Katherine Jackson - AEG lawsuit : NEWS Only (No discussion)

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Jackson witness: Answer to health was 'Get him a bucket of chicken'

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Michael Jackson announces several concerts at the London O2 Arena during a 2009 press conference. (Joel Ryan / AP / March 5, 2009)
By Corina Knoll
May 10, 2013, 3:01 p.m.
Michael Jackson’s makeup artist testified Friday that although the singer once asked her if she had painkillers, she never broached the subject of his addiction with him.

Karen Faye said that during Jackson’s 2005 molestation trial in Santa Maria she would spend a lot of time with the performer, arriving at 3 a.m. to help him get ready, and felt it was not appropriate to confront him about his misuse of prescription drugs.

“I was a place of safety for him, and peace,” Faye said. “And I didn’t want to bring up the allegations in my time with him. I wanted that to be a really safe place.”

PHOTOS: Michael Jackson | 1958-2009

Faye said it was her duty as Jackson’s longtime friend to keep him calm before he had to go to court.

“And no matter what he was doing, I could never blame him for that because of the pain,” Faye said, referring to the singer’s psychological pain over the charges as well as his physical pain from suffering injuries from a fire and a fall during a performance.

The makeup artist said she never saw Jackson use drugs and that there was only one instance when the singer asked her if she had painkillers.

Faye said she did request prescriptions in her name for Latisse, which is used to lengthen eyelashes, and the hair-growth drug Propecia so that she could give them to Jackson. She also inquired about Botox as a way to remedy Jackson’s onstage sweat that often caused problems with his hair extensions, but said she ultimately did not get that drug.

Since being hired to do Jackson's hair and makeup for his “Thriller” album cover, Faye said she worked with the pop star for nearly three decades, helping ready the star when he taped the 1993 statement about his decision to enter rehab following the Dangerous World Tour.

An audio recording of that announcement was played in court:

“My friends and doctors advised me to seek professional guidance immediately in order to eliminate what has become an addiction" Jackson said. "It is time for me to acknowledge my need for treatment in order to regain my health. I realize that completing the tour is no longer possible and I must cancel the remaining dates. I know I can overcome the problem and will be stronger from the experience.”

Now at the close of its second week, the civil trial pits AEG against Jackson’s mother and three children, who accuse the concert promoter of negligently hiring and controlling Conrad Murray. The doctor administered a fatal dose of propofol to Jackson in 2009 and is now serving jail time for involuntary manslaughter.

Jackson’s mother, Katherine Jackson, who has been steadily attending the trial, was absent Friday.

Faye said she sometimes spoke about Jackson’s addiction with his siblings, Rebbie, Randy and LaToya. It was her understanding, she said, that the family had attempted additional interventions with Jackson that were unsuccessful.

The makeup artist said she parted ways with Jackson during the HIStory World Tour due to problems with the tour manager as well as with Debbie Rowe, Jackson’s wife at the time.

“[Debbie] told me that she was jealous of me being there as Michael’s makeup artist,” Faye said. “She thought that Michael liked me better than her.”

After a few years, Faye said she returned to working with Jackson and that Rowe apologized.

Hired for Jackson’s comeback concert series “This Is It,” Faye said she was worried about the singer’s frail body and alerted his manager Frank DiLeo.

“[Frank] was saying pretty much, 'I got it under control, don’t worry about it,’” Faye said.

“I said, 'But he’s losing weight rapidly.' … I said, 'Why don’t you ask [costume designer] Michael Bush to verify taking in his pants and how much weight he’s actually losing?’”

Faye said DiLeo went to speak to Bush and she overheard the manager say, “Get him a bucket of chicken.”

“It was such a cold response,” Faye said. “I mean, it broke my heart.”

Kevin Boyle, an attorney for the Jacksons, said plaintiffs have a court order for emails DiLeo wrote during preparation for “This Is It” but were informed by AEG’s attorneys that the manager’s computer had disappeared.

An attorney who previously worked with DiLeo -- who died in 2011 -- has copies of those emails and is willing to turn them over, Boyle said. Plaintiffs believe that the emails could include exchanges between DiLeo and AEG executives.

Despite emotional testimony from Faye, who at times clenched a tissue and wiped her eyes, the overall mood in the courtroom was kept light by her frequent quips.

During cross-examination, she sighed at questions and told AEG attorney Marvin Putnam, “I’m 60 years old, sir, and you’re talking about a 30-year span, I’m going to do the best I can. ... How old are you, sir?”

After jurors and observers laughed, Faye asked slyly, “Is that hearsay?” referring to multiple hearsay objections AEG.

“You go girl,” said one fan in the courtroom who gave her the thumbs-up sign.

Later, when an AEG attorney interrupted a line of questioning, Faye said, “Oh my god, are we objecting? Sidebar?”

When Putnam brought up Faye’s Twitter account and blog and asked her if she had posted unfavorable things about AEG, she stood firm.

“I’ve stated the truth as far as my experience,” she said.

Before court started Friday, Faye had tweeted to her 12,600 followers: “Another difficult day. Thank you for all the love and support. Michael’s fans are forever on his side and the side of Truth…LET’S DANCE.”

The trial ended for the day at noon to give jurors a break from testimony that is expected to take four months.

On Monday, AEG attorneys are expected to call their first witnesses, choreographers Stacy Walker and Travis Payne.

Because the two must leave for a show in Tokyo, Judge Yvette Palazuelos has allowed the defense to call them early. Faye will return afterward.
 
Former Michael Jackson Hairstylist Testifies About His Painkiller Use
(CNS) Posted Friday, May 10 – 3:23 PM

A hair stylist and makeup artist who worked for 27 years with Michael Jackson testified today that she told a drug therapist after the pop star’s “Dangerous” tour in the early 1990s that she worried that his use of pain killers could be fatal.

Taking the stand for the second day on behalf of the plaintiffs in the trial of the negligence and wrongful death lawsuit that Jackson’s mother brought against entertainment giant AEG Live, Karen Faye said under cross- examination by defense attorney Marvin Putnam that Jackson went into a rehab program in England that was recommended by Elizabeth Taylor.

“I said I was afraid Michael could die,” Faye said in recalling different stages of the “Dangerous” tour. “Personally, there were times when he was OK and times when I was worried.” Faye said on Thursday that Jackson stumbled in his dressing room during a stop in Singapore on the “Dangerous” tour. She said he was taking medication after surgery for scalp reduction to try and remove a bald spot left over from burns he received when special effects went awry in the 1984 filming of a Pepsi commercial. Faye also testified on Thursday that Debbie Rowe, then the nurse for Jackson dermatologist Dr. Arnold Klein, was present during the “Dangerous” tour with a bag of medications. Jackson would later marry and divorce Rowe. The couple had two children. In other testimony today, Faye said she expressed her drug abuse concerns about Jackson’s health with his oldest sister, Rebbie Jackson, after the woman reached out to her requesting information about the singer. Faye said she could not recall the time period when the conversation occurred.

She said she also had more abbreviated discussions about the same topic with another two of the singer’s other siblings, LaToya Jackson and Randy Jackson.

Faye said that in later years Jackson’s family members unsuccessfully tried to get him to return to rehab.

“I never knew them to be successful, sir,” Faye told Putnam. “I’m sure they were trying to help him in any way the could.”

Faye said she did not discuss Jackson’s drug problem with him personally.

“I just avoided that issue like the plague, sir, the molestation and the drug areas,” she told Putnam today.

Asked by Putnam if Jackson ever sought drugs from her, Faye replied affirmatively.

“He asked me one time if I had pain killers,” Faye said. “I said no, I didn’t.”

Faye said she also became concerned during Jackson’s 2005 trial and acquittal on molestation charges that he was using drugs again, saying she based her assumptions on his appearance and his demeanor. She said she got up early every morning to get Jackson ready for court.

She said Jackson told her he had extreme back pain, in large part because of a 1999 concert accident in Munich when a bridge prop on which he was standing unexpectedly descended into the orchestra pit. She said he was hospitalized for part of the molestation trial because of the back pain that likely dated from the Munich accident.

She said she decided again to avoid confronting Jackson about possible drug abuse.

