hired, retained or supervised Dr. Conrad Murray, who was convicted of involuntary manslaughter.
Gongaware was the top producer of Jackson's comeback concerts when the singer died of an overdose of the surgical anesthetic propofol. It was Gongaware who negotiated the deal to pay Dr. Murray $150,000 a month to be Jackson's physician for the "This Is It" tour.
Jackson lawyers argue that Gongaware should have known the hazards of hiring the doctor because of his personal experience with Jackson -- and his work with other artists, including on Elvis Presley's last tour.
AEG Live lawyers contend their executives had no way of knowing that Murray was using propofol to treat Jackson's insomnia because the singer was very good at keeping his "deepest, darkest secret."
"AEG knew nothing about this decade-long propofol use," AEG Live lawyer Marvin Putnam said in his opening statements. "They were a concert promoter. How could they know?"
Gongaware, under questioning by his own lawyer Friday, testified that he only became aware that Jackson was addicted to painkillers when the singer made a public announcement after his "Dangerous" tour abruptly ended so he could enter rehab in 1993.
He was a manager for the "Dangerous" tour, but only handled logistics and didn't travel with Jackson then, he said.
His job on the second half of the "HIStory" tour, however, carried more responsibilities and he worked closely with Jackson, he said.
Gongaware testified that he saw "no indication at all" that Jackson was using drugs during that tour. "I would be certain to notice it if that was the case."
Did Jackson have a doctor treating him during the "HIStory" tour, his lawyer asked.
"Not that I know of," he answered.
In fact, Jackson was "sensational" on stage, performing 10 to 12 shows a month, he said. Unlike in the "Dangerous" tour, he never canceled a show because of his health.
"He only missed one," he said. "That was when Princess Diana died. He heard about the accident, went to bed, woke up, found she passed away and it affected him deeply."
But an interview that Jackson gave to Barbara Walters weeks after Diana's death could help Jackson lawyers refute Gongaware's claim that no doctor traveled with the singer during the tour.
Walters asked Jackson about how he learned the news that his friend, the princess, had died.
"I woke up and my doctor gave me the news, and I fell back down in grief and I started to cry," Jackson said. "That's why the inner pain, the pain in my stomach and in my chest, so I said 'I cannot handle this. It's too much.'"
Jackson's statement that a doctor was at his bedside when he woke up the day of a scheduled "HIStory" show in Belgium is not the only evidence he did have a physician on the tour.
Dr. Neil Ratner, an anesthesiologist from New York, has acknowledged that he traveled with Jackson during part of the tour. He was at Munich, Germany, in July 1997 when a stage collapsed and Jackson suffered a back injury. It was two months before Diana's death.
Dr. Ratner declined to talk about his treatment of Jackson when CNN's Dr. Sanjay Gupta confronted him outside his Woodstock, New York, home in July 2009, although he did confirm that Jackson had trouble sleeping.
"It's really something I don't want to talk about right now," he told Dr. Gupta.
A source who was close to Michael Jackson told Gupta in 2009 that when Jackson had trouble sleeping that Dr. Ratner helped "take him down" and "bring him back up."
Ratner, who was convicted of insurance fraud and stripped of his license to practice medicine for three years in 2002, is on the witness list for the trial and has been questioned in a deposition by each side.
Debbie Rowe -- Jackson's former wife and the mother of his two oldest children -- will testify that she assisted in administering propofol to Jackson in the 1990s when she was a nurse, AEG Live's Putnam said on the opening day of the trial.
"She saw several doctors put Mr. Jackson to sleep in hotel rooms while on tour," Putnam said, including in Munich, London, Paris.
But Gongaware and others did not know, he said.
"The truth is Mr. Jackson fooled everyone," Putnam said about Jackson's propofol use. "He kept those who might have helped him at a distance and no one knew his deepest, darkest secret."
Jackson's ability to keep his private side private meant AEG executives could not see any red flags warning of Jackson's destruction, Putnam said.
"They didn't see this coming," he said. "They had no idea."
Putnam said Jackson family members -- including Janet and her famous siblings -- will testify about their failed attempts at intervention and their lack of knowledge about what was happening.
"If they didn't know what was going on, how could someone else think there was even a problem," he said.
But Jackson lawyers will argue that Gongaware, who closely watched expenses on the "HIStory" tour because it was losing money at one point, would have noticed spending on hotel rooms and fees for a doctor traveling with the tour.
 
