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Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 69 - August 14 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

Doctors competed to give Michael Jackson painkillers, ex-wife Rowe says
By Alan Duke, CNN
updated 2:48 PM EDT, Wed August 14, 2013
Paris Jackson made headlines recently when she was rushed to the hospital after she [url='http://www.cnn.com/2013/06/05/showbiz/paris-jackson-hospitalized/index.html' t=_self]reportedly cut one of her wrists. [/url]Jackson is the second child of famed singer Michael Jackson and Deborah Jeanne Rowe. Click through to see more of the Jackson family tree. Paris Jackson made headlines recently when she was rushed to the hospital after she reportedly cut one of her wrists. Jackson is the second child of famed singer Michael Jackson and Deborah Jeanne Rowe. Click through to see more of the Jackson family tree.
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All in the Jackson family

>>
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
NEW: "Doctors took advantage" of Michael Jackson' because of his pain, Debbie Rowe testifies
Rowe is the mother of Jackson's two oldest children
AEG Live contends Jackson secretly used propofol for years to treat his insomnia
Jackson's mother and children accuse the concert promoter of liability for hiring the doctor

Los Angeles (CNN) -- Doctors "would try to outbid" each other on who could give Michael Jackson "the better drug" for his pain, his former wife testified Wednesday.
Debbie Rowe, who is the mother of Jackson's two oldest children, is being forced to testify about the singer's drug use by lawyers for AEG Live, the concert promoter being sued by members of Jackson's family, who say the promoter is responsible for his death.
Jackson family matriarch Katherine Jackson sat Wednesday morning in the front row of the small courtroom, where she has spent much of the past 16 weeks watching the trial.
"Michael had a very low pain tolerance and his fear of pain was incredible," Rowe testified. "And I think that doctors took advantage of him that way."
Rowe has rarely given interviews since her divorce from the pop icon, although she did testify in her former husband's defense during his child molestation trial in 2005. Jackson was acquitted on all charges in that case.
AEG Live contends that Jackson used the surgical anesthetic propofol for years to treat his insomnia, including when Rowe was traveling with him in Europe in the 1990s.
The coroner ruled Jackson died on June 25, 2009, from a propofol overdose administered by Dr. Conrad Murray, who is serving a prison sentence for involuntary manslaughter.
Debbie Rowe, Michael Jackson\'s ex-wife and mother of two of his children, is seen here in 2005.
Debbie Rowe, Michael Jackson's ex-wife and mother of two of his children, is seen here in 2005.
"Ms. Rowe will tell you that she saw Mr. Jackson using propofol on tours," AEG Live lawyer Marvin Putnam told jurors in his opening statement 16 weeks ago. "She saw several doctors put Mr. Jackson to sleep in hotel rooms while on tour."
Rowe, who met Jackson when she worked as a nurse in the Beverly Hills office of Dr. Arnold Klein, witnessed doctors put Jackson to sleep in Munich, London and Paris hotels, according to Putnam.
"She would always insist on being there" to make sure it was an anesthesiologist who did the "incredibly dangerous" procedure, he told jurors.
AEG Live executives, who were promoting and producing Jackson's comeback concerts, had no way of knowing that Murray was infusing him with propofol each night for two months in the spring of 2009, Putnam said.
"Almost no one knew until after his death," he said. "AEG Live certainly didn't know about it."
The Jackson family's lawyers contend that the promoters ignored warning signs that Jackson's health was deteriorating during the two months before his death. Instead of getting him to another doctor who might have saved his life, they gave Murray the responsibility to get Jackson to rehearsals, they argue.
Michael Jackson's mother and three children contend AEG Live is liable in his death because it negligently hired, retained or supervised Murray. The company's agreement to pay Murray $150,000 a month put the doctor in a conflict of interest because he was in deep debt and could not risk losing the job by refusing Jackson's demands for propofol, their lawyers contend.
AEG Live argues that while its executives negotiated with Murray to serve as Jackson's physician for the "This Is It" tour, it was Jackson who chose and controlled the doctor.
Wednesday is the 69th day of testimony in the trial, which the judge told jurors would likely be given to them for deliberations in late September.
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 69 - August 14 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

Michael Jackson trial: Debbie Rowe cries during testimony
Wednesday, August 14, 2013
Michael Jacksons ex-wife Debbie Rowe walks up to a Los Angeles courtroom to testify in the pop icons wrongful death trial on Wednesday, Aug. 14, 2013.
Michael Jackson's ex-wife Debbie Rowe walks up to a Los Angeles courtroom to testify in the pop icon's wrongful death trial on Wednesday, Aug. 14, 2013. (KABC Photo)
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LOS ANGELES (KABC) -- Michael Jackson's ex-wife Debbie Rowe took the stand Wednesday in the pop icon's wrongful death trial, crying as she described Jackson's fear of pain.

Prosecutors are questioning Rowe about Jackson's drug use when they were a couple. AEG attorneys want to show that Jackson had drug problems as far back as the early 1990s.

On Tuesday, the plastic surgeon who performed surgery on the star in 1993 testified via video that he was concerned by Jackson's continued demand for Percocet. The surgery was to remove a scar caused by an accident in 1984 when Jackson's hair caught fire during a Pepsi commercial.

Even though the surgery happened three years before Jackson wed Rowe, she was present during the surgery. Later that year, Jackson announced he was cutting his Dangerous World Tour short to enter rehab.

"My friends and doctors advised me to seek professional guidance immediately in order to eliminate what has become an addiction. It is time for me to acknowledge my need for treatment in order to regain my health," Jackson said in a recorded statement at the time.

Related Content
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AEG is trying to show that Jackson's use of medications and prescription drugs was habitual, and that his death, in part, was caused by his own behavior.

The lawsuit claims that AEG was negligent in Jackson's death. Katherine Jackson claims that AEG executives pressured her son to perform and, at the star's request, hired Dr. Conrad Murray.
 
JACKSON'S EX-WIFE TESTIFIES ABOUT HIS FEAR OF PAIN
By ANTHONY McCARTNEY
— Aug. 14 3:19 PM EDT
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LOS ANGELES (AP) — Michael Jackson's ex-wife broke into tears on Wednesday when she took the witness stand in a civil case and described the singer's fear of pain and trust of physicians.

Rowe said the pop star trusted doctors to prescribe pain medication to him, but they sometimes tried to outdo each other while losing sight of Jackson's care.

"Michael had a very low pain tolerance and his fear of pain was incredible," Rowe said. "I think the doctors took advantage of him that way."

She said she was with Jackson when he received treatments from his longtime dermatologist Dr. Arnold Klein and from another physician, Dr. Steven Hoefflin. The two doctors would try to out-do each other in the pain medications they gave the singer, she said.

"These idiots were going back and forth the whole time, not caring about him," Rowe told jurors.

Rowe is the mother of the singer's two oldest children, Prince and Paris Jackson. She and the pop star were married from 1996 to 1999. Rowe also worked with Klein.

Rowe said she told another one of Jackson's doctors, Allan Metzger, that she was concerned that Klein and Hoefflin were giving the singer too many medications.

"The only physician who ever did anything, the only physician who cared for Michael was Allan Metzger," Rowe said, fighting back tears.

She said Jackson respected doctors immensely because they went to school and vowed to do no harm to patients.

Katherine Jackson claims in her lawsuit that AEG Live failed to properly investigate the doctor convicted of giving her son an overdose of anesthetic in 2009. AEG denies any wrongdoing.
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 69 - August 14 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

DEBBIE ROWE
BREAKS DOWN
Docs Competed to Drug MJ
BREAKING NEWS0814_debbie_rowe_sad_getty
Michael Jackson's ex-wife Debbie Rowe just broke down in tears while testifying in the MJ wrongful death trial, claiming the singer's doctors constantly tried to outdo each other by giving Jackson the "better" drugs ... a competition that fueled his deadly drug addiction.

On the stand, Rowe pointed the finger at two doctors specifically -- Dr. Arnie Klein and Dr. Steven Hoefflin -- claiming MJ trusted them to prescribe his pain medication, and they consistently tried to one-up the other by giving MJ increasingly stronger doses of painkillers.

Rowe said Dr. Conrad Murray then "got in there and killed him."

Rowe said MJ had a notoriously low tolerance for pain, which paved the way for the abuse of painkillers like Demerol and Diprivan.

Rowe called Klein and Hoefflin idiots for going back and forth at the same time, trying to outdo each other and not looking out for MJ's best interest.


Read more: http://www.tmz.com/2013/08/14/debbi...n-arnold-klein-testimony-drugs/#ixzz2byan7nSh
Visit Fishwrapper: http://www.fishwrapper.com
 
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 2m
Rowe said she ended up going back to school and got a BS in psychology. She then started a horse breeding program in Palmdale.
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 2m
Rowe stopped working for Klein in 1996 or ’97 _ she couldn’t remember when. She said Jackson pushed her to return to college.
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 3m
Putnam asked Rowe a question about Klein’s prominence. “He is a legend in his own mind,” Rowe replied.
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 3m
Rowe repeatedly told Putnam and the jury that she was bad with dates and wouldn't be able to recall them exactly.
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 3m
Rowe was then asked about her personal history. She studied to be an Emergency Medical Technician, then went to work with Klein in late 70s.
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 4m
Putnam rattled off the names of Sandra Ribera, Perry Sanders, Kevin Boyle, KC Maxwell, Michael Koskoff and others. She didn’t know them.
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 4m
Rowe was also asked whether she had met most of the attorneys in the room. She said no. He also asked about other plaintiffs’ attorneys.
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 4m
Putnam also tried to establish her as an independent witness, getting her to states she came to court because of a subpoena, not voluntarily
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 5m
She hadn’t read her deposition or did any of the other steps many other witnesses had taken to prepare for her testimony.
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 5m
When Putnam asked if she did anything to prepare for her testimony, Rowe quipped, “Took a shower.”
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 5m
She explained that she lives 60 miles away and it was a tough commute. “I sat at a light for 20 minutes. How do you people do it?”
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 5m
Rowe started out fairly at ease on the witness stand, asking AEG Live’s defense attorney Marvin Putnam to get her testimony done today.
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 6m
Going to have to dash back into court shortly, but here's a few updates from morning session in Jackson vs AEG Live.
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 1h
Rowe was on the stand for a little over 55 minutes this morning. She'll resume testifying at 1:30 p.m. PDT.
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 1h
Debbie Rowe has been quite emotional so far, wiping away tears for at least half of her testimony so far.
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 1h
Michael Jackson's ex-wife Debbie Rowe testifies about singer's trust of doctors, fear of pain: http://bit.ly/125pNJ5
View summary
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 1h
We're on the lunch break in Jackson vs AEG Live case.
Debbie Rowe is on the stand. I'll have a story out shortly.
 
Debbie Rowe: Michael Jackson's doctors competed to give pain meds
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By Jeff Gottlieb
August 14, 2013, 1:51 p.m.
Often in tears, Michael Jackson's ex-wife Debbie Rowe testified Wednesday that doctors seemed in competition to see who could give him the most powerful painkillers.

“Michael had a very low pain tolerance, and his fear of pain was incredible, and I think the doctors took advantage of him that way,” said Rowe, the mother of the singer's two oldest children.

Rowe spoke in a folksy, informal manner on the stand, coming across as someone who truly cared about the singer.

Rowe said that dermatologist Arnold Klein took over Jackson's pain management but that plastic surgeon Steven Hoefflin would call the singer and say, "I have a better drug."

At one point, she said, she found a bottle of the powerful drug dilaudid on Jackson's counter that Hoefflin had prescribed. She said she told Jackson not to take it.

“These idiots were going back and forth the whole time not caring about him," she testified.

Rowe, who worked for Klein, said she was concerned that Jackson was not getting better.

“Klein was not doing what was best for Michael," she said. "The only physician who who ever cared for Michael was Allan Metzger,” his internist, who was treating Jackson for lupus.

She said Jackson began receiving pain medication after his scalp was burned during the filming of a Pepsi commercial.

Rowe said she was with Jackson about 10 times when Hoefflin gave him the anesthetic propofol when he was undergoing various procedures, such as collagen and botox injections. She said Klein also gave him propofol. She said Klein had five or six other patients whom he knocked out when they were undergoing cosmetic procedures.