“It was my job and my duty as a friend to make that time … calm and peaceful,” Faye said. “I didn’t want to confront him with anything. No matter what he was doing, I could never blame him for that because of the pain.”

AEG Live attorneys maintain that Jackson hired Dr. Conrad Murray in 2006 as his personal physician and chose him to be his doctor during his “This Is It Tour.” Jackson was rehearsing for 50 sold-out tour dates in London at the time of his death on June 25, 2009 at age 50.

Lawyers for 82-year-old Katherine Jackson, who filed the lawsuit in 2010 on behalf of herself and her son’s children, allege that AEG Live hired Murray and failed to supervise him properly.

Murray was convicted in 2011 of involuntary manslaughter for giving the singer the anesthetic propofol as a sleep aid and was sentenced to four years in jail.

http://bhcourier.com/michael-jackson-hairstylist-testifies-painkiller/2013/05/10
 
Michael Jackson's makeup artist cross-examined in wrongful death lawsuit
Friday, May 10, 2013

TAGS:legal, court case, celebrity, michael jackson, entertainment, miriam hernandez
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Miriam Hernandez
More: Bio, Recent Stories, News Team
LOS ANGELES (KABC) -- Michael Jackson's former makeup artist testified about Jackson's drug use at the singer's wrongful-death trial Friday.

In the courtroom Friday, dueling attorneys showed jurors two versions of a 1999 clip of Michael Jackson in concert.

Attorneys for Katherine Jackson, Michael's mother, assert that a mishap injured Michael's back and sent him into a cycle of dependency on painkillers. A longer view from the defense for AEG showed what happened later: Jackson never flinched while finishing the song.

Among the questions for the jury in the case brought against AEG by Katherine Jackson: How much did AEG managers know about Jackson's early abuse of medications? And were they negligent 10 years later for hiring a doctor who secretly administered to Jackson the surgical sedative propofol, which caused Jackson's death?

Karen Faye, Jackson's former makeup artist, testified Friday. Faye described how Jackson's health had changed over 27 years. She said that his legs, once muscular, were thin, and his face was skeletal. She said that Jackson was not strong enough for the rigorous concert schedule set by AEG.

She recounted an alarming moment with Jackson's costume designer, who was fitting him. She testified that he said to her, "Oh my God, I could see Michael's heart beating through his skin." The response, Faye says she overheard from Jackson's manager, Frank Dileo: "Get him a bucket of chicken." Faye wept.

"It was such a cold response. It broke my heart," Faye said.

Faye recounted multiple incidents that she says alarmed her about Jackson's use of painkillers from the time he was burned during the filming of a Pepsi commercial, to the stress of his criminal trial on molestation charges, to the day at rehearsal before he died.

Yet under cross-examination, Faye said she never had a single conversation with Jackson about his drug use, and that there was a period of time after Jackson went through rehab in 1993 that he seemed to be fine.

Faye said she had one discussion with Jackson family members who wanted to get him help, but that Michael would not cooperate.

Testimony resumes Monday with a staffer who worked on Jackson's final production, and the coroner who performed Jackson's autopsy.

(Copyright ©2013 KABC-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.)
 
Jacksons vs AEG - Day 10 - May 13 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

Jacksons vs AEG - Day 10 - May 13 2013 - News Only (no discussion)


Use this thread to post any and all news stories from day 10 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.

Don't post tweets or updates from fans on this thread.
 
Choreographer: No signs Jackson was ill in 2009
Associated PressBy ANTHONY McCARTNEY | Associated Press – 2 mins 12 secs ago




LOS ANGELES (AP) — An associate choreographer who worked on Michael Jackson's planned comeback concerts testified Monday that she didn't see any signs that the pop superstar was ill or might die in the final days of his life.


"I just never in a million years thought he would leave us, or pass away," Stacy Walker told jurors hearing a lawsuit filed by Jackson's mother against concert promoter AEG Live LLC. "It just never crossed my mind."


Walker, who is testifying for AEG, said Jackson appeared thinner than he had been in previous years and wore multiple layers of clothes while rehearing for his "This Is It" shows planned for London's O2 arena. She said despite Jackson missing multiple rehearsals, she was convinced based on his performances the last two days of his life that he was ready for the series of shows.


Previous witnesses have testified that Jackson was shivering and appeared unprepared.


Walker said she never saw any of that behavior, although she acknowledged that her job was to work with other dancers and not Jackson directly.


"I wasn't looking for things at the time," she said. "I wish I was."


Walker was the first witness called by AEG in a trial filed by Jackson's mother, Katherine, against the concert promoter. Her suit claims AEG didn't properly investigate the doctor convicted of involuntary manslaughter in Jackson's death and that its executives missed signs that the singer was unprepared for the "This Is It" shows.


AEG denies all wrongdoing, and contends Jackson hid struggles with addiction. Jackson died in June 2009 from an overdose of the anesthetic propofol, which he had been using as a sleep aid.


Walker was called to the witness stand Monday because she is slated to leave the country for work. The trial is expected to last several more weeks.


AEG is expected to call choreographer Travis Payne, who worked with Jackson directly in preparation for the "This Is It" shows, and tour director Kenny Ortega is also expected to testify.


Jurors last week heard from a dancer and also Jackson's longtime makeup artist, who testified that the singer appeared thin and at times unprepared for the concert tour.


___


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/choreographer...NhdANlbnRlcnRhaW5tZW50BHB0A3NlY3Rpb25z;_ylv=3
 
Anthony McCartney &#8207;<s style="text-decoration: none; color: rgb(187, 187, 187);">@</s>mccartneyAP<small class="time" style="font-size: 12px; color: rgb(187, 187, 187); position: relative; float: right; margin-top: 1px;">17m</small>
Here's an updated link on this morning's testimony in Jackson vs. AEG trial: http://yhoo.it/10EgPhM

Choreographer: No signs Jackson was ill in 2009
/ Updated

Associated PressBy ANTHONY McCARTNEY

LOS ANGELES (AP) &#8212; An associate choreographer who worked on Michael Jackson's planned comeback concerts testified Monday that she didn't see any signs that the pop superstar was ill or might die in the final days of his life.

"I just never in a million years thought he would leave us, or pass away," Stacy Walker told jurors hearing a lawsuit filed by Jackson's mother against concert promoter AEG Live LLC. "It just never crossed my mind."

Walker, who is testifying for AEG, said Jackson appeared thinner than he had been in previous years and wore multiple layers of clothes while rehearing for his "This Is It" shows planned for London's O2 arena. She said despite Jackson missing multiple rehearsals, she was convinced based on his performances the last two days of his life that he was ready for the series of shows.

Previous witnesses have testified that Jackson was shivering, had to be fed by others and appeared unprepared.
Walker said she never saw any of that behavior, although she acknowledged that her job was to work with other dancers and not Jackson directly.

"I wasn't looking for things at the time," she said. "I wish I was."

She said she attributed Jackson's multi-layered wardrobe to a personal preference. She said she recalled one incident in which Jackson may have appeared groggy or drugged, but she said she couldn't remember whether she witnessed or heard about it from others on the show.

Walker was the first witness called by AEG in a trial filed by Jackson's mother, Katherine, against the concert promoter. Her suit claims AEG didn't properly investigate the doctor convicted of involuntary manslaughter in Jackson's death and that its executives missed signs that the singer was unprepared for the "This Is It" shows.

AEG denies all wrongdoing, and contends Jackson hid his struggles with prescription drug addiction. Jackson died in June 2009 from an overdose of the anesthetic propofol, which he had been using as a sleep aid.

Walker, who worked with Jackson on three projects beginning in 1996, was called to the witness stand Monday because she is slated to leave the country for work. The trial is expected to last several more weeks.

AEG is expected to call choreographer Travis Payne, who worked with Jackson directly in preparation for the "This Is It" shows, and tour director Kenny Ortega is also expected to testify.

Jurors last week heard from a dancer and also Jackson's longtime makeup artist, who testified that the singer appeared thin and at times unprepared for the concert tour. Another dancer, Alif Sankey, told the panel she expressed concerns that Jackson might die and sent an email about his appearance to Ortega.