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP7m
We’re no a break in Katherine Jackson vs AEG Live trial. Executive Paul Gongaware resumed testifying this morning.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP7m
Gongaware is being questioned by defense attorney Marvin Putnam. He told him his testimony “shouldn’t be too much longer.” 2 days, he said.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP7m
First questions of the day centered on “This Is It” scheduling. Jury was shown calendar of all 50 show dates.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP7m
In July 2009 there were 8 shows scheduled, 10 in August and 9 in September. Then they’d take rest of ’09 off.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP6m
In Jan. and February of 2010, there were 10 shows planned per month. Three were planned in March 2010. No back-to-back shows.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP7m
Gongaware said this wasn’t a rigorous schedule since there would be no traveling. On “HIStory” tour, he said they did 10-12 shows per month

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP6m
The jury was shown an email in which Gongaware worked with a staffer to create a calendar to show Jackson. He wanted colors changed.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP6m
He wanted the calendar to be changed so that it reflected Jackson's show dates and off days differently.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP6m
Gongaware email: “Figure it out so it looks like he’s not working so much.” He told jury Jackson was comfortable with the show schedule.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP5m
Gongaware said there wasn’t a requirement for Jackson to rehearse. Said he’s never seen a requirement for musicial artist to rehearse.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP6m
Gongaware testified he had no doubts about Jackson’s fitness to perform the “This Is It” shows. He cited previous successes by Jackson.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP6m
For instance, Gongaware cited an outdoor concert in Bangkok in in high heat, humidity. “He nailed it,” he said of Jackson.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP5m
Gongaware: “When it was kind of game time, he was going to show up,” he said of Jackson's London shows.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP5m
Several clips from “This Is It” film were shown this morning. Included a clip showing proposed show opening. This was to feature ... (cont)

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP4m
... Jackson emerging from a figure wrapped in LED screens projecting various images. Gongaware said he called figure "Moon Man."

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP5m
Jury also shown footage of Jackson trying out a cherry picker that would hoist him over the “This Is It” crowd.

Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP3m
There was a lot of questioning this morning about Gongaware's first call with Murray, discussion of $5 million fee.
 
Jackson doc's interactions with AEG Live detailed
By ANTHONY McCARTNEY | Associated Press – 8 mins ago
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Associated Press/Al Seib, Pool, File - FILE - In this Sept. 28, 2011 file photo, concert promoter and producer on Michael Jackson's ill-fated "This Is It" tour, Paul Gongaware, testifies on the second day of …more
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LOS ANGELES (AP) — An AEG Live LLC executive who negotiated with Michael Jackson's doctor told a jury Monday that he never considered conducting a background check on the singer's physician.
Promoter and producer Paul Gongaware testified that he didn't think it was necessary to conduct background checks on anyone working closely with Jackson. He said in Conrad Murray's case, he wasn't concerned about his background because he'd been recommended by the entertainer.
The former physician had several liens, child support judgments and was facing foreclosure before agreeing to work with Jackson.
"I just expect doctors to be ethical," Gongaware said. "Their financial side of their life shouldn't affect their medical judgment."
Gongaware is testifying in a negligent hiring lawsuit filed by Jackson's mother against AEG Live, contending that the company failed to properly investigate Murray before allowing him to work with her son on preparations for the "This Is It" shows.
AEG denies it hired Murray, or could have known that Murray was giving Jackson doses of the anesthetic propofol as a sleep aid. Jackson died from a propofol overdose in June 2009, and Murray was convicted of involuntary manslaughter.
Defense attorney Marvin S. Putnam has said hiring Murray was Jackson's personal choice.
Jackson died before signing Murray's $150,000 per month contract to work on the tour. Murray was never paid by AEG for his work with the singer.
Katherine Jackson's attorney Brian Panish, who has said Murray was facing nearly $1 million in debts, said in opening statements that the doctor's financial problems created a conflict of interest in his treatments of Jackson.
Gongaware reiterated earlier testimony that he wasn't concerned about Jackson's health.
The executive worked on an earlier Jackson tour, "Dangerous," that had to be halted due to the singer's prescription drug abuse. He said he saw no signs in 2009 that Jackson was abusing prescription medications.
Gongaware said he recommended that Jackson hire a London-based doctor for the concerts, but the singer didn't seem to give it serious consideration.
"It wasn't my place to say who his doctor was going to be," Gongaware said. "It was his decision."
He also said he never considered performing background checks on Jackson's makeup artist, a choreographer who worked one-on-one with the singer or Kenny Ortega, the tour's director.
"I didn't see the need for it," he said.
Gongaware was shown emails he was sent less than a month before Jackson's death in which tabloid newspapers were speculating the singer was suffering from cancer.
Gongaware urged his company not to respond. "Our redemption will be when he does his shows," he wrote about Jackson. "We don't have to sell tickets, so we can just sit back and prove them wrong by just doing it."
The trial is entering its sixth week. AEG Live CEO Randy Phillips is expected to testify later this week.
 