She said there were times when extensive scarring in Jackson's nose made it difficult for him to breathe and that he needed a painful injection of steroids in his nose to bring down the swelling.

On at least two occasions, Hoefflin put Jackson out with propofol and didn't do anything other than put tape in his nose, Rowe testified.

However, she said she was not aware of Jackson ever going to Hoefflin's office because he was feeling stress or needed sleep.

Rowe said she met Jackson while working for Klein as an assistant who took patient histories and helped schedule appointments with the dermatologist and other doctors. She said she met Jackson when Klein called her in on a weekend in the early 1980s.

"I opened the door to the room and Michael was there. I introduced myself and I said, 'Nobody does what you do better. Nobody. You are amazing, but nobody does what I do better. I am amazing and if we could do these amazing things on regular time, I would appreciate it.'”

Rowe was called as a witness by concert promoter and producer AEG Live. Jackson's mother and three children are suing AEG for wrongful death. They say the firm negligently hired and supervised Conrad Murray, who gave Jackson a fatal overdose of propofol in June 2009. AEG says that Jackson hired the doctor and that any money the firm was supposed to pay Murray was an advance to the singer.
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 69 - August 14 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

AP updated

Michael Jackson's Ex-Wife Testifies About His Fear of Pain
LOS ANGELES August 14, 2013 (AP)
By ANTHONY McCARTNEY AP Entertainment Writer
VIDEO: Debbie Rowe to take the stand in a wrongful death trial against concert promoter AEG Live.
Paris Jackson Raises Questions as She Reunites with Birth MomNEXT VIDEO
Michael Jackson: The Kids, 1 Year Later
AUTO START: ON | OFF

Associated Press
Michael Jackson's ex-wife broke into tears on Wednesday when she took the witness stand in a civil case and described the singer's fear of pain and trust of physicians.

Debbie Rowe said the pop star trusted doctors to prescribe pain medication to him, but they sometimes tried to outdo each other while losing sight of Jackson's care.

"Michael had a very low pain tolerance and his fear of pain was incredible," Rowe said. "I think the doctors took advantage of him that way."

She said she was with Jackson when he received treatments from his longtime dermatologist Dr. Arnold Klein and from plastic surgeon Dr. Steven Hoefflin. The two doctors would try to out-do each other in the pain medications they gave the singer, she said.

"These idiots were going back and forth the whole time, not caring about him," Rowe told jurors.

Rowe is the mother of the singer's two oldest children, Prince and Paris Jackson. She and the pop star were married from 1996 to 1999. Rowe also worked with Klein.

Rowe said she told another one of Jackson's doctors, Allan Metzger, that she was concerned that Klein and Hoefflin were giving the singer too many medications.

"The only physician who ever did anything, the only physician who cared for Michael was Allan Metzger," Rowe said, fighting back tears.

A phone message left at Klein's office was not immediately returned. An email sent to Hoefflin's former practice was returned, stating the plastic surgeon retired five years ago and no longer practiced medicine.

Rowe said Jackson respected doctors immensely because they went to school and vowed to do no harm to patients.

Katherine Jackson claims in her lawsuit that AEG Live failed to properly investigate the doctor later convicted of giving her son an overdose of the anesthetic propofol in 2009.

She sat in the front row of the courtroom and leaned forward in her seat during portions of Rowe's testimony.

AEG denies it hired Conrad Murray or bears any responsibility for the singer's death.

Marvin S. Putnam, the company's lead defense attorney, said in opening statements that the case was about Jackson's personal choices and his desire to use propofol as a sleep aid.

Rowe described her first meeting with Jackson in the early 1980s, when he came into Klein's office for treatment of acne. She said Klein often met with celebrity patients on weekends and after-hours so they could avoid scrutiny, and in her first meeting with Jackson she asked him to come into the office for future visits at a more convenient time.

"That's when our friendship started," she said.

Rowe said she would frequently talk to Jackson on the phone and eventually started to accompany him to his treatments with Hoefflin. The plastic surgeon would give Jackson propofol during procedures and the singer would be unconscious for several hours.
 
Michael Jackson wrongful death trial: Debbie Rowe in tears as she recalls King of Pop's 'incredible' fear of pain
The ex-wife of the late pop star told reporters she was 'good' as she made her way into the courtroom with her lawyer.

Comments (4)
BY NANCY DILLON / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

PUBLISHED: WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14, 2013, 2:24 PM
UPDATED: WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14, 2013, 5:31 PM
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51179945 Debbie Rowe, Michael Jackson's ex-wife and mother of his two oldest children, arrives at court on August 14, 2013 in Los Angeles, California. Rowe will take the witness stand to testify about Michael's drug use during their time together in the wrongful death lawsuit brought by the singer's family against concert promoter and producer AEG Live.
LG/FAMEFLYNET PICTURES

Debbie Rowe arrives at Los Angeles County courthouse on Wednesday.
Michael Jacksons' ex-wife Debbie Rowe choked back tears Wednesday as she told a Los Angeles jury that "competing" doctors pushed dangerous and unnecessary drugs on the pain-phobic pop icon in the early 1990s.

"Michael had a very low pain tolerance, and his fear of pain was incredible. And I think the doctors took advantage of him that way," Rowe testified.

Jackson suffered a serious scalp burn in 1984 when a pyrotechnics stunt for a Pepsi commercial went horribly wrong.

Debbie Rowe was called as a defense witness by concert promoter AEG Live.
SPLASH NEWS/SPLASH NEWS

Debbie Rowe was called as a defense witness by concert promoter AEG Live.

The "Thriller" singer later developed painful "thickening" keloid scars and decided to try a scalp-expansion procedure meant to stretch his healthy skin for a graft before his 1993 Dangerous tour.

RELATED: MICHAEL JACKSON’S MOTHER TESTIFIES IN WRONGFUL DEATH TRIAL

She said Michael was going in for weekly injections into a balloon placed under his skin and found the pressure "extremely painful."

Michael Jackson and then-wife Debbie Rowe in Pasedena, Calif. in 1996.
CHRIS PIZZELLO/AP

Michael Jackson and then-wife Debbie Rowe in Pasedena, Calif. in 1996.

"His sensitivity to pain was just off the charts at this point," she said, explaining that she had grown close to the entertainer through her job at the office of his Beverly Hills dermatologist Dr. Arnold Klein.

Rowe said Dr. Klein and Jackson's plastic surgeon Dr. Steven Hoefflin were "competing" for favor at this time, and she claimed she was at Jackson's Century City residence on one occasion when she had to confiscate a prescription of Dilaudid, a powerful narcotic.

"Hoefflin gave it to him, and while it was sitting on the counter I said, 'You're not taking this,'" she testified. "He was so afraid of the pain because the pain was so great. …I ended up being with him all the time until this procedure was over."

Paris Jackson spent the day with mom Debbie Rowe in May.
BLUE WASP / SPLASH NEWS/BLUE WASP / SPLASH NEWS

Paris Jackson spent the day with mom Debbie Rowe in May.

PHOTOS: MICHAEL JACKSON'S LIFE IN PHOTOS

She said Dr. Klein also used the surgery-strength anesthetic propofol to put Jackson under for collagen injections used to treat his acne scars.

Jackson died in June 2009 from a propofol overdose provided by Dr. Conrad Murray, the personal physician now serving four years for his involuntary manslaughter.

Michael Jackson posed with Debbie Rowe during her pregnancy with daughter Paris.
BUSINESSWIRE/REUTERS

Michael Jackson posed with Debbie Rowe during her pregnancy with daughter Paris.

Rowe said she also witnessed propofol infusions given in Dr. Hoefflin's office. She claimed that on two occasions, Dr. Hoefflin had Jackson knocked out with propofol but didn't perform the procedures that Jackson requested.

She said Jackson believed he was receiving steroid shots to reduce swollen scar tissue in his nose, but that Dr. Hoefflin claimed he didn't see any inflamed tissue.

RELATED: MICHAEL JACKSON NEARLY OVERDOSED, FAMILY STAGED AT LEAST 10 DRUG INTERVENTIONS: BROTHER

Michael Jackson pictured rehearsing for his planned shows in London at the Staples Center in June 2009.
GETTY IMAGES/GETTY IMAGES

Michael Jackson pictured rehearsing for his planned shows in London at the Staples Center in June 2009.

Rowe is expected to continue her testimony Wednesday afternoon. She was subpoenaed to testify as a defense witness for concert promoter AEG Live.

Her two kids with Jackson - Prince, 16, and Paris, 15 - are suing AEG along with their younger brother and grandmother claiming the company negligently hired and supervised Murray.

Lead AEG lawyer Marvin Putnam said during his opening statement in April that Rowe had intimate knowledge of the superstar's lengthy use of the surgery-strength anesthetic that ultimately killed him.

He told jurors that Rowe would testify about Michael using propofol as a sleep aid as far back as the 1990s.

"(She) will tell you she saw several doctors put Mr. Jackson to sleep with propofol overnight in hotel rooms (while touring)," he said. "Ms. Rowe knew this was incredibly dangerous. …She would always insist on being there when he got propofol overnight."

AEG has denied any wrongdoing in the case, claiming it was Michael who hired Dr. Murray and secretly begged for nightly propofol infusions to treat his insomnia.



Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/entertai...l-death-trial-article-1.1426736#ixzz2byyF3KOs
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 69 - August 14 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

article-2393911-1B4C7B1D000005DC-161_634x516.jpg
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 69 - August 14 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

DEBBIE ROWE
BREAKS DOWN
Docs Competed to Drug MJ
BREAKING NEWS0814_debbie_rowe_sad_getty
Michael Jackson's ex-wife Debbie Rowe just broke down in tears while testifying in the MJ wrongful death trial, claiming the singer's doctors held a "pissing match" to outdo each other by giving Jackson the "better" drugs ... a competition that fueled his deadly drug addiction.

On the stand, Rowe pointed the finger at two doctors specifically -- Dr. Arnie Klein and Dr. Steven Hoefflin -- claiming MJ trusted them to prescribe his pain medication, and they consistently tried to one-up the other by giving MJ increasingly stronger doses of painkillers.

Rowe said Dr. Conrad Murray then "got in there and killed him." She added, "I was probably one of the only ones who said no to MJ."

Rowe said MJ had a notoriously low tolerance for pain, which paved the way for the abuse of painkillers like Demerol and Diprivan.

Rowe called Klein and Hoefflin idiots for going back and forth at the same time, trying to outdo each other and not looking out for MJ's best interest.