Emails presented during the trial so far have shown Ortega expressed concerns about Jackson's physical and mental wellbeing to AEG executives.

Anthony McCartney can be reached at http://twitter.com/mccartneyAP


Source:
http://news.yahoo.com/choreographer...NhdANlbnRlcnRhaW5tZW50BHB0A3NlY3Rpb25z;_ylv=3

 
Jackson pulled it together in final rehearsals, choreographer says

By Jeff Gottlieb
May 13, 2013, 12:09 p.m.

A choreographer on Michael Jackson's doomed "This Is It" concert series testified Monday she was frustrated the singer was missing rehearsals but that her concerns were swept away during the last two preparation sessions for his anticipated &#8220;This Is It&#8221; comeback concerts in London.

&#8220;I finally saw what I was looking to see,&#8221; said Stacy Walker.

Walker said she was so encouraged she told her mother to buy a ticket for opening night in London. "I was very excited and relieved and hopeful,&#8221; she testified.

The testimony, coming in the third week of a wrongful-death trial in downtown Los Angeles, followed earlier reports from witnesses who described Jackson as being in such feeble health that they doubted he could pull off the 50-concert series.

One witness, Jackson&#8217;s longtime makeup and hair artist, said she warned others that she believed the pop singer was dying.

Walker had worked as a dancer on Jackson's 40-minute video "Ghost" in the mid-1990s, a job that she said was the big break of her career, and toured with him.

She was associate choreographer on "This Is It," working mainly with the dancers. Choreographer Travis Payne, she said, would often rehearse with Jackson in another room or at his rented mansion.

Walker also testified that Jackson was much skinnier than he had been when she had worked with him previously.

Walker was the first witness to testify for Anschutz Entertainment Group, the promoter of the London concerts. Jackson's mother and children are suing AEG, saying the company hired and poorly supervised Conrad Murray, the tour doctor who administered Jackson a fatal dose of the anesthetic propofol in the final days before the concerts.

AEG says that Jackson wanted Murray with him and that any payments the company was supposed to make to the doctor were advances to the singer.

Walker testified out of turn because she will be out of town and not available when AEG presents its case.

She said she wasn't "shocked" Jackson was missing rehearsals. "I was irritated he wasn&#8217;t coming.&#8221;

http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-jackson-final-rehearsals-20130513,0,5701736.story
 
Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP1h
Court is about to resume. Deputy Medical Examiner Christopher Rogers is afternoon witness. Choreographer Travis Payne is in the courthouse.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP23m
Dr. Christopher Rogers just finished testifying. Choreographer Travis Payne is the next witness.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP30s
We're on an afternoon break. Choreographer Travis Payne has taken the stand and I'll address his testimony first.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP18s
Travis Payne took the witness stand and began explaining his experience. He tells the jury about working on tours, music videos, vid games.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP41s
Travis Payne worked on the &#8220;Michael Jackson Experience&#8221; video game. In the game, he taught players Jackson&#8217;s dance moves.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP32s
Payne first worked with Jackson on the &#8220;Remember the Time&#8221; film/music video. He was a dancer in the film.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP47s
Many witnesses have told jury that Jackson called his music videos films. Jackson treated them more like films than videos, they&#8217;ve said.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP1m
He then worked as a dancer and choreographer on Jackson&#8217;s &#8220;Dangerous&#8221; tour. By that point, he&#8217;d developed a rapport with Jackson.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP52s
He helped choreograph moves for Jackson&#8217;s song &#8220;Dangerous&#8221; and &#8220;Jam&#8221; on the &#8220;Dangerous&#8221; tour, Payne testified.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP1m
Payne says it was goal since being a child to be a dancer and work with Michael Jackson. The &#8220;Dangerous&#8221; tour was realization of that dream.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP1m
&#8220;On the &#8220;Dangerous&#8221; tour at that tour, I was really very ecstatic. I was working with my idol,&#8221; choreographer Travis Payne, on Jackson.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP1m
On the &#8220;HIStory&#8221; tour, Payne said Jackson rehearsed both with and without his backup dancers.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP1m
Payne worked privately with Jackson on &#8220;This Is It&#8221; rehearsals. He says he didn&#8217;t see any signs of drug abuse by Jackson at this time.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP1m
Travis Payne also worked with Jackson on &#8220;One Night Only&#8221; show that was canceled after incident in which Jackson fainted on stage.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP4m
Payne says dermatologist Dr. Arnold Klein and nurse Debbie Rowe were only medical professionals of Jackson&#8217;s that he met.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP4m
The choreographer also testifies that he never saw Jackson drink alcohol or take any medications. He says he saw no signs of addiction.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP3m
Here's the latest @AP story on Jackson vs AEG case, updated with coroner's testimony on singer's health: http://bit.ly/13VTM5u

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP2m
The following tweets reflect testimony from immediately after the lunch break in Jackson vs AEG case

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP2m
We&#8217;re on an afternoon break. Dr. Christopher Rogers just finished testifying. Choreographer Travis Payne is the next witness.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP3m
Dr. Christopher Rogers, a deputy medical examiner, began testifying last week, but was interrupted to take other witnesses.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP2m
Rogers testifies that he found no conditions during Michael Jackson&#8217;s autopsy that would affect his long-term survival. #JacksonTrial

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP2m
AEG lawyer Kathryn Cahan did the bulk of the afternoon questioning of Rogers. She focused on prescription drug aspect of Jackson&#8217;s death.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP2m
In response to a Cahan question, Rogers says Jackson&#8217;s death was considered a polypharmacy death. That means it involved multiple drugs.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP1m
Rogers noted that propofol was the main drug that killed Jackson, but told jury that other drugs (benzodiazepines) were present.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP1m
Cahan also asked Dr. Rogers whether he knew about other doctors treating Jackson before his death. Rogers says yes.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP2m
Rogers says he became aware that dermatologist Arnold Klein was treating Jackson.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP2m
Cahan also asked whether he ever concluded that any other doctors contributed to Jackson&#8217;s death. &#8220;I don&#8217;t believe so,&#8221; Roger said.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP2m
Cahan also asks about Jackson&#8217;s weight at the time of his death. He weighed 136 pounds, with a Body Mass Index of 20.1, Rogers tells jury.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP2m
Rogers testified that Michael Jackson&#8217;s Body Mass Index was within the normal range. A BMI figure below 18.5 would be underweight.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP2m
&#8220;He looked thin in comparison to most people,&#8221; Rogers said. He says Jackson did not appear emaciated. Says singer didn't appear emaciated.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP2m
Dr. Rogers said Jackson&#8217;s body didn&#8217;t have characteristics of someone who starved to death. Rogers said Jackson&#8217;s health appeared excellent.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP2m
There was more testimony about the condition of Jackson&#8217;s lungs, which were damaged in a way that might lead to pneumonia or other problems.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP2m
Rogers testified he was interested in role of prescription drugs in Jackson&#8217;s death based on finding propofol and other meds at the scene.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP2m
Dr. Rogers testified that propofol shouldn&#8217;t be given in a home setting, and when someone is sedated they need to be continuously monitored.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP2m
Rogers said he&#8217;s only worked one other propofol overdose case. That person was a medical professional, he said.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP2m
Plaintiff&#8217;s attorney Michael Koskoff asks Rogers about whether hospital treatments might have added weight to Jackson&#8217;s body

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP2m
Koskoff doesn&#8217;t state how much weight might have been added to Jackson based on IV treatements by paramedics, hospital staff.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP2m
Rogers did say that Jackson&#8217;s body had some fat, but that most of his weight appeared to be in the singer&#8217;s muscles.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP2m
Rogers testified that Jackson&#8217;s organs didn&#8217;t show any sign of lasting damage. With that, he&#8217;s done testifying.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP1m
That's it for updates from this break. Here's our latest story, I'll update at the end of the day: http://bit.ly/13VTM5u
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 10 - May 13 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

AP update

A medical examiner who conducted Jackson's autopsy testified Tuesday that Jackson was not underweight when he died and appeared to be in excellent health.

Despite testimony from some witnesses that Jackson appeared emaciated, Dr. Christopher Rogers said the singer did not bear the signs of someone who was starving when he died.