Michael Jackson wanted Conrad Murray as tour doctor, AEG exec says

The AEG executive in charge of Michael Jackson's London concerts testified Monday that he had never heard of Conrad Murray — the doctor who gave the singer a fatal dose of the anesthetic propofol — until Jackson told him he wanted the physician to accompany him on his comeback tour in England.

“He came up to me and said he wanted to take Dr. Murray to London as his personal physician,” Paul Gongaware testified in the Jackson family's wrongful-death suit against Anschutz Entertainment Group, the tour promoter and producer.

When Gongaware suggested during the late April 2009 conversation it would be easier and cheaper to use an English doctor, Jackson vetoed the idea.

Gongaware said Jackson told him, "'This is the machine. We have to take care of the machine.' I think what he meant was his brain could create it but his body had to deliver the show every night.”

Shortly after, Gongaware testified, he called Murray to tell him Jackson wanted to take him to London.

Murray, he said, didn't ask any questions, and they immediately started talking about the price.

“I asked him what he wanted." Gongaware testified. "He said he’d need $5 million."

Murray told Gongaware that he'd have to shut down his clinics in Houston, Las Vegas and San Diego and lay people off.

Asked by AEG attorney Marvin Putnam if Murray's price was reasonable, Gongaware replied, “It was ridiculous… Michael couldn’t afford it, so I had to tell him it wasn’t going to work.”

Murray eventually agreed to work for $150,000 a month.

Jackson's mother and three children are suing AEG, Gongaware and AEG executive Randy Phillips, saying they negligently hired and supervised Murray. AEG says Jackson hired the doctor and that any money the company was supposed to pay him was an advance to the singer.

Murray was convicted of involuntary manslaughter and is now serving a jail sentence.
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 22 - June 3 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts5m
Hello from the courthouse in downtown LA. Day 22 of Jackson family vs AEG trial under way. AEG's exec Paul Gongaware on the stand again.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts5m
AEG's attorney Marvin Putnam is doing the questioning. He's expected to last until tomorrow, at least.

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There were no members of the Jackson family in the courtroom this morning.

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Putnam asked Gongaware if MJ was comfortable with all the show dates. "Yes, I went through all of the dates with him," Gongaware said.

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Bugzee, the tour manager, had big calendar on the walls, Gongaware explained, saying they changed the dates of the shows four times.

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As to the email about changing coloring on calendar so it didn't look MJ was working too hard Putnam asked if he was trying to fool MJ

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"No, I was trying to make it clear, trying to get it just the way I wanted it," Gongaware responded.

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After changing 4 show dates Gongaware said MJ was comfortable with it. He would do 8 shows in July, 10 in August, 9 in September.

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There would be no shows in October, November and December, resuming with 10 shows in January, 10 in February and three in March.

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Gongaware said the O2 Arena had previous commitment in Oct-Dec of 2009 and they could not have the MJ's concerts.

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Putnam: Was this a rigorous schedule? Gongaware: No, not at all

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Gongaware rcalled that on the HIStory tour they did 10-12 shows per month, from country to country, but this one would stay in London only.

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Gongaware said he wasn't concerned with MJ's age. "He seemed great to me," he said, and this was stationary show, didn't have to travel.

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Gongaware: The reason MJ wanted to delay the 1st show was he wanted more time to rehearse in the O2 Arena where the show would take place

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Gongaware said MJ and Kenny Ortega would decide the rehearsal schedule.