Read more: http://www.tmz.com#ixzz2bzFEG2Cf
Visit Fishwrapper: http://www.fishwrapper.com
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 69 - August 14 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

updated CNN

Doctors competed to give Michael Jackson painkillers, ex-wife Rowe says
By Alan Duke, CNN
updated 6:02 PM EDT, Wed August 14, 2013
Watch this video
Jackson's ex: Doctors were like vultures
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
NEW: Debbie Rowe: "Conrad Murray got in there and killed him"
"Doctors took advantage" of Michael Jackson' because of his pain, Rowe testifies
Rowe is the mother of Jackson's two oldest children
AEG Live contends Jackson secretly used propofol for years to treat his insomnia

Los Angeles (CNN) -- Doctors "would try to outbid" each other on who could give Michael Jackson "the better drug" for his pain, his former wife testified Wednesday.
Debbie Rowe, who is the mother of Jackson's two oldest children, is being forced to testify about the singer's drug use by lawyers for AEG Live, the concert promoter being sued by members of Jackson's family, who say the promoter is responsible for his death.
Jackson family matriarch Katherine Jackson sat Wednesday morning in the front row of the small courtroom, where she has spent much of the past 16 weeks watching the trial.
"Michael had a very low pain tolerance and his fear of pain was incredible," Rowe testified. "And I think that doctors took advantage of him that way."
Photos: All in the Jackson family Photos: All in the Jackson family
Rowe has rarely given interviews since her divorce from the pop icon, although she did testify in her former husband's defense during his child molestation trial in 2005. Jackson was acquitted on all charges in that case.
Jackson lawyers smiled as the trial recessed for the lunch break, indicating that they believed the defense witness was actually supporting their case.
"Michael respected doctors immensely, that they went to school, that they studied and to do no harm," Rowe said. "Unfortunately, some of the doctors decided that when Michael was in pain or something that they would try to outbid on who could give him the better drug and so he listened to those doctors."
Rowe said many of the doctors who treated Jackson were "idiots," including the dermatologist she worked for from 1979 until she quit in 1996 before she married Jackson.
"The only physician who ever cared for Michael as Michael was Allen Metzger," Rowe testified, referring to the doctor who became his primary care physician for several years.
"So Metzger continued as his doctor?" AEG Live lawyer Marvin Putnam asked.
"I don't know, because Conrad Murray got in there and killed him," Rowe replied -- a reference to the doctor AEG Live is accused of hiring.
AEG Live contends that Jackson used the surgical anesthetic propofol for years to treat his insomnia, including when Rowe was traveling with him in Europe in the 1990s.
The coroner ruled Jackson died on June 25, 2009, from a propofol overdose administered by Dr. Conrad Murray, who is serving a prison sentence for involuntary manslaughter.
"Ms. Rowe will tell you that she saw Mr. Jackson using propofol on tours," Putnam told jurors in his opening statement 16 weeks ago. "She saw several doctors put Mr. Jackson to sleep in hotel rooms while on tour."
Rowe, who met Jackson when she worked as a nurse in the Beverly Hills office of Dr. Arnold Klein, witnessed doctors put Jackson to sleep in hotels in Munich, London and Paris, according to Putnam.
Debbie Rowe, Michael Jackson\'s ex-wife and mother of two of his children, is seen here in 2005.
Debbie Rowe, Michael Jackson's ex-wife and mother of two of his children, is seen here in 2005.
"She would always insist on being there" to make sure it was an anesthesiologist who did the "incredibly dangerous" procedure, he told jurors.
Putnam is expected to question Rowe about those events when court resumes after the lunch break.
AEG Live executives, who were promoting and producing Jackson's comeback concerts, had no way of knowing that Murray was infusing him with propofol each night for two months in the spring of 2009, Putnam said.
"Almost no one knew until after his death," he said. "AEG Live certainly didn't know about it."
The Jackson family's lawyers contend that the promoters ignored warning signs that Jackson's health was deteriorating during the two months before his death. Instead of getting him to another doctor who might have saved his life, they gave Murray the responsibility of getting Jackson to rehearsals, they argue.
Michael Jackson's mother and three of her children contend AEG Live is liable in his death because it negligently hired, retained or supervised Murray. The company's agreement to pay Murray $150,000 a month put the doctor in a conflict of interest because he was in deep debt and could not risk losing the job by refusing Jackson's demands for propofol, their lawyers contend.
AEG Live argues that while its executives negotiated with Murray to serve as Jackson's physician for the "This Is It" tour, it was Jackson who chose and controlled the doctor.
One revelation from Rowe was that a Beverly Hills plastic surgeon faked doing a procedure on Jackson on two occasions, although he told the singer he had done it. Jackson complained about painful scars in his nose and went to Dr. Steven Hoefflin to inject them with collagen, she said.
"He put Michael out and didn't do anything but put tape on him as if he had treated him," Rowe testified. The doctor told her he did that because he could not find the scars Jackson thought were there.
Wednesday is the 69th day of testimony in the trial, which the judge told jurors would likely be given to them for deliberations in late September.
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 69 - August 14 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

AP update

Rowe described efforts to wean Jackson off the painkiller Demerol after he had surgery in 1993 to repair damage to his scalp, which was burned while filming a Pepsi commercial.
She said Metzger devised a plan to treat Jackson's pain with different medications before he went on a leg of his "Dangerous" tour. Rowe lived with Jackson for three weeks to ensure he stayed on the regimen.
"At that point we were friends," Rowe said. "He wasn't a patient."
She said Jackson knew he couldn't take pain medications forever but needed a strong voice to get him off the drugs. "I'm probably one of the only people who said no to him," Rowe said.
Rowe said the plan to break Jackson's use of Demerol failed when a doctor who accompanied the singer on tour gave him the drug while overseas.
A phone message left at Klein's office was not immediately returned. An email sent to Hoefflin's former practice was returned, stating the plastic surgeon retired five years ago and no longer practiced medicine.
 
Michael Jackson Wrongful Death Trial: Debbie Rowe Breaks Down on the Stand
by Bruna Nessif and Claudia Rosenbaum Today 4:06 PM PDT

Debbie Rowe
LG/FAMEFLYNET PICTURES
It was Debbie Rowe's turn to testify.
Michael Jackson's ex-wife, who was ordered to take the stand in the King of Pop's wrongful death trial today, found herself in a whirlwind of emotions while explaining Jackson's relationship with his doctors.
"Michael expected doctors to do no harm. Unfortunately, some of the doctors decided when Michael was in pain they would try to help him out and so he listened to the doctors," Rowe testified as she wiped her tears. "His fear of pain was incredible and I think the doctors took advantage in that way."
WATCH: Paris Jackson testifies via videotape in Michael Jackson wrongful-death trial
Rowe explained that when she was working for Dr. Arnold Klein, she would sometimes go to Jackson's house twice a day to check on him and also on the weekend, adding that the doctors were competing for Jackson¹s business and would call him and tell him they had better drugs.
At one point, she said called Dr. Allan Metzger and told him that her own doctor, Dr. Klein, was not doing what was best for Jackson, and shared that she thought Dr. Metzger was good for the pop star.
Then, Rowe blurted out, "I don't know, 'cause Conrad Murray got in there and killed him."
PHOTOS: Michael Jackson's life in pictures
Dr. Conrad Murray, Michael Jackson
AP Photo/Isaac Brekken; Pool Photographer/Getty Images
Rowe explained that Dr. Steven Hoefflin would give Jackson Propofol when the celeb would have his burn scars injected, and would only take the drug when having a procedure done.
"Michael had extension scarring in his nose that made it difficult to breath," Rowe said. "To inject the nose—I can't think of anything more painful."
However, Rowe added that there were times she knew about when one doctor would just give Jackson Propofol and put him under for four or five hours without giving him treatment. She told the court that the doctor would tell Jackson that he had done a procedure when in fact he hadn't.
Jackson's mother, Katherine, is suing AEG Live on behalf of her son's estate, accusing the concert promoter of negligence by hiring Dr. Conrad Murray to oversee her son's health and ultimately being complicit in the King of Pop's death from a Propofol overdose.
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 69 - August 14 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

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Michael Jackson's ex-wife Debbie Rowe testifies, reveals 21 things
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Posted 10 minutes ago by OnTheRedCarpet.com Staff
Debbie Rowe, an ex-wife of Michael Jackson and the biological mother of his two oldest children, broke down in tears while testifying at the late King of Pop's wrongful death trial in Los Angeles on Wednesday, Aug. 14.

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Paris Jackson appears on stage at her father Michael Jackson's hand and footprint ceremony at the Grauman's Chinese Theatre on Jan. 26, 2012. Michael Jackson kids at footprint ceremony
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Michael Jackson home videos, photos of kids shown during trial - watch
Rowe used to work with Arnold Klein, a dermatologist who had treated Jackson. The singer's family is suing AEG Live, a concert promoter that had organized a mini tour for him before his 2009 death.

They claim the company hired Conrad Murray, the doctor who was jailed in 2011 for involuntary manslaughter over Jackson's death. AEG say the singer chose the physician himself and denies any wrongdoing. The company called Rowe to testify at the trial.

Rowe was married to Jackson between 1996 to 1999 and is the mother of their son Prince, 16, and daughter Paris, 17. Jackson's third child, his 11-year-old son Blanket, was born to a surrogate mother.

During her testimony, Rowe talked about Jackson's fear of pain, their first meeting and his medical treatments. Check out 21 things Rowe revealed during her testimony.

What Debbie Rowe revealed about Michael Jackson ...

1. She met Jackson when he arrived for an appointment at Dr. Arnold Klein's office, where she worked as an assistant, in either 1982 or 1984. They then became friends.

"I introduced myself, said, 'Nobody does what you do better, you're amazing. And nobody does what I do better, I'm amazing," Rowe testified, adding that the singer then laughed.

2. Jackson asked Rowe to be present while undergoing medical procedures. She cited several doctors who treated him, including Klein, a plastic surgeon and an internist.

3. She said Jackson was initially treated for acne at Klein's office and was given collagen injections. He was later treated for lupus and vitiligo -- a skin disease.

4. Jackson was not given pain medication during the first few times he received collagen injections. He was prescribed painkillers by another doctor after undergoing what Rowe called "extremely painful" surgery in 1984 to treat burns he suffered while filming a Pepsi commercial.

5. "Michael respected doctors tremendously that they went to school and studied. And meant no harm," Rowe said. "Unfortunately some of the doctors decided when Michael was in pain that they would try to outbid each other on who could give the better drug. So he listened to the doctors."

6. "Michael had a very low pain tolerance," Rowe said, crying in the courtroom. "His fear of pain was incredible and I think the doctors took advantage of him that way."

7. Rowe said that over the years, at Klein's office and at the office of plastic surgeon Steven Hoefflin, Jackson was treated with Diprivan, aka propofol -- the anesthetic Murray administered to the singer before he died -- "probably 10 times," including during acne treatments.

8. She said she was concerned that Hoefflin was "overprescribing medications" to Jackson and that the plastic surgeon and Klein would try to out-do each other with regard to the painkillers they would administer, adding: "These idiots were going back and forth all the time and not caring about him."

9. Rowe said Jackson wanted his plastic surgeon to inject steroids into his nose, saying that he had "extensive scarring" that made it difficult to breathe. She told the court that the doctor put him under general anesthesia but did not perform the procedure because he said he did not see the scarring. Rowe said the surgeon put tape on Jackson's nose and told the singer he had administered the injections.

10. Jackson saw Klein in the early 1990s, "not that often." He saw Hoefflin sometimes every six months, sometimes more often, Rowe said.

11. Rowe recalled a time she found Jackson under the influence of a painkiller called Dilaudid that Hosefflin had prescribed. She said she confiscated the pills and unplugged the phones in his hotel room.

"He liked to talk on the phone," she said. "You couldn't understand him. I didn't want him to embarrass himself. I was there all night."

12. Rowe said she eventually told Jackson he had a drug issue.

"I said you're taking too much, you can't take this forever," she said.

What Debbie Rowe revealed about herself ...

13. She was born in Spokane, Washington.

14. Her father was an Air Force pilot.

15. She breeds and trains American Quarter Horse and has raised American Paint Horses for 10 years.

16. She moved to Los Angeles when her parents divorced. She was 11 at the time.

17. She attended Hollywood High School and graduated in 1977. She attended Los Angeles Valley College for a year and studied to become a nurse technician.

18. She also studied to become an EMT (Emergency Medical Technician) and once worked for an ambulance company before she began her job as an assistant at Dr. Arnold Klein's office. She said: "He was a legend in his own mind. We had a very high profile clientele."

19. She began her job at Klein's office in the late 1970s and stopped working for him in 1997. She said she's not good with dates but is good with facts, joking: "I hated history."