Walker, who worked with Jackson on three projects beginning in 1996, was called to the witness stand Monday because she is slated to leave the country for work. The trial is expected to last several more weeks.

AEG is also calling choreographer Travis Payne, who worked with Jackson directly in preparation for the "This Is It" shows, as a witness. Tour director Kenny Ortega is also expected to testify.

Jurors last week heard from a dancer and also Jackson's longtime makeup artist, who testified that the singer appeared thin and at times unprepared for the concert tour. Another dancer, Alif Sankey, told the panel she expressed concerns that Jackson might die and sent an email about his appearance to Ortega.

Emails presented during the trial so far have shown Ortega expressed concerns about Jackson's physical and mental wellbeing to AEG executives.
 
Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 1m
Payne will resume testifying in the morning. He has to wrap up by tomorrow, because Wednesday&#8217;s he leaving country for work.
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Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 1m
Payne said Jackson&#8217;s goal was to sing every song in &#8220;This Is It&#8221; live. Jackson had used vocal-assist tracks on previous shows, he said.
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Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 1m
AEG attorney Jessica Stebbins Bina asked Payne whether he thought Jackson could have finished &#8220;This Is It&#8221; show. Payne said yes.
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Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 1m
He also ate lunch with Jackson on many days. He said MJ&#8217;s appetite depended on the day.
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Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 1m
Payne was then asked about his one-on-one rehearsals with Jackson at the singer&#8217;s home. These were scheduled for 5 days a week.
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Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 1m
When Payne was describing the illuminated &#8220;Billie Jean&#8221; costume, he looked out into the audience and nodded at Katherine Jackson.
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Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 2m
Payne also shown an email in which he described a costume for &#8220;Billie Jean&#8221; in which the clothing material would light up.
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Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 2m
Jackson wanted a torch in the Italian Baroque design. Actually, he wanted two, in case one broke, Payne tells jury.
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Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 2m
Payne spent several minutes describing details of the &#8220;This Is It&#8221; show, including a torch and costume that would light up.
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Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 2m
Payne attended an April meeting at Michael Jackson&#8217;s home. Said he saw no signs of impairment, drug abuse by the singer.
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Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 3m
The choreographer said Jackson explained to him that having AEG would be a good thing for the &#8220;This Is It&#8221; shows.
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Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 3m
Payne testified &#8220;This Is It&#8221; would be different from Jackson&#8217;s previous tours. AEG would be a partner, not a sponsor.
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Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 3m
Travis Payne served as an associate director for the &#8220;This Is It&#8221; shows. He wouldn't be dancing in the concerts, he said.
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Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 3m
&#8220;I believe he missed performing. I believe he missed direct contact with his fans,&#8221; Travis Payne says about why Jackson wanted to tour.
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Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 4m
After mid-afternoon break, Payne resumed testifying about how he came to work with Jackson on &#8220;This Is It&#8221; preparations.
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Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 4m
Last story of the day on Jackson vs AEG Live trial. http://bit.ly/13VTM5u I'll post some additional updates shortly.
View summary
Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 24m
We're done for the day. Choreographer Travis Payne will be back on the witness stand tomorrow morning. Updates to come...
 
latest aP update

CHOREOGRAPHER: NO SIGNS JACKSON WAS ILL IN 2009
By ANTHONY McCARTNEY
&#8212; May. 13 7:56 PM EDT
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FILE - In this March 5, 2009 file photo, Michael Jackson announces several concerts at the London O2 Arena in July, at a press conference at the London O2 Arena. Stacy Walker, a choreographer who worked with Jackson in his ill-fated &#8220;This Is It&#8221; shows, told a civil jury in a Los Angeles courtroom on Monday May 13, 2013, that she did not see any signs that the singer was ill or might die in his final days and weeks. Walker is AEG&#8217;s first defense witness in a civil case filed by Jackson&#8217;s mother, Katherine Jackson, who claims the concert giant failed to properly investigate or supervise the doctor convicted in 2011 of causing the singer&#8217;s death. (AP Photo/Joel Ryan, file)


FILE - In this June 23, 2009 handout photo provided by AEG, pop star Michael Jackson rehearses at the Staples Center in Los Angeles. Stacy Walker, a choreographer who worked with Jackson in his ill-fated &#8220;This Is It&#8221; shows, told a civil jury in a Los Angeles courtroom on Monday May 13, 2013, that she did not see any signs that the singer was ill or might die in his final days and weeks. Walker is AEG&#8217;s first defense witness in a civil case filed by Jackson&#8217;s mother, Katherine Jackson, who claims the concert giant failed to properly investigate or supervise the doctor convicted in 2011 of causing the singer&#8217;s death. (AP Photo/ Kevin Mazur, AEG/Getty Images, file) ** MANDATORY CREDIT. NO SALES, ARCHIVE OUT **


FILE - In this Nov. 7, 2011 file photo, Michael Jackson's mother Katherine Jackson leaves the Criminal Justice Center after it was announced that Dr. Conrad Murray, Michael Jackson's physician when the pop star died in 2009, was found guilty of involuntary manslaughter, in Los Angeles. During the 2013 negligent hiring trial in Los Angeles between Michael Jackson's mother, Katherine Jackson, and concert giant AEG Live, Jackson's mother wants a jury to determine that the promoter of Jackson's planned comeback concerts didn't properly investigate Murray, who a criminal jury convicted of involuntary manslaughter for Jackson's June 2009 death. (AP Photo/Bret Hartman, File)
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LOS ANGELES (AP) &#8212; An associate choreographer who worked on Michael Jackson's planned comeback concerts testified Monday that she didn't see any signs that the pop superstar was ill or might die in the final days of his life.

"I just never in a million years thought he would leave us, or pass away," Stacy Walker told jurors hearing a lawsuit filed by Jackson's mother against concert promoter AEG Live LLC. "It just never crossed my mind."

Walker, who is testifying for AEG, said Jackson appeared thinner than he had been in previous years and wore multiple layers of clothes while rehearing for his "This Is It" shows planned for London's O2 arena. She said despite Jackson missing multiple rehearsals, she was convinced based on his performances the last two days of his life that he was ready for the series of shows.

Her testimony was supported by Travis Payne, an associate director on the "This Is It" concerts. Payne, who rehearsed one-on-one with Jackson and helped craft the creative vision for the show, said he never saw signs that Jackson was ill or impaired in early preparations.

"I thought he was thinner than he was in the past, but I didn't have any reason to be alarmed," Payne said.

He briefly discussed Jackson missing rehearsals, but has not yet addressed Jackson's appearance in his final days. Payne resumes testifying Tuesday.

Walker said she attributed Jackson's multilayered wardrobe to a personal preference. She said she recalled one incident in which Jackson may have appeared groggy or drugged, but she said she couldn't remember whether she witnessed or heard about it from others on the show.

Walker was the first witness called by AEG in a trial filed by Jackson's mother, Katherine, against the concert promoter. Her suit claims AEG didn't properly investigate the doctor convicted of involuntary manslaughter in Jackson's death and that its executives missed signs that the singer was unprepared for the comeback shows.

AEG denies all wrongdoing, and contends Jackson hid his struggles with prescription drug addiction. Jackson died in June 2009 from an overdose of the anesthetic propofol, which he had been using as a sleep aid.

Previous witnesses have testified that Jackson was shivering, had to be fed by others and appeared unprepared while preparing for the "This Is It" shows.

Walker said she never saw any of that behavior, although she acknowledged that her job was to work with other dancers and not Jackson directly.

"I wasn't looking for things at the time," she said. "I wish I was."

Payne, however, worked with Jackson individually almost every day for the last three months of the singer's life. He ate lunches with Jackson, saying the star's appetite varied daily. The "Thriller" singer was able to perform many of his familiar dance moves, although they had to be modified because the singer was 50 years old and not as limber as he had been decades earlier.

He said Jackson was tired for some of the sessions and that "some days would be better than others."

A medical examiner who conducted Jackson's autopsy testified Tuesday that Jackson was not underweight when he died and appeared to be in excellent health.

Despite testimony from some witnesses that Jackson appeared emaciated, Dr. Christopher Rogers said the singer did not bear the signs of someone who was starving when he died.