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Gongaware explained MJ didn't have to attend rehearsals, since it was not part of his deal. He said they never require an artist to rehearse

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"I didn't have any expectation," Gongaware said regarding MJ rehearsing. He said that during the HIStory tour, MJ didn't rehearse, nailed it

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"When it was game time, he would show up," Gongaware explained.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts56s
As to the email Gongaware wrote about calling MJ lazy, he said he used unfortunate choices of words, Michael didn't like to rehearse.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts37s
Putnam: Why weren't you concerned? Gongaware: When the house lights would go up, he would show up

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Talking about the elements of the show, Gongaware described what they wanted to do for the opening of the show.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts38s
He said Michael would be dressed up in a LED suit, like a television, flashing on him brief movie about things that happened in history.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts58s
Michael would be lower down onto the stage, Gongaware described. He called the LED suit a "Moon man" suit, but Ortega called it "Light man."

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts34s
Putnam showed a presentation of how the LED suit idea would work. Footage is not on TII documentary because it was early stages of prep.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
We're hoping to get a copy of the video to show it this on today's @ABC7 Eyewitness News and KABC-TV Los Angeles News, Weather & Traffic | Southern California News | abc7.com

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Gongaware said 1st idea was to make MJ float from the audience, but they couldn't make it work. So they decided to lower him down on stage

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Gongaware said the big screen on the back of the stage was 3D capable. The audience would be given glasses when they entered the show.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
The 3D songs would be Thriller, Earth Song and Smooth Criminal. Email from Ortega to Gongaware saying MJ had big dreams for the shows.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
"He wanted to do biggest, best show ever, live show," Gongaware said.

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Putnam showed email chain from Ortega to Gongaware asking to make a deal with choreographer Travis Payne.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts57s
Answer from Gongaware: This is not AEG money, it's MJ's money so it takes a lot of time to get approvals.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts19s
Defendants were trying to establish a pattern that all the money spent was actually MJ's money, not AEG's, just like with Dr. Murray.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
At one point Gongaware said he learned from MJ about doctor named Murray. "He came to me and said he wanted his personal doctor on the tour"

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts42s
Gongaware said he suggested to Michael to get a licensed doctor in London who would know the lay of the land, in case of need.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts52s
"This is the machine, we have to take care of the machine. I want Conrad," Gongaware said Michael responded.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts2m
Putnam: Were you surprised he wanted to take his doctor on tour? Gongaware: No P: Why not? G: He had doctors before

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts2m
Gongaware said other artists take doctors as well, so he was not the only one and it didn't surprise him.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Gongaware said he's been on tour before where an artist had chiropractors, but couldn't remember being in one with a doctor.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Putnam: Did you worry MJ might have a health issue? Gongaware: No P: Why not? G: He seemed fine to me, had a physical and passed

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts42s
Gongaware said the suggestion for London doctor was due to the cost; paying doctor full time was much more expensive then hiring local doc.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts36s
As to MJ asking to take care of the machine, Gongaware said he understood it to be that every night MJ would have to do be ready to perform

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts2m
Gongaware said Dr. Murray treated MJ for about three years before 2009. He knew the doctor was from Las Vegas but said he was in LA.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Gongaware said he then called Dr. Murray to work out a deal.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Gongaware testified he didn't have MJ's direct phone number, would go through Michael Amir Williams, MJ's personal assistant, to reach him.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts2m
Gongaware called Murray on behalf of MJ saying singer wanted to take him to London. "What do you want to be paid for that," Gongaware asked

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts2m
Gongaware said he thought Dr. Murray was expecting his call and was aware of MJ's desire to take him on tour.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
"He said he would need $5 million," Gongaware recalled. "He said he has 4 clinics to close, would lay off people, need $5 million for that."

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
"It was ridiculous," Gongaware said about the amount asked. "It was a lot of money for something like that and Michael could not afford it."

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Gongaware said he responded that it wasn't going to work. He said this was the first time he spoke with Dr. Murray.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts52s
After that, Gongaware said he told Michael Amir and Randy Phillips what the doctor had asked. He also told Frank DiLeo.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts1m
Putnam: Would you be doing this if Michael had not asked you? Gongaware: No

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Putnam: Did you contemplate bringing a doctor on tour? Gongaware: I didn't think he needed one, we didn't have one in History, he was fine

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Gongaware said he called Michael Amir Williams to report back to MJ what the doctor had asked to go on tour.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts4m
"We couldn't afford it," Gongaware said. He spoke with Phillips and called Frank DiLeo, MJ's manager at the time.
 
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