20. She said she left her job after Jackson "encouraged me to go back to college."

21. She attended Antioch University in Los Angeles for two and half years and obtained a degree in psychology. She then left Los Angeles and in 2002, she moved to work as a horse breeder Palmdale, located 60 miles north. At the beginning of her testimony, Rowe joked: "I sat in traffic for 20 minutes! 20 minutes!"
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 69 - August 14 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

Doctors competed to give Michael Jackson painkillers, ex-wife Debbie Rowe says
By Alan Duke, CNN
updated 7:39 PM EDT, Wed August 14, 2013
Watch this video
Jackson's ex: Doctors were like vultures
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
NEW: Debbie Rowe describes 2 instances when Jackson used propofol for sleep
"Doctors took advantage" of Michael Jackson because of his pain, Rowe testifies
Rowe is the mother of Jackson's two oldest children
AEG Live contends Jackson secretly used propofol for years to treat his insomnia

Los Angeles (CNN) -- Two German doctors treated Michael Jackson's insomnia with propofol 12 years before he died from an overdose of the surgical anesthetic, his former wife testified Wednesday.
Debbie Rowe, who is the mother of Jackson's two oldest children, is being forced to testify about the singer's drug use by lawyers for AEG Live, the concert promoter being sued by members of Jackson's family, who say the promoter is responsible for his death.
Doctors "would try to outbid" each other on who could give Michael Jackson "the better drug" for his pain, Rowe testified Wednesday.
Jackson family matriarch Katherine Jackson sat Wednesday morning in the front row of the small courtroom, where she has spent much of the past 16 weeks watching the trial.
Dr. Allen Metzger -- Jackson's general practitioner in the United States -- arranged for the German anesthesiologists to infuse the singer with propofol in a Munich hotel in July 1997 after sedatives failed to help him sleep between concerts, Rowe testified.
"I think they tried it and it hadn't worked and if he couldn't sleep, he couldn't perform," she testified. Jackson "was at the end of his rope; he didn't know what else to do."
He "felt better" after eight hours of propofol-induced sleep and decided to get a second treatment after his second Munich show, she said.
Metzger testified at the criminal trial of Dr. Conrad Murray that he was never involved in giving propofol treatments for Jackson and was not aware of the drug until much later.
Rowe, who met Jackson when she worked as a nurse in the Beverly Hills office of Dr. Arnold Klein, backed away from her previous statement at her deposition in which she said doctors also gave Jackson propofol infusions in hotels in France during the HIStory tour.
AEG Live contends that Jackson used propofol for years to treat his insomnia, including when Rowe was traveling with him in Europe in the 1990s.
The coroner ruled Jackson died on June 25, 2009, from a propofol overdose administered by Murray, who is serving a prison sentence for involuntary manslaughter.
Rowe testified that Jackson underwent surgery in 1993 to repair burns suffered years earlier.
His doctors "couldn't get a grip of the pain" and that two doctors "were having a pissing contest over who gave him the better drug."
"Michael had a very low pain tolerance, and his fear of pain was incredible," Rowe testified. "And I think that doctors took advantage of him that way."
Photos: All in the Jackson family Photos: All in the Jackson family
Rowe has rarely given interviews since her divorce from the pop icon, although she did testify in her former husband's defense during his child molestation trial in 2005. Jackson was acquitted on all charges in that case.
Jackson lawyers smiled as the trial recessed for the lunch break, indicating that they believed the defense witness was actually supporting their case.
"Michael respected doctors immensely, that they went to school, that they studied and to do no harm," Rowe said. "Unfortunately, some of the doctors decided that when Michael was in pain or something that they would try to outbid on who could give him the better drug and so he listened to those doctors."
Rowe said many of the doctors who treated Jackson were "idiots," including the dermatologist she worked for from 1979 until she quit in 1996 before she married Jackson.
"The only physician who ever cared for Michael as Michael was Allen Metzger," Rowe testified.
"So Metzger continued as his doctor?" AEG Live lawyer Marvin Putnam asked.
"I don't know, because Conrad Murray got in there and killed him," Rowe replied -- a reference to the doctor AEG Live is accused of hiring.
AEG Live executives, who were promoting and producing Jackson's comeback concerts, had no way of knowing that Murray was infusing him with propofol each night for two months in the spring of 2009, Putnam said.
"Almost no one knew until after his death," he said. "AEG Live certainly didn't know about it."
The Jackson family's lawyers contend that the promoters ignored warning signs that Jackson's health was deteriorating during the two months before his death. Instead of getting him to another doctor who might have saved his life, they gave Murray the responsibility of getting Jackson to rehearsals, they argue.
Michael Jackson's mother and three of her children contend AEG Live is liable in his death because it negligently hired, retained or supervised Murray. The company's agreement to pay Murray $150,000 a month put the doctor in a conflict of interest because he was in deep debt and could not risk losing the job by refusing Jackson's demands for propofol, their lawyers contend.
AEG Live argues that while its executives negotiated with Murray to serve as Jackson's physician for the "This Is It" tour, it was Jackson who chose and controlled the doctor.
One revelation from Rowe was that a Beverly Hills plastic surgeon faked doing a procedure on Jackson on two occasions, although he told the singer he had done it. Jackson complained about painful scars in his nose and went to Dr. Steven Hoefflin to inject them with collagen, she said.
"He put Michael out and didn't do anything but put tape on him as if he had treated him," Rowe testified. The doctor told her he did that because he could not find the scars Jackson thought were there.
Wednesday is the 69th day of testimony in the trial, which the judge told jurors would likely be given to them for deliberations in late September.
 
JACKSON'S EX-WIFE TESTIFIES ABOUT HIS FEAR OF PAIN
By ANTHONY McCARTNEY
— Aug. 14 8:33 PM EDT
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Michael Jackson, Debbie Rowe

FILE - In this April 28, 1996 file photo shows pop singer Michael Jackson, left, and his wife Debbie Rowe in Pasedena, Calif. Rowe is expected to testify, Wednesday, Aug. 14, 2013, in the negligence lawsuit filed by Jackson’s mother against AEG Live, claiming the company failed to adequately investigate Dr. Conrad Murray, who was convicted of giving the singer a fatal dose of anesthesia in June 2009. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello, file)
Debbie Rowe

FILE - In this April 28, 2005 file photo, Debbie Rowe, Michael Jackson's ex-wife and mother of two of his children, passes through a magnetometer as she arrives at the Santa Barbara County courthouse during Jackson's child molestation trial, in Santa Maria, Calif. Rowe is expected to testify, Wednesday, Aug. 14, 2013, in the negligence lawsuit filed by Jackson’s mother against AEG Live, claiming the company failed to adequately investigate Dr. Conrad Murray, who was convicted of giving the singer a fatal dose of anesthesia in June 2009. (AP Photo/Aaron Lambert, Pool, File)
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LOS ANGELES (AP) — Michael Jackson's ex-wife broke into tears on Wednesday when she took the witness stand in a civil case and described the singer's fear of pain and reliance on physicians.

Debbie Rowe said the pop star trusted doctors to prescribe pain medication to him, but they sometimes tried to outdo each other while losing sight of Jackson's care.

"Michael had a very low pain tolerance and his fear of pain was incredible," Rowe said. "I think the doctors took advantage of him that way."

She said she was with Jackson when he received treatments from his longtime dermatologist Dr. Arnold Klein and from plastic surgeon Dr. Steven Hoefflin.

They would try to out-do each other, with each one prescribing different drugs while trying to persuade Jackson their recommendations were better to manage his pain, she said.

The doctors "were going back and forth the whole time, not caring about him," Rowe told jurors.

Rowe is the mother of the singer's two oldest children, Prince and Paris Jackson. She and the pop star were married from 1996 to 1999. Rowe also worked with Klein beginning in the late 1970s.

Rowe said she told another one of Jackson's doctors, Allan Metzger, that she was concerned that Klein and Hoefflin were giving the singer too many medications.

"The only physician who ever did anything, the only physician who cared for Michael was Allan Metzger," Rowe said, fighting back tears.

Rowe said Metzger arranged for two doctors to give Jackson the anesthetic propofol in Germany in 1997 when he complained that he couldn't sleep during his "HIStory" tour.

On two occasions, the doctors brought medical equipment to Jackson's hotel suite and monitored the singer while he was under the effect of the anesthetic for eight hours. The doctors warned Jackson about the dangers of using propofol, but Rowe said he disregarded the information.

"He was just more worried about not sleeping," she said. Rowe said she would not allow the singer to get similar propofol treatments for sleep issues after the use in Germany.

Jackson died from an overdose of propofol that was administered by another physician in 2009.

Rowe also described efforts to wean Jackson off the painkiller Demerol after he had surgery in 1993 to repair damage to his scalp sustained when he was burned while filming a Pepsi commercial years earlier.

She said Metzger devised a plan to treat Jackson's pain with different medications before he went on a leg of his "Dangerous" tour. Rowe lived with Jackson for three weeks to ensure he stayed on the regimen.

"At that point we were friends," Rowe said. "He wasn't a patient."

She said Jackson knew he couldn't take pain medications forever and needed a strong voice to get him off the drugs. "I'm probably one of the only people who said no to him," Rowe said.

Rowe said the plan to break Jackson's use of Demerol failed when a doctor who accompanied the singer on tour gave him the drug while overseas.

A phone message left at Klein's office was not immediately returned. An email sent to Hoefflin's former practice was returned, stating the plastic surgeon retired five years ago and no longer practiced medicine.

Rowe said Jackson respected doctors immensely because they went to school and vowed to do no harm to patients.

Katherine Jackson claims in her lawsuit that AEG Live failed to properly investigate the doctor later convicted of giving her son an overdose of propofol while he prepared for a series of comeback shows in 2009.

She sat in the front row of the courtroom and leaned forward in her seat during portions of Rowe's testimony.

AEG denies it hired Conrad Murray or bears any responsibility for the singer's death.

Marvin S. Putnam, the company's lead defense attorney, said in opening statements that the case was about Jackson's personal choices and his desire to use propofol as a sleep aid.
 
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 1m
Court reconvenes tomorrow at 9:30 a.m. PDT with Rowe back on the stand. I’ll be in court.
My updated story is here: http://bit.ly/125pNJ5
View summary
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 1m
By the point the lawyers returned, it was almost time to adjourn, so Chang said she’d slow the slide in the morning.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 1m
Chang wanted to show jurors a slide that displayed vitiligo, the skin condition that Jackson had. AEG objected and there was a sidebar.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 1m
Chang asked about Rowe re-establishing contact with Paris this year. Rowe said she had, but she never discussed the case with her.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 1m
Rowe said she hung up on Mrs. Jackson’s assistant and only came to court because she received a subpoena.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 1m
She only had about 15 minutes to ask questions before the court adjourned for the day. Rowe asked about her testimony.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 1m
The lawyer ended his direct examination, and plaintiff’s attorney Deborah Chang took over on cross-examination.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 2m
Putnam asked Rowe about the last time she saw Michael Jackson. She said it was in around 2003, when Paris was 4 years old.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 2m
After rehab, Rowe said Jackson was much improved. She then related the story about Metzger arranging propofol that’s in my story.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 2m
“He foolishly, foolishly, trusted a lot of people,” Rowe said of Jackson. Katherine nodded her head in agreement.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 2m
Rowe said she blamed Forecast for the issues. She said Jackson often couldn't see who was hurting him.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 3m
Rowe: “You need to straighten up, you need to face whatever it is that’s going on.” Jackson agreed with her and went to rehab.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 3m
“You can’t go looking and acting like this,” Rowe said she told Jackson. She said she told him he couldn't continue on the tour.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 3m
She said she tried to confront Dr. Forecast, but she wasn't allowed to see him. She didn't remember who blocked that effort.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 3m
Rowe said she saw Jackson in Mexico City when he went there for the “Dangerous” tour. He was messy and wouldn't make eye contact.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 3m
She said she later learned that “the first thing” Forecast did was give Jackson Demerol on the tour. That led to more problems.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 3m
Rowe said Forecast didn’t listen to her while she tried to describe the treatment plan.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 4m
She said Metzger then told her to deliver Jackson’s medications and his treatment plan to a Dr. Forecast, who was going on the tour with MJ.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 4m
Rowe returned to Jackson’s condo one day and all his stuff with gone. His assistant said Jackson had left to go on tour.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 4m
She said it was working until Jackson abruptly left to go on another leg of the “Dangerous” tour.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 4m
Rowe said she lowered his doses without letting Klein know and worked with Metzger to institute a plan to get MJ off Demerol.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 5m
Rowe said she got concerned with Jackson’s Demerol usage after the surgery, and worked with Metzger to wean him off of it.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 5m
She stayed the rest of the night in the hotel suite to make sure Jackson was OK. She would also live with him after the scalp surgery.
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 5m
Rowe said she unplugged all the phones in the room, since MJ liked to talk on the phone and she didn’t want him to call anyone else.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 6m
“I said I’m taking these, you’re (effed) up,” Rowe said. She apologized for the bad language.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 6m
Rowe dropped the F-bomb to describe what she told Jackson after taking the pill bottle.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 6m
“He was heavily under the influence of whatever Hoefflin had given him,” Rowe said. She said she confiscated a bottle of Dilaudid.
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 6m
Jackson had called Klein after taking the medication and was unintelligible. Klein sent Rowe to take care of MJ at a hotel in Universal City
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 7m
She also told the jury about an incident in which Hoefflin apparently gave Jackson the painkiller Dilaudid and she had to take it away.
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 7m
Rowe said she wasn’t sure precisely which anesthetic drugs were being used at Hoefflin’s office, but some propofol was involved.
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 7m
When Klein performed a procedure, Jackson was often awake within an hour. At Hoefflin’s, he might be in recovery for 6+ hours, she said.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 8m
The amount of time that Jackson was put under for procedures varied between Hoefflin and Klein’s offices, Rowe said.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 8m
Rowe said the need to manage Jackson’s pain medications became necessary after he had scalp surgery in 1993. (More on this later)
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 8m
Rowe said that Hoefflin told her that there were times he gave Jackson anesthesia, but performed no medical procedures.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 8m
She reached out to Jackson’s general doctor, Allan Metzger. “I needed one person to talk to me and I chose Metzger,” she said.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 8m
Rowe said she was caught in the middle of Dr. Arnold Klein and Dr. Steven Hoefflin’s conflicting treatments of Jackson.
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 9m
At this point, Katherine Jackson was leaning forward in her seat. I couldn’t see her face or any other reaction she had to Rowe’s testimony.
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 9m
“...that they would try to outbid each other on who could get the better drug. And so he listened to the doctors.”
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 9m
“Unfortunately, some of the doctors decided,” Rowe said, pausing to wipe away tears, “that when Michael was in pain ...”
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 10m
She started to break down when she began to describe how Jackson viewed doctors. “Michael respected doctors immensely,” she said.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 10m
Rowe described various treatments that Jackson got over the years, including botox and collagen injections for acne scars.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 10m
She and Jackson sparked up a friendship, speaking on the phone often and eventually seeing each other outside the office.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 10m
They met in ’82 or ’84, and the singer started coming into the office more after he was diagnosed with lupus, she said.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 10m
Rowe said she was a great hand holder for patients, and that Jackson appreciated her playing that role with his treatments.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 11m
She said she was very casual with patients.
“Dr. Klein would call me probably the least professional assistant he had,” Rowe said.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 11m
Rowe said she told MJ that they were both at the top of their fields, and said it’d be nice if he came to the office during regular hours.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 11m
Rowe described her first meeting with Jackson, which came outside regular business hours when she wanted to spend time with her nieces.
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Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 11m
I’ve covered a lot of Rowe’s testimony in today’s story, which can be found here:http://bit.ly/125pNJ5
View summary
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 12m
Rowe started out fairly at ease on the witness stand, asking AEG Live’s defense attorney Marvin Putnam to get her testimony done today.
Expand
Anthony McCartney ‏@mccartneyAP 12m
Updates coming on Debbie Rowe's testimony in Jackson vs AEG Live case ...
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 69 - August 14 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