Walker and Payne, who have worked with Jackson since the 1990s, were called Monday because they are slated to leave the country for work. The trial is expected to last several more weeks.
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 10 - May 13 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts 4m
Walker: MJ didn't want to change the choreography, it wasn't broken, so why change it? She thought it was going to be a great show.
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"I've seen other artists bring chefs, masseuses, trainers sometimes," Walker said. The idea of bringing a doctor on tour didn't surprise her
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Walker said she knew Ortega kept on Michael about eating and thinks they had a massage therapist come in for him.
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Walker heard MJ had problems with prescription drugs from the press. She also heard about the sleeping problems.
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Boyle: Did you ever see MJ covered in blankets watching rehearsal with heaters?
Walker: I never saw heaters or blankets
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MJ never told Walker about his health, never discussed Propofol use since they didn't talk about that stuff.
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Walker said MJ and her were not friends, they had a work relationship. Walker never went to his house, had dinner or social interaction.
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"He was a huge risk taker, was very innovative as a dancer and choreographer," Walker opined, saying he was an excellent dancer, confident
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Boyle plays clip of film "Ghost". Walker said MJ was pretty impressive, played 5 different roles. "Probably one of the hardest jobs I had."
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Walker: I was relieved because he was there, he was going full out. Last 2 rehearsals it was the first time we saw everything come together
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She also agreed that it wasn't her job 2 supervise Dr. Murray or observe MJ's health. Walker didn't have info if Dr. Murray gave MJ Propofol
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Boyle: And it wasn't your job to look if MJ was sick?
Walker: It was not
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Planitffs attorney Kevin Boyle did the cross examination. Boyle asked Walker if her job was to focus on dancers and not MJ. She said yes.

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Walker didn't remember MJ having cold/stomach flu. "I've seen people that were drunk or high and he didn't appear to be that way"

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"I just never in a million years thought he'd leave us," Walker said crying. "I was frustrated but never thought that would happen"

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Walker said MJ was the nicest person ever, they were not friends. "Guarded is a strong word, he let people see Michael Jackson, not Michael"
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Regarding the "This Is It" tour, Walker doesn't know if MJ was excited. "He always seemed happy, he liked to watch the dancers dance"
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Walker said she remembers telling MJ about McDonald's -- he had never been and she told him he had to go.
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Walker said she felt MJ was more open this time around. In "Ghost" she said they didn't talk at all, but that he was so nice to everybody
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Travis Payne had a loving, trusting relationship with MJ, Walker testified. Payne would go over to MJ's house around 1p PT to work
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When asked if Walker was familiar with the name Dr. Conrad Murray, she said yes, but she never met him or knew who he was prior to June 25.
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Bina: when you heard MJ passed away, were you surprised?
Walker: Yes, it was shocking, 12 hours ago he did "Beat It" and "Thriller"
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Walker: "I remember telling them don't worry, everything will be fine. I didn't believe, I thought that everything was going to be ok."
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On Jun 25, Walker was rehearsing Michael's disappearing act. She said Payne called saying he heard on the radio MJ was in the hospital
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Bina: Any doubts he could perform the tour?
Walker: Not after those two nights (June 23 and 24)
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Walker said she called her mom after the rehearsal and asked her to buy a ticket for the opening and she did. "It was great."
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"He was great, very bratty and sassy as he was. He was just a funny guy at times," Walker said.
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When she talked about MJ's last two rehearsals, Walker cried saying he was great. "He was great, I finally saw what I wanted to see."
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Walker got emotional when she said she wasn't looking for things that could be wrong w/ MJ at the time. "I wish I was," she said.
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"My only concern was that he was really thin and I wish he ate more," Walker recalled.
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Jessica Bina: Did you ever see MJ drink any alcohol?
Walker: No
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Walker: He wore a lot of jackets, I assumed he was cold but he never said anything. I never saw him shivering. He just wore a lot of jackets
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Walker remembered MJ wearing jackets/layers but didn't think of him being insanely cold. "Different artists like different temperature."
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Walker: I remember 1 night he excused himself to his room, wasn't feeling well. He didn't say anything, it was a general understanding
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"He looked much thinner to me than in 97," she said, but she doesn't remember noticing a dramatic difference between April and June of 09.
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Walker said she never saw MJ sick. She said he seemed normal to her, he was much thinner, but she never felt he was acting intoxicated.
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"I wasn't shocked he wasn't coming, I was irritated, but I wasn't shocked," Walker said, noting that maybe MJ wanted to stay with his kids
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Walker: "I can remember being frustrated at times, he (MJ) wasn't coming when we were hoping he would."
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During rehearsals at the Forum, MJ was supposed to be there more often, Walker said. Payne worked w/ MJ, she was in charge of dancers.
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Walker said during rehearsals for "This Is It" in April/May 09, MJ was there occasionally, but they were teaching dancers the choreography
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"Drill" was like a soldier marching dancing, Walker said. "MJ said we can't use guns, since it was not good for the kids," Walker recalled.
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Walker said for the "This is It" tour a lot of choreography was done many years ago. The only new was "Drill" and everyone worked together
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Walker said the casting of dancers began in April 2009. She was the associated choreographer, got direction from Payne/Ortega and Michael
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Walker told the jury Travis Payne was the main choreographer for "This Is It." She thinks she was an independent contractor hired by AEG
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Walker didn't remember if MJ had doctor on staff while on History tour. She never saw any signs of drug abuse, saw MJ on stage, amazing!
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History tour: dancers rehearsed by themselves in LA. Then went to France, rehearsed in a studio at Disneyland. MJ showed up one or two times
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On the "History" tour, Walker worked about 6 months. She was one of the two girls dancer in The Way You Make Me Feel. "I feel it's my song"
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Stacy Walker said she 1st worked w/ MJ in 96 on a 40-minute movie, "Ghost." "He never made a music video, only made movies," Walker said.
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Back in session. Will tweet all the details of Stacy Walker's testimony shortly.
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Defendants' atty Jessica Bina did direct examination of Walker. She's choreographer, director. Worked w/ MJ, Gaga, B. Spears, Usher, others
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Defendants' first witness (out of order) was Stacy Walker, the Associate Choreographer for "This Is It" tour.
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 10 - May 13 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

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"I don't know what his normal weight would be," Dr. Rogers expressed. He said MJ didn't have a great deal of fat, but there was some
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Dr. Rogers said he didn't find any opiates, opioids, Demerol in MJ's body. He had 1 other case of Propofol overdose, person in medical field
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Dr. Rogers said he had some concerns about drug abuse due to the investigator's report listing all the medications found at the house.
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Dr. Rogers said MJ had a bit of degeneration of the lower thoracic spine, degenerative osteoarthritis of lower lumbar. Not sure how painful
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Autopsy report: MJ had lung damage, which wasn't cause of death but madr this individual especially susceptible to adverse health effects.
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Cahan: Was his general health excellent?
Dr. Rogers: As far as the autopsy goes, yes
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Cahan: Did you rule out starvation as possible Mr. Jackson's cause of death?
Dr. Rogers: Yes
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"He looked thin in comparison to most people," Dr. Rogers said. MJ didnt look one who died from starvation or anorexia.
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At the autopsy, Dr. Rogers said MJ weighed 136 lbs, was 5'9. His body mass index was 20.1, which is within the range of normal weight.
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Def atty: Did any other doctor, other than Dr. Murray, contributed to MJ's death?
Dr. Rogers: Yes, other doctors contributed to his death
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Dr. Rogers said he was uncertain who MJ's primary physician was, he understood he was seeing several doctors.
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Dr. Rogers said MJ's doctor, Dr. Murray, made a statement to the police saying MJ wasn't breathing but he felt a faint pulse.
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Koskoff: did you find any factors that could impact MJ's long-term survival?
Dr. Rogers: From the autopsy, no I did not.
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Death was not due to trauma and was not caused by natural disease. "He died of acute Propofol toxicity," Dr. Rogers said.
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Dr. Christopher Rogers resumed testimony after lunch break. He did MJ's autopsy. Katherine and Rebbie Jackson were not in the courtroom.
 