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Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 69 - August 14 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

 
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 38 min

"He said he was at the end of his rope and didn't know whatelse to do," Rowe recalled. P: Did he indicate he had done it before? R: No
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ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 39 min

Putnam: Why diprivan not sedative, sleeping pills? Rowe: I think he tried and it didn't work. And if he couldn't sleep, he couldn't perform.
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ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 39 min

Rowe said Dr. Metzger talked to Michael and it wasn't Dr. Metzger's first choice.
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ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 39 min

She said it was a little drastic to do something like that and they were in another country, she didn't know the name of the medications.
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ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 40 min

"They had set everything up and Metzger said the doctors were coming." Rowe said she voiced her concerns to MJ and Metzger.
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ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 40 min

Rowe said MJ had called Metzger and said he didn't sleep. "I called Metzger to find out what we could do," Rowe described.
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ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 40 min

"I didn't know we were going to have a second time." She said she didn't know there was going to be a first time either.
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ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 41 min

Rowe said Propofol was not done in Paris and London. In Germany, MJ was in a hotel room, doctors came in and set it up.
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 69 - August 14 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

Michael Jackson's ex-wife recalls star's fear of pain

The 54-year-old broke down in tears during testimony
Continue reading the main story
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Michael Jackson's former wife broke down in court as she told of the pop star's "incredible" fear of pain.

"Michael had a very low pain tolerance," Debbie Rowe, mother to the singer's two elder children, told Los Angeles Superior Court.

"His fear of pain was incredible. I think the doctors took advantage of him that way," she said.

Ms Rowe was giving evidence in a civil action filed by Katherine Jackson over her son's death in 2009.

The Jackson family claims concert promoter AEG Live failed to properly investigate Dr Conrad Murray - the former cardiologist who was convicted of involuntary manslaughter in 2011 - and missed warning signs about the singer's health.

Ms Rowe, who met the singer while working for dermatologist Dr Arnold Klein, was married to Jackson from 1996-1999.

"Unfortunately, some of the doctors decided that when Michael was in pain they would try to see who could give him the best painkiller," said the 54-year-old former nurse.


Rowe was married to Jackson for three years
In court, she recalled seeing Jackson administered with the surgical anaesthetic propofol - the drug which ultimately killed him - in 1997, when he was struggling to sleep during the HIStory tour in Munich.

'End of his rope'

She claimed, at the time, the doctors warned Jackson about the dangers of using propofol, but he disregarded the information.

"Michael was at the end of his rope."

"He was more worried about not sleeping than dying because he couldn't perform [without sleep]," said Ms Rowe, who became frustrated by the line of questioning in court, at one point shouting at lawyers representing AEG.

She also described efforts to wean Jackson off painkiller Demerol, following surgery in 1993 for burns to his scalp which happened while filming a Pepsi advert. Efforts failed when a doctor who accompanied the singer on tour gave him the drug while overseas.

AEG Live has argued Jackson had prescription drug and addiction problems long before entering into any agreement with the company.

The company has argued that it did not hire or supervise Murray and could not have foreseen that he posed a danger to Jackson.

Ms Rowe will continue testimony under cross-examination by Katherine Jackson's lawyers on Thursday.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-23708774
 
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 5 min

Here's our story on @ABC7: http://abclocal.go.com/kabc/story?section=news/entertainment&id=9206174 …
Voir le résumé
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 9 min

Judge broke session until today at 9:30 am PT. Rowe is ordered back. We hope to see you here for full coverage.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 10 min

Chang wants to show a picture of a black male's hand with vitiligo. Defendants objected, Chang asked for sidebar.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 10 min

"His scarring was from the burn in the Pepsi commercial," Rowe said. MJ also had vitiligo, which causes discoloration of the skin.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 10 min

MJ had discoid lupus, which is a disease in the skin, Rowe said. Discoid lupus is not systemic lupus, which is all over the body.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 10 min

First time MJ went to Dr. Klein he was still in his 20s, and acne caused embarrassment, Rowe said.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 10 min

Chang: Despite what you think of him know, was Dr. Klein considered a respected dermatologist? Rowe: He was, he was brilliant.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 10 min

Rowe said at Klein's office they did studies of collagen and Botox. She knew Dr. Klein well.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 11 min

Chang: But communication got complicated because of divorce lawyers? Rowe: There were divorce lawyers/personal assistants that were annoying
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 11 min

Chang: Do you agree you were close friends for 20 years? Rowe: Yes, longer. "It was not like we ever hated each other," Rowe said about MJ.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 11 min

Rowe said she reestablished seeing daughter Paris this year. She never spoke to the kids about this lawsuit.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 12 min

Chang asked if prior to this year is it true she spent little time with Prince and Paris. Rowe said that was true.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 12 min

Rowe is not the legal guardian of either Prince and Paris Jackson. Mrs. Jackson and TJ Jackson are, she said.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 12 min

She's here now because of defendant's subpoena, would not come to testify voluntarily.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 12 min

Rowe hung up on Mrs. Jackson's assistant when asked to talk to KJ's attorney because she said she didn't want to testify on anyone's behalf.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 13 min

At the day of the deposition, plaintiffs didn't show up. Rowe said AEG attorneys told her they didn't want to come.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 13 min

Chang asked how Rowe was. "I have a headache to die for, I'm tired," Rowe said.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 13 min

Putnam concluded direct examination. Deborah Chang, attorneys for the Jacksons, did cross examination at 3:55 pm PT.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 13 min

Putnam: Other than Germany, was there any other time MJ used Diprivan to sleep? Rowe: Not that I was aware of, no.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 14 min

Rowe: I didn't know what Propofol was. I still didn't know. I think it was at a deposition I was told it was the same thing (as diprivan)
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 14 min

Rowe: I actually called Dr Klein and said 'what did you give him, you killed him' "I thought he was responsible in some way" Rowe testified
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 15 min

Putnam: When it came out he died of overdose of Propofol, how did you react?
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 15 min

Paris was 4 the last time Rowe saw Michael. That would've been in 2003.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 15 min

Rowe said they would get together at Klein's office and talk. "Everybody agreed that it was a little too much to have Diprivan to sleep."
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 15 min

"Klein at one time was a brilliant physician, and it was very sad what happened to him," Rowe testified.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 15 min

Rowe said that he told Grace if MJ didn't look ok to not let him alone with the baby.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 15 min

Rowe: I wasn't sure how Michael would be when he woke up. We'd stay in different areas of the hotel because fans would keep the baby awake
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 16 min

"He needed somebody to be there for him, to not take him, to not look at him as a cash cow," Rowe expressed.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 16 min

"I couldn't go in to Dr Klein's office and look at his chart, it's illegal. I felt if he wanted me there he'd talk to me about it" Rowe said
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 17 min

Rowe: We were married. When I was no longer working with Dr. Klein, I felt like I had a completely different role in his life.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 17 min

Rowe: Michael could be strong for about 10 minutes, then reasonable and he respected Dr. Metzger very much.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 18 min

Rowe: Because Metzger cared about Michael as a human being, wanted the best for him, talked to him for hours.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 18 min

Rowe: After Michael and I decided to separate, Michael got "custody" of the doctors. It was more important for me that he had Metzger.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 18 min

"I'd go to Europe every other week to see Prince," Rowe said. "We were making Paris."
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 18 min

She said her and Grace had been in the room while MJ slept. Rowe took notes of the procedure and gave Dr. Metzger to include in his chart.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 20 min

Putnam: Did security, nanny see him being put under? Rowe: No, I'm not going to let anyone in when he's sleeping. That's rude.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 20 min

"He never did it when I was around. It would not have happened," Rowe said about MJ using Diprivan/Propofol again to sleep.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 21 min

"You don't give someone Diprivan to sleep. It's not appropriate, it's not a labeled use," Rowe expressed.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 21 min

Rowe: That wasn't going to happened again. It just wasn't going to happen again.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 21 min

Putnam: After second time in hotel room, were you concerned he was going to do it again?
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 21 min

Rowe: But that was the only place that had happened that I had seen Michael have anesthesia, that was only place it happened, at Hoefflin's
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 22 min

Rowe: He slept when he had the procedures at Hoefflin and he slept after Hoefflin had done the procedure.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 23 min

"He'd come to Klein's office and sleep," Rowe said. Putnam: With Diprivan? Rowe: No just sleep.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 23 min

Rowe: In Germany, he was awaken within 1 hour after the drip had stopped. W/ Hoefflin, he was in the recovery room, with oxygen, for 5-6 hrs
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 23 min

"Even with the doctors in Germany, he woke up," she said. "He was not sound asleep like when he saw Dr. Hoefflin."
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 24 min

Rowe said that before, MJ had gotten the procedures done and had gotten sleep.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 24 min

Rowe said they were going to a sleep facility, she wasn't with him, she believes Dr. Metzger went along.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 24 min

"He always had a sleep disorder, but I don't remember why it had kicked in high gear like it had," Rowe said.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 25 min

Rowe recalled this was the end of the tour."I think we were going to address the issue after."
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 25 min

"They were a little more emphatically you can't do this, we are not doing this again," Rowe said.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 25 min

Rowe: Dr. Stoll and his assistant did it. They did a physical, it was almost exactly the same as the first time.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 26 min

Rowe: He said he hadn't slept after the concert, I called Dr. Metzger, I believed it was decided this is something you can't do all the time
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 27 min

Putnam: Did you remain concerned he had done this? Rowe: No, it was the one time Putnam: But then he did it again one day later? Rowe: Yes
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 27 min

"I asked next day how he was feeling. He said he felt better," Rowe remembered.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 27 min

Rowe said next day MJ warmed up with his voice coach on the phone and went to the venue, rested voice during the day, did meet and greet.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 28 min

"It was a hard 8 hours period," Rowe said about Diprivan/Propofol. "It was 8 hours and that was it."
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 28 min

Rowe said the doctors did a physical on MJ prior. "I was very impressed, I was very comfortable with Michael being under their care."
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 29 min

Putnam: Did he seem worried at all? Rowe: No, he just seemed worried about not sleeping.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 29 min

"He had so many procedures done with Hoefflin I don't think he was worried about it," Rowe said.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 29 min

Putnam: Did you tell him you were afraid he might die? Rowe: No, I said what happens if you die.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 29 min

She's familiar with Fentanyl, Diprivan, but not Propofol, never used that word. "They warned him that any anesthesia is dangerous" Rowe said
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 30 min

"They said it was the same stuff we had used in the States," Rowe explained.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 32 min

Finally out of twitter jail. Here's the rest of Debbie Rowe's testimony yesterday.
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 33 min

Putnam: Did he indicate he was worried about this? Rowe: He didn't seem to be. We sat with the doctors and went over all the risks/concerns
Ouvrir
ABC7 Court News ‏@ABC7Courts 8 h

"He said he was at the end of his rope and didn't know whatelse to do," Rowe recalled. P: Did he indicate he had done it before? R: No
Ouvrir
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 69 - August 14 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

Rest of the ABC7 tweets:

Putnam: Did he indicate he was worried about this?
Rowe: He didn't seem to be. We sat with the doctors and went over all the risks/concerns
"They said it was the same stuff we had used in the States," Rowe explained.
She's familiar with Fentanyl, Diprivan, but not Propofol, never used that word. "They warned him that any anesthesia is dangerous" Rowe said
Putnam: Did you tell him you were afraid he might die?
Rowe: No, I said what happens if you die.
"He had so many procedures done with Hoefflin I don't think he was worried about it," Rowe said.
Putnam: Did he seem worried at all?
Rowe: No, he just seemed worried about not sleeping.
Rowe said the doctors did a physical on MJ prior. "I was very impressed, I was very comfortable with Michael being under their care."
"It was a hard 8 hours period," Rowe said about Diprivan/Propofol. "It was 8 hours and that was it."
Rowe said next day MJ warmed up with his voice coach on the phone and went to the venue, rested voice during the day, did meet and greet.
"I asked next day how he was feeling. He said he felt better," Rowe remembered.
Putnam: Did you remain concerned he had done this?
Rowe: No, it was the one time
Putnam: But then he did it again one day later?
Rowe: Yes
Rowe: He said he hadn't slept after the concert, I called Dr. Metzger, I believed it was decided this is something you can't do all the time
Rowe: Dr. Stoll and his assistant did it. They did a physical, it was almost exactly the same as the first time.
"They were a little more emphatically you can't do this, we are not doing this again," Rowe said.
Rowe recalled this was the end of the tour."I think we were going to address the issue after."
"He always had a sleep disorder, but I don't remember why it had kicked in high gear like it had," Rowe said.
Rowe said they were going to a sleep facility, she wasn't with him, she believes Dr. Metzger went along.
Rowe said that before, MJ had gotten the procedures done and had gotten sleep.
"Even with the doctors in Germany, he woke up," she said. "He was not sound asleep like when he saw Dr. Hoefflin."
Rowe: In Germany, he was awaken within 1 hour after the drip had stopped. W/ Hoefflin, he was in the recovery room, with oxygen, for 5-6 hrs
"He'd come to Klein's office and sleep," Rowe said.
Putnam: With Diprivan?
Rowe: No just sleep.
Rowe: He slept when he had the procedures at Hoefflin and he slept after Hoefflin had done the procedure.
Rowe: But that was the only place that had happened that I had seen Michael have anesthesia, that was only place it happened, at Hoefflin's
Putnam: After second time in hotel room, were you concerned he was going to do it again?
Rowe: That wasn't going to happened again. It just wasn't going to happen again.
"You don't give someone Diprivan to sleep. It's not appropriate, it's not a labeled use," Rowe expressed.
"He never did it when I was around. It would not have happened," Rowe said about MJ using Diprivan/Propofol again to sleep.
Putnam: Did security, nanny see him being put under?
Rowe: No, I'm not going to let anyone in when he's sleeping. That's rude.
She said her and Grace had been in the room while MJ slept. Rowe took notes of the procedure and gave Dr. Metzger to include in his chart.
"I'd go to Europe every other week to see Prince," Rowe said. "We were making Paris."
Rowe: After Michael and I decided to separate, Michael got "custody" of the doctors. It was more important for me that he had Metzger.
Rowe: Because Metzger cared about Michael as a human being, wanted the best for him, talked to him for hours.
Rowe: Michael could be strong for about 10 minutes, then reasonable and he respected Dr. Metzger very much.
Rowe: We were married. When I was no longer working with Dr. Klein, I felt like I had a completely different role in his life.
"I couldn't go in to Dr Klein's office and look at his chart, it's illegal. I felt if he wanted me there he'd talk to me about it" Rowe said
"He needed somebody to be there for him, to not take him, to not look at him as a cash cow," Rowe expressed.
Rowe: I wasn't sure how Michael would be when he woke up. We'd stay in different areas of the hotel because fans would keep the baby awake
Rowe said that he told Grace if MJ didn't look ok to not let him alone with the baby.
"Klein at one time was a brilliant physician, and it was very sad what happened to him," Rowe testified.
Rowe said they would get together at Klein's office and talk. "Everybody agreed that it was a little too much to have Diprivan to sleep."
Paris was 4 the last time Rowe saw Michael. That would've been in 2003.
Putnam: When it came out he died of overdose of Propofol, how did you react?
Rowe: I actually called Dr Klein and said 'what did you give him, you killed him'
"I thought he was responsible in some way" Rowe testified
Rowe: I didn't know what Propofol was. I still didn't know. I think it was at a deposition I was told it was the same thing (as diprivan)
Putnam: Other than Germany, was there any other time MJ used Diprivan to sleep?
Rowe: Not that I was aware of, no.
Putnam concluded direct examination. Deborah Chang, attorneys for the Jacksons, did cross examination at 3:55 pm PT.
Chang asked how Rowe was. "I have a headache to die for, I'm tired," Rowe said.
At the day of the deposition, plaintiffs didn't show up. Rowe said AEG attorneys told her they didn't want to come.
Rowe hung up on Mrs. Jackson's assistant when asked to talk to KJ's attorney because she said she didn't want to testify on anyone's behalf.
She's here now because of defendant's subpoena, would not come to testify voluntarily.
Rowe is not the legal guardian of either Prince and Paris Jackson. Mrs. Jackson and TJ Jackson are, she said.
Chang asked if prior to this year is it true she spent little time with Prince and Paris. Rowe said that was true.
Rowe said she reestablished seeing daughter Paris this year. She never spoke to the kids about this lawsuit.
Chang: Do you agree you were close friends for 20 years?
Rowe: Yes, longer.

"It was not like we ever hated each other," Rowe said about MJ.
Chang: But communication got complicated because of divorce lawyers?
Rowe: There were divorce lawyers/personal assistants that were annoying
Rowe said at Klein's office they did studies of collagen and Botox. She knew Dr. Klein well.
Chang: Despite what you think of him know, was Dr. Klein considered a respected dermatologist?
Rowe: He was, he was brilliant.
First time MJ went to Dr. Klein he was still in his 20s, and acne caused embarrassment, Rowe said.
MJ had discoid lupus, which is a disease in the skin, Rowe said. Discoid lupus is not systemic lupus, which is all over the body.
"His scarring was from the burn in the Pepsi commercial," Rowe said. MJ also had vitiligo, which causes discoloration of the skin.
Chang wants to show a picture of a black male's hand with vitiligo. Defendants objected, Chang asked for sidebar.
Judge broke session until today at 9:30 am PT. Rowe is ordered back. We hope to see you here for full coverage.
 
Jacksons vs AEG - Day 70 - August 15 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

Jacksons vs AEG - Day 70 - August 15 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

Use this thread to post any and all news stories from day 70 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 70 - August 15 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

Ex-wife: Michael Jackson worried he was 'Elephant Man'
By Alan Duke, CNN
updated 2:18 PM EDT, Thu August 15, 2013
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Ex-wife describes Michael Jackson's skin problems, pains and drug use
"Everyone says he bleached himself, but he didn't," Debbie Rowe says
Jackson compared himself to the "Elephant Man," she testifies
Doctors had "a pissing contest" over who could give Jackson "the better drug," she says

Los Angeles (CNN) -- When Debbie Rowe divorced Michael Jackson after their three-year marriage in 1999, the singer "got custody of the doctors," his ex-wife joked.
Rowe, the mother of Jackson's two oldest children, returned to the witness stand Thursday for a second day of testimony in the AEG Live death trial in Los Angeles court. She was forced to testify about the singer's drug use by lawyers for the concert promoter being sued by Jackson's mother and three children.
Wednesday's questioning by AEG Live lawyer Marvin Putnam centered on Jackson's use of prescription drugs to deal with pain from scalp surgery and two times in Germany when doctors used the surgical anesthetic propofol to treat his insomnia.
Thursday's testimony, however, began with Rowe's description of Jackson's skin problems, which included vitiligo -- a condition in which his pigment disappeared, leaving large white spots on his face, hands and body.
"Everyone says he bleached himself, but he didn't," Rowe said. Many of his visits to Dr. Arnold Klein, the Beverly Hills dermatologist where she worked for 18 years as a medical assistant, were to treat the condition, she testified.
Jackson compared himself to the "Elephant Man," a 19th-century Englishman who became a circus sideshow curiosity because of severe disfigurements, she said.
"He was worried that people would see the disease or the disfigurement before they would see him working sometimes," Rowe testified.
He also suffered from discoid lupus, which made his skin tissue "mushy," especially on his scalp, she said. Jackson's scalp was severely burned during a pyrotechnics accident while he was filming a Pepsi commercial in 1984.
MJ's insomnia struggle
Two German doctors treated Jackson's insomnia with propofol 12 years before he died from an overdose of the surgical anesthetic, Rowe testified Wednesday.
Dr. Allen Metzger -- Jackson's general practitioner in the United States -- arranged for the German anesthesiologists to infuse the singer with propofol in a Munich hotel in July 1997 after sedatives failed to help him sleep between concerts, Rowe testified.
"I think they tried it and it hadn't worked, and if he couldn't sleep, he couldn't perform," she testified. Jackson "was at the end of his rope; he didn't know what else to do."
He "felt better" after eight hours of propofol-induced sleep and decided to get a second treatment after his second Munich show, she said.
Metzger testified at the criminal trial of Dr. Conrad Murray that he was never involved in propofol treatments for Jackson and was not aware of the drug until much later.
Rowe backed away from her previous statement during a deposition, in which she said doctors also gave Jackson propofol infusions in hotels in France during the HIStory tour, in the late 1990s.
AEG Live contends that Jackson used propofol for years to treat his insomnia, including when Rowe was traveling with him in Europe in the 1990s.
The coroner ruled Jackson died on June 25, 2009, from a propofol overdose administered by Murray, who is serving a prison sentence for involuntary manslaughter.
AEG Live executives, who were promoting and producing Jackson's comeback concerts, had no way of knowing that Murray was infusing him with propofol each night for two months in the spring of 2009, AEG lawyer Marvin Putnam said in his opening statements 16 weeks ago.
"Almost no one knew until after his death," Putnam said. "AEG Live certainly didn't know about it."
The Jackson family's lawyers contend that the promoters ignored warning signs that Jackson's health was deteriorating in the two months before his death. Instead of getting him to another doctor who might have saved his life, they gave Murray the responsibility of getting Jackson to rehearsals, they argue.
Michael Jackson's mother, Katherine Jackson, and three of her children contend AEG Live is liable in his death because it negligently hired, retained or supervised Murray. The company's agreement to pay Murray $150,000 a month put the doctor in a conflict of interest because he was in deep debt and could not risk losing the job by refusing Jackson's demands for propofol, their lawyers contend.
AEG Live argues that while its executives negotiated with Murray to serve as Jackson's physician for the "This Is It" tour, it was Jackson who chose and controlled the doctor.
"Getting a grip' on MJ's pain
Jackson underwent surgery in 1993 to repair burns suffered in the 1984 accident, including placement of a balloon under his scalp to stretch it over several months, Rowe testified.
His doctors "couldn't get a grip of the pain" the procedure caused and two doctors "were having a pissing contest over who gave him the better drug," she said.
"Michael had a very low pain tolerance, and his fear of pain was incredible," Rowe testified. "And I think that doctors took advantage of him that way."
Rowe said many of the doctors who treated Jackson were "idiots," including the dermatologist she worked for from 1979 until she quit in 1996 before she married Jackson.
"Michael respected doctors immensely, that they went to school, that they studied ... to do no harm," Rowe said. "Unfortunately, some of the doctors decided that when Michael was in pain or something that they would try to outbid on who could give him the better drug, and so he listened to those doctors."
Metzger tailored a plan to help Jackson withdraw from dependence on demerol, a powerful painkiller given him because of the scalp pain, she said. That plan, however, was derailed when Jackson resumed traveling on his "Dangerous" tour, she said.
After six weeks, when the tour reached Mexico City (in autumn 1993), Jackson was "a hot mess," she said.
"He was depressed," she said. "He had taken something. I don't know what he had taken or who he had got it from."
After a three-day argument with Jackson, Rowe said, she convinced him to end his tour early and enter a drug rehabilitation program.
"You need to straighten up," she said she told Jackson. "You need to face whatever it is that is going on and we'll get through this."
Jackson eventually announced publicly that he was entering a rehab program to deal with an addiction to prescription drugs.
Rowe said Jackson's drug use was not a secret among people in the "Dangerous" tour production. AEG Live Co-CEO Paul Gongaware, who was the over the "This Is It" production when Jackson died, was also tour manager for the "Dangerous" tour.
One revelation from Rowe was that a Beverly Hills plastic surgeon faked doing a procedure on Jackson on two occasions, although he told the singer he had done it. Jackson complained about painful scars in his nose and went to Dr. Steven Hoefflin to inject them with collagen, she said.
"He put Michael out and didn't do anything but put tape on him as if he had treated him," Rowe testified. The doctor told her he did that because he could not find the scars Jackson thought were there.
Thursday is the 70th day of testimony in the trial, which the judge told jurors would likely be given to them for deliberations in late September.
 