Jackson used vocal aid in concerts, choreographer says

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Michael Jackson in a scene from the "This Is It" movie. (Kevin Mazur / May 28, 2009)
ByJeff Gottlieb
May 13, 2013, 7:05 p.m.
Michael Jackson sometimes sang during concerts accompanied by his own recorded vocal track to help him perform the most physically strenuous numbers, the choreographer for what was to be his comeback shows in London testified Monday.

What is known as a vocal assist track is used by performers to boost their voices, for example, if dancing makes it difficult to sing to their standards.

Travis Payne, testifying in the wrongful death suit filed by Jackson&#8217;s mother and three children, said the singer told him that on the &#8220;This Is It&#8221; concerts, he wanted to sing all the vocals live, &#8220;which he had not done in the past on every tour&#8230;. This was a goal he set for himself.&#8221;

Payne said that Jackson had never performed a complete show with just his live vocals.

He said Jackson had not reached his goal by the time he died June 25, 2009, but the choreographer thought he could have pulled it off.

Jackson&#8217;s family alleges in the suit that entertainment giant AEG hired and supervised Dr. Conrad Murray, the tour doctor who administered a fatal dose of the anesthetic propofol shortly before the series of 50 concerts was to begin. Murray is now serving jail time for involuntary manslaughter.

AEG says that it was Jackson who wanted Murray with him and that the $150,000 a month the company was supposed to pay the doctor was just part of the multimillion-dollar advance it had given to the singer.

Payne also testified that Jackson was involved in almost every detail of his scheduled shows, such as costume, wardrobe and set design, choosing the dancers and the bandleader.

The choreographer said that on most days he would rehearse with Jackson at the singer&#8217;s rented Holmby Hills mansion for several hours, but as show time approached, he missed some rehearsals with the full crews, causing &#8220;production&#8221; to worry whether he would be ready.

Payne and associate choreographer Stacy Walker said they were working to modify Jackson&#8217;s dance routine to his age. &#8220;I was realizing that&#8217;s Michael Jackson, but he&#8217;s not 20 or 30 any more,&#8221; Walker testified, &#8220;he&#8217;s 50 and how is that going to be? We have to figure it out.&#8221;

Earlier in the day, Christopher Rogers, the Los Angeles County deputy medical examiner, testified that Jackson&#8217;s weight was in the normal range for his height. Rogers said that Jackson was 5 feet, 9 inches tall and 136 pounds when he was weighed and measured at the coroner&#8217;s office the day after he died.

Rogers said he gave Jackson a body mass index of 20.1. It would take a BMI of less than 18.5 for him to be considered underweight.

Rogers' testimony was used by AEG to try to rebut witnesses who testified that Jackson was rail thin. A paramedic testified that when he answered the 911 call to Jackson&#8217;s rented Holmby Hills mansion, the singer was so emaciated that he looked like an end-stage cancer patient who had come home to die.

However, under questioning by Jackson attorney Michael Koskoff, Rogers said that by the time the pop star was weighed, intravenous fluids had been administered to him in the ambulance and at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center, which could have increased his weight.

Rogers testified that Jackson didn&#8217;t have much fat on him.

He also said that Jackson was only the second coroner&#8217;s case he had worked on in which the person had died of propofol toxicity. The other person worked in the medical field, he said.

Propofol, he said, &#8220;caused his death by sedation. &#8220;Essentially, he was so sedated his vital functions stopped.&#8221;

Rogers also said that &#8220;other doctors contributed to Jackson&#8217;s death,&#8221; but did not go into details.

http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-jackson-vocals-20130513,0,6854924.story
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 10 - May 13 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

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And that wrapped Day 10 of the trial. Payne is expected to last most of the day tomorrow on the stand. See you all then!
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In it, Dr. Murray said he was hired by MJ to be paid by AEG. Plaintiffs said it's hearsay and judge agreed.
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After jurors left, Judge Palazuelos said she sustained plaintiffs objection and will not allow defense to use Dr. Murray's intvw w/ LAPD
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By June 25, Payne said MJ had not developed the goal of singing and dancing at the same time. Payne resumes testimony tomorrow morning.
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"MJ told me he wanted to sing all the songs live," Payne said. "He had not done that in the past." Some songs were vocalist tracked 2 assist
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Payne: because there was inconsistency with MJ appearing at the rehearsal, production was concerned they would not meet their goals.
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Payne testified that production wanted MJ to be more in attendance with all the cast, rather than just MJ rehearsing by himself at his house
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"He seemed very tired, we all were," Payne said.
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"Drill" was the last thing they worked together, Payne said. Michael had a great love for military precision.
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Payne said MJ's dancing seemed fine to him. He said they were working on things created decades before to make them age appropriate, dynamic
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Payne said he had meals with MJ. He said MJ's appetite depended on the day.
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"Customarily, we would see each other every day," Payne said. Rehearsal with MJ was scheduled five days a week.
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MJ told Payne he expected him to be in every show. He wanted Payne to take notes to make sure show was as perfect as possible.
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Payne said they started rehearsing after the press conference, and stopped the day before MJ died. He spoke with MJ everyday.
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Bina shows an email Payne wrote. It said MJ was very persistent about having a torch, a concept that meant a lot to Michael.
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They auditioned 5,000 dancers, MJ chose the final ones. Payne said MJ chose the band director also.
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Payne: Everything started with Mr. Jackson, always. As his support team, we would contribute with ideas. MJ had the final word.
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"This is It" was a partnership with AEG. Payne said this new way of doing business would revolutionize the way tours were done.
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Payne said he found out that his role would not include dancing, he would choreograph and would be the associate director in "This Is It"
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"He looked fine to me healthwise, I thought he was thinner from what I have seen him in the past, but nothing alarming," Payne recalled.
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Payne said he knew MJ was excited about the tour and his children, to share this experience with them. Payne met w/ MJ in late March/2009.
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Payne didn't personally meet with MJ until after the press conference announcement. He said he was excited to work with him again.
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Payne said he worked with Kenny Ortega for many years. Payne and Ortega were in Vegas when MJ called Ortega asking to work in new project
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Payne said he never saw MJ take drugs, medication or alcohol. "Nothing."
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Payne said he knew there were physicians tending to MJ, only ones Payne personally met were Dr. Klein and Debbie Rowe.
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Payne: Michael had an incident, appeared to faint, we were asked to leave the theater and were told later the show was not going to happen
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Payne worked with MJ in the "One Night Only" show, one time performance by MJ and dancers in New York. The show never happened.
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Payne said MJ rehearsed with the dancers and separately. Dancers would get up to speed in the beginning, MJ was good at giving space 2 learn
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Rehearsals for "History" tour was very extensive, Payne said. He was involved w/ selecting dancers, ideas for costumes and whatever needed
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Payne worked with MJ in "Ghost" in 1995/96, then "History" tour, other tv shows and commercials and culminated with "This Is It."
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"In the "Dangerous" tour I was ecstatic! I was working with my idol," Payne described.
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During "Dangerous" relationship with MJ grew. Payne said all he knew pain was an on going issue for MJ since the Pepsi commercial accident
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The next time Payne worked with MJ was in "Dangerous" tour as dancer and choreographer. Katherine and Rebbie Jackson return to the courtroom
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Payne worked with MJ first time in 1992 as a dancer in the short film "Remember the Times."
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Payne worked with Paula Abdul, Brandy, Diana Ross, Mick Jagger, Marilyn Manson, MJ, among others.
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Next defendant's witness was Travis Payne -- heard out of order due his schedule. Defendants atty Jessica Bina did direct examination
 
Potentially significant footage of Michael Jackson filmed shortly before his death may have been scrapped intentionally before editors started work on a posthumous documentary, a lawyer suggested to jurors Monday... Lawyer Kevin Boyle alleged that AEG executive Randy Phillips asked colleague Paul Gongaware to toss any potentially damaging rehearsal recordings before sending some 100 hours of raw footage to Sony Pictures for the making of the &#8220;This Is It&#8221; film. &#8220;Did Mr. Phillips ever tell you he instructed Mr. Gongaware in writing to take out footage that (made Jackson) look like a skeleton?&#8221; lawyer Kevin Boyle asked choreographer Stacy Walker. &#8220;He didn&#8217;t tell me that,&#8221; Walker replied.

Boyle didn&#8217;t elaborate on the written exchange in court, but a source told the Daily News that Katherine&#8217;s lawyers plans to show email evidence of the alleged request later during the civil trial. The source confirmed Katherine&#8217;s side has not recovered any video footage showing Michael in a compromised physical condition."

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/world/sss-article-1.1343221#ixzz2TGJnGWn3

Lawyer for Michael Jackson's mother, Katherine, raises question of whether footage was taken out of a documentary featuring the late singer
Kevin Boyle alleged that AEG executive Randy Phillips asked colleague Paul Gongaware to toss any potentially damaging rehearsal recordings before sending some 100 hours of raw footage to Sony Pictures for the making of the 'This Is It' film.

BY NANCY DILLON / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

TUESDAY, MAY 14, 2013, 4:22 AM
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JOEL RYAN/AP

Questions arose Monday whether or not potentially significant footage of Michael Jackson filmed shortly before his death may have been scrapped intentionally.
Potentially significant footage of Michael Jackson filmed shortly before his death may have been scrapped intentionally before editors started work on a posthumous documentary, a lawyer suggested to jurors Monday.

A lawyer for the King of Pop&#8217;s mother raised the possibility during cross-examination of a choreographer testifying in Katherine Jackson&#8217;s negligence trial against concert promoter AEG Live.

Lawyer Kevin Boyle alleged that AEG executive Randy Phillips asked colleague Paul Gongaware to toss any potentially damaging rehearsal recordings before sending some 100 hours of raw footage to Sony Pictures for the making of the &#8220;This Is It&#8221; film.

PHOTOS: MICHAEL JACKSON - BEFORE HE GOT WEIRD

&#8220;Did Mr. Phillips ever tell you he instructed Mr. Gongaware in writing to take out footage that (made Jackson) look like a skeleton?&#8221; lawyer Kevin Boyle asked choreographer Stacy Walker.

&#8220;He didn&#8217;t tell me that,&#8221; Walker replied.


FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES

The late Michael Jackson's brother Randy Jackson arrives at court of the trial pitting Katherine Jackson, mother of the late singer Michael, against concert promoters AEG Live.

Boyle didn&#8217;t elaborate on the written exchange in court, but a source told the Daily News that Katherine&#8217;s lawyers plans to show email evidence of the alleged request later during the civil trial.

PHOTOS: MICHAEL JACKSON ON THE COVER OF THE NEWS

The source confirmed Katherine&#8217;s side has not recovered any video footage showing Michael in a compromised physical condition.

The jurors likely will decide whether any such video ever existed and, if it did, whether executives conspired to hide it.

Katherine, 82, is suing AEG for millions &#8212; possibly billions &#8212; claiming the concert giant negligently hired and supervised the personal doctor convicted of overdosing her son on June 25, 2009.

PHOTOS: INSIDE MICHAEL JACKSON'S NEVERLAND RANCH


MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/AP

The late Michael Jackson follows his mother, Katherine Jackson, in this undated photo. Katherine, 82, is suing AEG for millions &#8212; possibly billions &#8212; claiming the concert giant negligently hired and supervised the personal doctor convicted of overdosing her son on June 25, 2009.

AEG has denied any wrongdoing, saying it was Michael&#8217;s decision to hire the now-disgraced personal physician, Dr. Conrad Murray.

Testifying tearfully on the tenth day of the civil trial in Los Angeles Monday, Walker said she knew Michael for years and didn&#8217;t suspect he was on the verge of death as he completed &#8220;great&#8221; rehearsals on the two nights that preceded his passing.

Her boss, Travis Payne, the lead choreographer for &#8220;This Is It,&#8221; also took the witness stand Monday and said he had no reservations about the King of Pop&#8217;s ability to perform in the weeks before the 50-date concert series was scheduled to start in London.

PHOTOS: LONG LIVE THE KING OF POP: STARS, FANS HONOR MJ

He said he was rehearsing with Michael five days a week, much of the time at the singer&#8217;s rented estate, and that Michael even hoped to perform without any lip-synching.

&#8220;Mr. Jackson told me he wanted to sing all the songs live,&#8221; Payne said. &#8220;He had not always done that in the past.&#8221;


HO/REUTERS

Over 100 hours of raw footage to Sony Pictures for the making of the 'This Is It' film.

Payne said Jackson used &#8220;partial-assist&#8221; tracks during prior live performances that would play under his live singing.

PHOTOS: KING OF POP LAID TO REST

&#8220;He said that he wanted to sing everything live,&#8221; Payne reiterated. &#8220;I think that this was a goal that he had set for himself. He wanted to deliver live performances to his fans.&#8221;

Still, at the time of his death, Michael was not strong enough to perform his entire show live, Payne conceded.

&#8220;By June 25, he had not reached the goal of being able to do both (dancing and live signing),&#8221; Payne said.

Asked if he thought Jackson would have reached his goal &#8220;over time,&#8221; Payne said he believed he would have.



Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/world/sss-article-1.1343221#ixzz2THCmMDiG
 
Jacksons vs AEG - Day 11 - May 14 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

Jacksons vs AEG - Day 11 - May 14 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

Use this thread to post any and all news stories from day 10 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.

Don't post tweets or updates from fans on this thread.
 
Anthony McCartney @mccartneyAP
I have to head back into court, this link will update soon additional elements of Payne's morning testimony: bit.ly/16bvqc8

Anthony McCartney @mccartneyAP
Payne says the second time was at the Staples Center, after a rehearsal and Jackson was leaving for the day. Both meetings were brief.

Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 40s
Payne says the first time was at Jackson&#8217;s Carrolwood Drive home. The men passed on a stairway and Jackson introduced them briefly.
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Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 49s
Stebbins Bina asked Payne whether he ever met Conrad Murray. The choreographer says he met Murray twice.
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Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 1m
Payne said Jackson didn&#8217;t want the physical therapist to work with him, thought it would be a violation of his personal space.
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Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 1m
The choreographer said at one point, he and others tried to bring in a top physical therapist who works with Olympic athletes to help MJ
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Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 1m
Payne told jury that at times Michael Jackson was lethargic and needed &#8220;support&#8221; to rehearse.
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Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 2m
AEG attorney Jessica Stebbins Bina began day by asking Payne about how Jackson seemed at rehearsals in June.
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Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 2m
Payne is wearing a black jacket with a gold emblem on the shoulders with the words &#8220;MJ&#8221; and a pair of wings. #JacksonTrial
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Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 2m
Choreographer Travis Payne and Katherine Jackson spoke briefly in the courtroom before the jury came in. They seemed cordial.
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Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 3m
Here's a short story on Travis Payne's testimony, in which he described MJ as "loopy" after visits to Dr. Klein: http://bit.ly/16bvqc8
View summary
Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 4m
We're on the morning break in Jackson vs AEG case. I'll have a couple updates.
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Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 1h
Katherine Jackson, Rebbie and Trent have arrived for today's Jackson's vs AEG session. Travis Payne resumes testifying in a few mins.
 
JACKSON DESCRIBED AS 'LOOPY' AFTER DOCTOR VISITS
May. 14 2:12 PM EDT
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FILE - In this March 5, 2009 file photo, Michael Jackson announces several concerts at the London O2 Arena in July, at a press conference at the London O2 Arena. Stacy Walker, a choreographer who worked with Jackson in his ill-fated &#8220;This Is It&#8221; shows, told a civil jury in a Los Angeles courtroom on Monday May 13, 2013, that she did not see any signs that the singer was ill or might die in his final days and weeks. Walker is AEG&#8217;s first defense witness in a civil case filed by Jackson&#8217;s mother, Katherine Jackson, who claims the concert giant failed to properly investigate or supervise the doctor convicted in 2011 of causing the singer&#8217;s death. (AP Photo/Joel Ryan, file)


FILE - In this June 23, 2009 handout photo provided by AEG, pop star Michael Jackson rehearses at the Staples Center in Los Angeles. Stacy Walker, a choreographer who worked with Jackson in his ill-fated &#8220;This Is It&#8221; shows, told a civil jury in a Los Angeles courtroom on Monday May 13, 2013, that she did not see any signs that the singer was ill or might die in his final days and weeks. Walker is AEG&#8217;s first defense witness in a civil case filed by Jackson&#8217;s mother, Katherine Jackson, who claims the concert giant failed to properly investigate or supervise the doctor convicted in 2011 of causing the singer&#8217;s death. (AP Photo/ Kevin Mazur, AEG/Getty Images, file) ** MANDATORY CREDIT. NO SALES, ARCHIVE OUT **
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LOS ANGELES (AP) &#8212; A choreographer who worked one-on-one with Michael Jackson says the entertainer appeared "a little loopy" after visits with his longtime dermatologist in the weeks before his death.