Ex-wife says Jackson wasn't doctor shopping
By ANTHONY McCARTNEY, AP Entertainment Writer

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Michael Jackson's frequent medical visits were tied to legitimate procedures and he was not doctor-shopping when he received treatments involving powerful pain medications in the 1980s and 1990s, his ex-wife told a jury on Thursday.

Testifying during a negligence lawsuit filed by Jackson's mother, Debbie Rowe said the singer was treated for scars he sustained when his scalp was burned in a commercial shoot and for the skin-lightening disease vitiligo.

Rowe, clutching a tissue and breaking down at times, described Jackson as being in debilitating pain throughout the nearly 20 years that she knew him. She said her husband trusted his doctors and depended on them to give him proper medications.

Jackson wouldn't specifically demand certain medications but had an intense fear of pain caused by procedures to try to repair his scalp, she said.

"When it came to the pain ... it was more begging for relief than anything," Rowe said. "He respected doctors so he wouldn't question what they were doing."

Rowe is the mother of the singer's two oldest children, Prince and Paris Jackson. She and the pop star were married from 1996 to 1999.

She is testifying in a case filed against AEG Live LLC, the promoter of Jackson's ill-fated "This Is It" comeback concerts.

Rowe hugged Katherine Jackson and held her hand during a break in testimony. Rowe was called to the witness stand by AEG Live attorneys but told the jury on Wednesday that she was not testifying for either side and wouldn't have come to court if she hadn't received a subpoena.

Jackson's scalp was badly burned when his hair caught on fire while filming a 1984 Pepsi commercial. The injuries left his scalp with painful scarring that required surgeries and injections of medications to try to lessen the pain and repair the damage.

Rowe said the injuries as well as the effects of vitiligo left Jackson feeling like he was disfigured.

Katherine Jackson claims in her lawsuit that AEG Live failed to properly investigate the doctor later convicted of giving her son an overdose of the anesthetic propofol while he prepared for a series of comeback shows in 2009.

AEG denies it hired Conrad Murray or bears any responsibility for the singer's death.

Marvin S. Putnam, the company's lead defense attorney, said in opening statements that the case was about Jackson's personal choices and his desire to use propofol as a sleep aid.
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 70 - August 15 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

CNN update

Debbie Rowe: Paris Jackson 'has no life' since father's death
By Alan Duke, CNN
updated 3:22 PM EDT, Thu August 15, 2013
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
NEW: "I almost lost my daughter!" Debbie Rowe testifies
Ex-wife describes Michael Jackson's skin problems, pains and drug use
"Everyone says he bleached himself, but he didn't," Debbie Rowe says
Doctors had "a pissing contest" over who could give Jackson "the better drug," she says

Los Angeles (CNN) -- The mother of Michael Jackson's two oldest children broke down in tears when she was asked to describe the impact of the singer's death on his daughter Paris.
"Their father is dead," Debbie Rowe responded. "I almost lost my daughter! She is devastated. She tried to kill herself. She is devastated. She has no life. She doesn't feel she has a life anymore."
Paris, 15, attempted suicide in early June and is still being treated in a facility for her emotional problems.
Jurors sitting for a 70th day of testimony in the wrongful death trial of Jackson's last concert promoter have laughed loudly at time during colorful testimony of Rowe, who alternated between tears and jokes.
When she and Jackson divorced after their three-year marriage in 1999, the singer "got custody of the doctors," she joked Wednesday.
Rowe returned to the witness stand Thursday for a second day of testimony in the small Los Angeles courtroom. She was ordered to testify about the singer's drug use by lawyers for AEG Live, the concert promoter being sued by Jackson's mother and three children.
Wednesday's questioning by AEG Live lawyer Marvin Putnam centered on Jackson's use of prescription drugs -- to deal with pain from scalp surgery, and two times in Germany, where doctors used the surgical anesthetic propofol to treat his insomnia.
Thursday's testimony, however, began with Rowe's description of Jackson's skin problems, which included vitiligo -- a condition in which his pigment disappeared, leaving large white spots on his face, hands and body.
"Everyone says he bleached himself, but he didn't," Rowe said. Many of his visits to Dr. Arnold Klein, the Beverly Hills dermatologist where she worked for 18 years as a medical assistant, were to treat the condition, she testified.
Jackson compared himself to the "Elephant Man," a 19th-century Englishman who became a circus sideshow curiosity because of severe disfigurements, she said.
"He was worried that people would see the disease or the disfigurement before they would see him working sometimes," Rowe testified.
He also suffered from discoid lupus, which made his skin tissue "mushy," especially on his scalp, she said. Jackson's scalp was severely burned during a pyrotechnics accident while he was filming a Pepsi commercial in 1984.
MJ's insomnia struggle
Two German doctors treated Jackson's insomnia with propofol 12 years before he died from an overdose of the surgical anesthetic, Rowe testified Wednesday.
Dr. Allen Metzger -- Jackson's general practitioner in the United States -- arranged for the German anesthesiologists to infuse the singer with propofol in a Munich hotel in July 1997 after sedatives failed to help him sleep between concerts, Rowe testified.
"I think they tried it and it hadn't worked, and if he couldn't sleep, he couldn't perform," she testified. Jackson "was at the end of his rope; he didn't know what else to do."
He "felt better" after eight hours of propofol-induced sleep and decided to get a second treatment after his second Munich show, she said.
Metzger testified at the criminal trial of Dr. Conrad Murray that he was never involved in propofol treatments for Jackson and was not aware of the drug until much later.
Rowe backed away from her previous statement during a deposition, in which she said doctors also gave Jackson propofol infusions in hotels in France during the HIStory tour, in the late 1990s.
AEG Live contends that Jackson used propofol for years to treat his insomnia, including when Rowe was traveling with him in Europe in the 1990s.
The coroner ruled Jackson died on June 25, 2009, from a propofol overdose administered by Murray, who is serving a prison sentence for involuntary manslaughter.
AEG Live executives, who were promoting and producing Jackson's comeback concerts, had no way of knowing that Murray was infusing him with propofol each night for two months in the spring of 2009, AEG lawyer Marvin Putnam said in his opening statements 16 weeks ago.
"Almost no one knew until after his death," Putnam said. "AEG Live certainly didn't know about it."
The Jackson family's lawyers contend that the promoters ignored warning signs that Jackson's health was deteriorating in the two months before his death. Instead of getting him to another doctor who might have saved his life, they gave Murray the responsibility of getting Jackson to rehearsals, they argue.
Michael Jackson's mother, Katherine Jackson, and three of her children contend AEG Live is liable in his death because it negligently hired, retained or supervised Murray. The company's agreement to pay Murray $150,000 a month put the doctor in a conflict of interest because he was in deep debt and could not risk losing the job by refusing Jackson's demands for propofol, their lawyers contend.
AEG Live argues that while its executives negotiated with Murray to serve as Jackson's physician for the "This Is It" tour, it was Jackson who chose and controlled the doctor.
"Getting a grip' on MJ's pain
Jackson underwent surgery in 1993 to repair burns suffered in the 1984 accident, including placement of a balloon under his scalp to stretch it over several months, Rowe testified.
His doctors "couldn't get a grip of the pain" the procedure caused and two doctors "were having a pissing contest over who gave him the better drug," she said.
"Michael had a very low pain tolerance, and his fear of pain was incredible," Rowe testified. "And I think that doctors took advantage of him that way."
Rowe said many of the doctors who treated Jackson were "idiots," including the dermatologist she worked for from 1979 until she quit in 1996 before she married Jackson.
"Michael respected doctors immensely, that they went to school, that they studied ... to do no harm," Rowe said. "Unfortunately, some of the doctors decided that when Michael was in pain or something that they would try to outbid on who could give him the better drug, and so he listened to those doctors."
Metzger tailored a plan to help Jackson withdraw from dependence on demerol, a powerful painkiller given him because of the scalp pain, she said. That plan, however, was derailed when Jackson resumed traveling on his "Dangerous" tour, she said.
After six weeks, when the tour reached Mexico City (in autumn 1993), Jackson was "a hot mess," she said.
"He was depressed," she said. "He had taken something. I don't know what he had taken or who he had got it from."
After a three-day argument with Jackson, Rowe said, she convinced him to end his tour early and enter a drug rehabilitation program.
"You need to straighten up," she said she told Jackson. "You need to face whatever it is that is going on and we'll get through this."
Jackson eventually announced publicly that he was entering a rehab program to deal with an addiction to prescription drugs.
Rowe said Jackson's drug use was not a secret among people in the "Dangerous" tour production. AEG Live Co-CEO Paul Gongaware, who was the over the "This Is It" production when Jackson died, was also tour manager for the "Dangerous" tour.
One revelation from Rowe was that a Beverly Hills plastic surgeon faked doing a procedure on Jackson on two occasions, although he told the singer he had done it. Jackson complained about painful scars in his nose and went to Dr. Steven Hoefflin to inject them with collagen, she said.
"He put Michael out and didn't do anything but put tape on him as if he had treated him," Rowe testified. The doctor told her he did that because he could not find the scars Jackson thought were there.
Thursday is the 70th day of testimony in the trial, which the judge told jurors would likely be given to them for deliberations in late September.
 
Debbie Rowe: Jackson felt like Elephant Man, chose to 'depigment' skin

By Kate Mather and Jeff Gottlieb
August 15, 2013, 12:52 p.m.
Michael Jackson’s ex-wife Debbie Rowe returned to the witness stand Thursday, crying as she described the singer “begging for relief” from medical issues and treatments she said were “horribly painful.”

It was the second day of testimony for Rowe, who married Jackson in 1996, and is the mother of his two oldest children. They divorced a few years later. Rowe met the singer while she was working for Beverly Hills dermatologist Dr. Arnold Klein.

Rowe said she was designated to help Jackson through the procedures, and the two formed a friendship. She would accompany him to other procedures with other doctors, she said, because “he knew that I would look out for him."

Rowe offered perhaps the most detailed public recital of Jackson’s medical ailments, saying he suffered from vitiligo, discoid lupus and keloids from serious burns on his scalp sustained during the 1984 filming of a Pepsi commercial.

The conditions, Rowe testified, would be difficult on their own for anyone. For Jackson, she said, it was worse.

“He’s very shy. For him to have all this going on and to be in public, it was really really difficult for him,” she said.

The singer was embarrassed of his skin conditions, she said, and compared himself to the Elephant Man.

Jackson’s vitiligo — where skin loses pigment in patches — “would come and go,” Rowe said, but grew progressively worse. He made a decision to “depigment” his skin because he couldn’t find decent makeup, she said.

“Everybody says he bleached himself, which he didn’t,” she said.

The keloids, she said, were dense, bumpy scars that went from the middle of Jackson’s scalp back to the crown of his head. Klein and other doctors would inject cortisone into the tissue to soften the scars — a procedure Rowe said was “horribly painful.”

“You could hear the skin popping when the medication went in,” she said.

Ultimately, she said, doctors looked to insert a “tissue expander” to expand what healthy skin was left on the singer’s head. A flap was filled with saline every seven to 10 days to stretch the skin, she said, again describing the treatment as “brutally painful.”

Jackson was very fearful of pain, she said, noting he was afraid of needles and that she “always” held his hand. The pain would be so intense, she said, he would suffer “blind migraines,” get cold sweats and grow pale.

“He couldn’t do anything,” Rowe said.

But, Rowe said, she never saw Jackson “doctor shop” in order to get more pain medications. He was very trusting of doctors and “very loyal” to his own, she said.

“He said, ‘They take the oath. Do no harm,’” Rowe testified.

Rowe testified Wednesday that she believed some of his doctors “took advantage” of his low pain tolerance and fear of pain.

“The very rich, very poor and the very famous get the worst medical care,” she said Thursday. “The very rich can buy it, the very poor can’t get any and the very famous can dictate it.”

When asked if she thought Jackson dictated his medical care to his own doctors, Rowe said, “When it came to pain, I wouldn’t say it was dictating. I would say it was more begging for relief.”

“He respected doctors and wouldn’t question what they were doing,” she said.

Rowe was called as a witness by AEG Live in the suit filed by Jackson's mother and three children. The Jacksons say that AEG negligently hired and supervised Conrad Murray, the cardiologist who administered the fatal dose of propofol to Jackson in June 2009 as he was rehearsing for a 50-concert comeback in London. AEG says that the singer hired Murray and that any money the company was supposed to pay the doctor was an advance to Jackson.

The jury seemed to hang on every word of Rowe's testimony, which included the singer's medical conditions, and the time they were watching "To Kill a Mockingbird" and called Gregory Peck with a question about the movie he had starred in.

She spoke of his concerts, which she described as “amazing,” and watching them from a seat on stage.

“I would see him and I would think, is this Michael Jackson? Michael Jackson was my friend before he was anything else,” she said. “I saw him, and I would say, ‘Oh my God, I know him.’ … And I would think, 'I’m so flipping lucky.’”

When court broke mid-morning, Rowe hugged Michael's mother, Katherine Jackson, and both were crying.

“You taking care of her?" Rowe said to Jackson's nephew Trent, who has accompanied her to the trial.

“I don’t want to have to beat you up, Trent," she joked. "I can take you.”
 
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Jackson's ex-wife says med visits concerned her
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ANTHONY McCARTNEY 1 minute ago

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Michael Jackson's ex-wife acknowledged Thursday that she was concerned that some of his frequent medical visits were motivated more by a desire for drugs than by the treatments he received.


Debbie Rowe testified during the trial of a lawsuit that she told Jackson about her concerns when he would go to his longtime dermatologist more than once a week in the 1980s and early 1990s.


Rowe worked in the office of the dermatologist, Dr. Arnold Klein.


"I didn't understand why he would come in twice in one week," Rowe said, adding that she was concerned he might be in search of drugs rather than treatments for blemishes with collagen injections. "I didn't necessarily see what he wanted to have done."


Rowe has offered a conflicting portrait of Jackson's medical treatments during her testimony, saying earlier that she never saw him engage in doctor shopping or request specific pain medications. She said many of the visits were legitimately tied to treatments for the skin-lightening condition vitiligo and scars he sustained after being burned during a Pepsi commercial shoot.


Rowe, clutching a tissue and breaking down at times, described Jackson as suffering debilitating pain throughout the nearly 20 years that the pair were close friends. She said her husband trusted his doctors and depended on them to give him proper medications.


"When it came to the pain ... it was more begging for relief than anything," Rowe said. "He respected doctors so he wouldn't question what they were doing."


Rowe is the mother of the singer's two oldest children, Prince and Paris Jackson. She and the pop star were married from 1996 to 1999.


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Debbie Rowe, Michael Jackson's former wife and mother of two of his children, leaves Los Angeles Cou …
She is testifying in a lawsuit filed by Jackson's mother against AEG Live LLC, the promoter of Jackson's ill-fated "This Is It" comeback concerts.


Rowe hugged Katherine Jackson and held her hand during a break in testimony. Rowe was called to the witness stand by AEG Live attorneys but told the jury on Wednesday that she was not testifying for either side and wouldn't have come to court if she hadn't received a subpoena.


Jackson's scalp was badly burned when his hair caught on fire while filming a 1984 Pepsi commercial. The injuries left his scalp with painful scarring that required surgeries and injections of medications to try to lessen the pain and repair the damage.


Rowe said the injuries as well as the effects of vitiligo left Jackson feeling like he was disfigured. The singer was forced to wear wigs and de-pigment his skin and struggled to deal with the effects while in the public eye.


On another matter, Rowe said Jackson was devastated by his divorce from Lisa Marie Presley and because he didn't have any children. Rowe said she told him they should have a baby together.


By that time, she and Jackson had been friends for more than a decade, with Rowe holding the singer's hand as he received injections for numerous medical procedures and talking with him several times a week.


"I wanted him to be a father," she said. "I wanted him to have everything he didn't have growing up. I wanted him to experience it with his own child, with his own children."


Rowe broke down when describing her recent relationship with her daughter Paris. She said she had been in daily touch with the teen until she had to be hospitalized on June 5, when paramedics were summoned to the Jackson family home in Calabasas. Paris, 15, took Motrin pills and cut her arm with a kitchen knife, according to emergency dispatchers.


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FILE - In this April 28, 1996 file photo shows pop singer Michael Jackson, left, and his wife Debbie …
Rowe was asked how Jackson's death had affected his only daughter.


"She is devastated," Rowe said. "She tried to kill herself. She is devastated. She has no life. She doesn't feel she has a life anymore."


Jackson family representatives have not provided an update or publicly classified her hospitalization as a suicide attempt. Jurors have heard from her older brother, Prince, but have only seen Paris through a couple clips of her deposition and have heard references to her struggling with her father's death.


Katherine Jackson claims in her lawsuit that AEG Live failed to properly investigate the doctor later convicted of giving her son an overdose of the anesthetic propofol while he prepared for a series of comeback shows in 2009.


AEG denies it hired Conrad Murray or bears any responsibility for the singer's death.


Marvin S. Putnam, the company's lead defense attorney, said in opening statements that the case was about Jackson's personal choices and his desire to use propofol as a sleep aid.


___


Anthony McCartney can be reached at http://twitter.com/mccartneyAP
 
Jackson's ex-wife says med visits concerned her
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Debbie Rowe, Michael Jackson's former wife and mother of two of his children, leaves Los Angeles County Superior Court after testifying in the negligence lawsuit filed by Jackson’s mother, Katherine Jackson, against AEG Live, Wednesday, Aug. 14, 2013, in Los Angeles. Rowe broke into tears when she took the witness stand in the civil case and described the singer’s fear of pain and reliance on physicians. She said the pop star trusted doctors to prescribe pain medication to him, but they sometimes tried to outdo each other while losing sight of Jackson’s care. (AP Photo/Nick Ut).
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Associated Press ANTHONY McCARTNEY 4 minutes ago
Debbie Rowe

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Michael Jackson's ex-wife acknowledged Thursday that she was concerned that some of his frequent medical visits were motivated more by a desire for drugs than by the treatments he received.

Debbie Rowe testified during the trial of a lawsuit that she told Jackson about her concerns when he would go to his longtime dermatologist more than once a week in the 1980s and early 1990s.

Rowe worked in the office of the dermatologist, Dr. Arnold Klein.

"I didn't understand why he would come in twice in one week," Rowe said, adding that she was concerned he might be in search of drugs rather than treatments for blemishes with collagen injections. "I didn't necessarily see what he wanted to have done."

Rowe has offered a conflicting portrait of Jackson's medical treatments during her testimony, saying earlier that she never saw him engage in doctor shopping or request specific pain medications. She said many of the visits were legitimately tied to treatments for the skin-lightening condition vitiligo and scars he sustained after being burned during a Pepsi commercial shoot.

Rowe, clutching a tissue and breaking down at times, described Jackson as suffering debilitating pain throughout the nearly 20 years that the pair were close friends. She said her husband trusted his doctors and depended on them to give him proper medications.

"When it came to the pain ... it was more begging for relief than anything," Rowe said. "He respected doctors so he wouldn't question what they were doing."

Rowe is the mother of the singer's two oldest children, Prince and Paris Jackson. She and the pop star were married from 1996 to 1999.

View gallery."Debbie Rowe, Michael Jackson's former wife and mother …
Debbie Rowe, Michael Jackson's former wife and mother of two of his children, leaves Los Angeles Cou …
She is testifying in a lawsuit filed by Jackson's mother against AEG Live LLC, the promoter of Jackson's ill-fated "This Is It" comeback concerts.

Rowe hugged Katherine Jackson and held her hand during a break in testimony. Rowe was called to the witness stand by AEG Live attorneys but told the jury on Wednesday that she was not testifying for either side and wouldn't have come to court if she hadn't received a subpoena.

Jackson's scalp was badly burned when his hair caught on fire while filming a 1984 Pepsi commercial. The injuries left his scalp with painful scarring that required surgeries and injections of medications to try to lessen the pain and repair the damage.

Rowe said the injuries as well as the effects of vitiligo left Jackson feeling like he was disfigured. The singer was forced to wear wigs and de-pigment his skin and struggled to deal with the effects while in the public eye.

On another matter, Rowe said Jackson was devastated by his divorce from Lisa Marie Presley and because he didn't have any children. Rowe said she told him they should have a baby together.

By that time, she and Jackson had been friends for more than a decade, with Rowe holding the singer's hand as he received injections for numerous medical procedures and talking with him several times a week.

"I wanted him to be a father," she said. "I wanted him to have everything he didn't have growing up. I wanted him to experience it with his own child, with his own children."

Rowe broke down when describing her recent relationship with her daughter Paris. She said she had been in daily touch with the teen until she had to be hospitalized on June 5, when paramedics were summoned to the Jackson family home in Calabasas. Paris, 15, took Motrin pills and cut her arm with a kitchen knife, according to emergency dispatchers.

View gallery."FILE - In this April 28, 1996 file photo shows pop …
FILE - In this April 28, 1996 file photo shows pop singer Michael Jackson, left, and his wife Debbie …
Rowe was asked how Jackson's death had affected his only daughter.

"She is devastated," Rowe said. "She tried to kill herself. She is devastated. She has no life. She doesn't feel she has a life anymore."

Jackson family representatives have not provided an update or publicly classified her hospitalization as a suicide attempt. Jurors have heard from her older brother, Prince, but have only seen Paris through a couple clips of her deposition and have heard references to her struggling with her father's death.

Katherine Jackson claims in her lawsuit that AEG Live failed to properly investigate the doctor later convicted of giving her son an overdose of the anesthetic propofol while he prepared for a series of comeback shows in 2009.

AEG denies it hired Conrad Murray or bears any responsibility for the singer's death.

Marvin S. Putnam, the company's lead defense attorney, said in opening statements that the case was about Jackson's personal choices and his desire to use propofol as a sleep aid.
 
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