Travis Payne is testifying for AEG Live LLC in a case filed by Jackson's mother over her son's June 2009 death.

Payne told a Los Angeles jury Tuesday that he didn't think Jackson had a problem with prescription drugs but was having cosmetic procedures done to help him feel comfortable returning to the stage for his planned "This Is It" concerts.

Payne testified that he saw Jackson appear "loopy" two to four times over the course of his sessions with the singer. He says the incidents always followed visits with Dr. Arnold Klein, who is not a party to the case.
 
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/15/b...n-of-aegs-negligence.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Negligence Is Debated in Jackson Death Case

LOS ANGELES &#8212; After only two weeks of testimony, no side has a clear advantage in the civil trial pitting the mother of Michael Jackson against A.E.G. Live, the promoter of his attempted comeback concerts, over the question of who was responsible for Jackson&#8217;s death.
But both sides have chosen the same weapons: Jackson himself, his problems with drugs and the wrenching details of his last days. What&#8217;s most surprising is that even with so much written and revealed about Jackson since his death four years ago, there is still more to learn.
Martin S. Putnam, A.E.G.&#8217;s lead lawyer, promised in his opening statement that the case would reveal &#8220;ugly stuff&#8221; about Jackson&#8217;s private life. And witnesses called by lawyers for Jackson&#8217;s 83-year-old mother, Katherine, have testified at length about Jackson&#8217;s addiction to medications, his physical deterioration and his belief that he was talking to God.
The case hinges on the fairly limited questions of whether A.E.G. hired Dr. Conrad Murray, the physician who administered the powerful anesthetic that killed Jackson in June 2009, and if it was negligent in doing so. Dr. Murray was convicted of involuntary manslaughter in a separate criminal trial in 2011, and is serving a four-year prison sentence.
Lawyers for Mrs. Jackson have said that they may seek up to $5 billion in damages. But the greater risk for both A.E.G. and the Jackson family is the potential damage to their reputations as the details of Jackson&#8217;s life and final days are revealed, in perhaps even greater detail than at Dr. Murray&#8217;s criminal trial.
&#8220;It&#8217;s all downside for A.E.G.,&#8221; said Bill Werde, the editorial director of Billboard magazine. &#8220;And this trial affects A.E.G., as well as the touring and broader music industry. Every time people see headlines about these incredibly sad details of Michael Jackson&#8217;s life, it makes this seem to be an uncaring business that exploits stars, even to their peril.&#8221;
Witnesses last week included two women who had worked for Jackson for decades, both describing him as a sensitive artistic genius haunted by physical pain. One, Karen Faye, his makeup artist since the early 1980s, said that Jackson became more dependent on prescription drugs over the course of his career.
The other woman, the choreographer Alif Sankey, tearfully recounted how, less than a week before Jackson died, she had begged Kenny Ortega, the director of &#8220;This Is It,&#8221; Jackson&#8217;s attempted comeback concerts, to take him to the hospital after Jackson appeared ill and said that God was speaking to him.
&#8220;I had a very strong feeling that Michael was dying,&#8221; Ms. Sankey said. As she testified, the only other sound audible in the small courtroom was the tapping of journalists on their laptops.
On Monday another choreographer on &#8220;This Is It,&#8221; Stacy Walker, who was called by lawyers for A.E.G., testified that she saw no signs that Jackson was in bad shape before he died.
&#8220;I just never in a million years thought he would leave us, or pass away,&#8221; Ms. Walker said, according to a report by The Associated Press.
The evidence in the case has included e-mails from A.E.G. executives which the Jackson lawyers say show that the company was acting as Dr. Murray&#8217;s employer. One message, sent to Mr. Ortega less than two weeks before Jackson&#8217;s death, says of Dr. Murray: &#8220;We want to remind him that it is A.E.G., not M. J., who is paying his salary. We want to remind him what is expected of him.&#8221;
A.E.G., a global sports and entertainment company controlled by the billionaire Philip F. Anschutz, denies that it hired Dr. Murray, saying that he had been selected by Jackson and that his $150,000-a-month salary was to come out of Jackson&#8217;s earnings for the tour.
What damage the case could cost Jackson&#8217;s reputation &#8212; and his valuable estate &#8212; is unclear. The estate has flourished, even though his faults and indiscretions have already been widely publicized, and entertainment and estate experts say that the details revealed in this trial are likely to elicit more sympathy for Jackson, not less.
&#8220;I don&#8217;t think this will negatively impact Jackson&#8217;s earning potential through music or consumer product licensing at all,&#8221; said Martin Cribbs, who has represented the estates of Einstein and Gandhi. &#8220;What truly separates a legend from just a star is when their body of work supersedes who they were as an individual.&#8221;
In a court filing last May, the estate said that it had had gross earnings of $475 million since Jackson&#8217;s death.
Jackson got more headlines last week when a choreographer, Wade Robson, said that Jackson had sexually abused him as a child. Lawyers for the Jackson estate &#8212; which is not a party to the A.E.G. case &#8212; immediately excoriated Mr. Robson&#8217;s claims as &#8220;outrageous and pathetic,&#8221; and Mr. Putnam told reporters that the claims were irrelevant to the current Jackson civil suit.
Also this week, a California state attorney filed a response to an appeal by Dr. Murray, whose lawyers have argued that the judge in the case made legal errors in not sequestering the jury and not allowing jurors to hear evidence about Jackson&#8217;s troubled finances. In the filing on Monday, Supervising Deputy Attorney General Victoria B. Wilson wrote that there were no errors, and that Dr. Murray&#8217;s lawyers had forfeited opportunities to object to the judge&#8217;s rulings, according to The A.P.
By the standards of Los Angeles celebrity trials, the Jackson suit seems a quiet affair. The judge, Yvette M. Palazuelos, has barred cameras, and the 45 seats in the courtroom are occupied mostly by lawyers and reporters. A daily lottery for the two or three seats guaranteed for the public draws the same small circle of Jackson superfans. There was one notable guest: Judge Lance A. Ito, who presided over O. J. Simpson&#8217;s murder trial in 1995, sat briefly in the gallery last week.
But the trial, which is expected to last at least three months, will draw more attention as potential witnesses include stars like Diana Ross and Quincy Jones, who may testify to Jackson&#8217;s professional drive or his physical condition.
 
updated AP story

JACKSON DESCRIBED AS 'LOOPY' AFTER DOCTOR VISITS
By ANTHONY McCARTNEY
&#8212; May. 14 2:40 PM EDT
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FILE - In this March 5, 2009 file photo, Michael Jackson announces several concerts at the London O2 Arena in July, at a press conference at the London O2 Arena. Stacy Walker, a choreographer who worked with Jackson in his ill-fated &#8220;This Is It&#8221; shows, told a civil jury in a Los Angeles courtroom on Monday May 13, 2013, that she did not see any signs that the singer was ill or might die in his final days and weeks. Walker is AEG&#8217;s first defense witness in a civil case filed by Jackson&#8217;s mother, Katherine Jackson, who claims the concert giant failed to properly investigate or supervise the doctor convicted in 2011 of causing the singer&#8217;s death. (AP Photo/Joel Ryan, file)


FILE - In this June 23, 2009 handout photo provided by AEG, pop star Michael Jackson rehearses at the Staples Center in Los Angeles. Stacy Walker, a choreographer who worked with Jackson in his ill-fated &#8220;This Is It&#8221; shows, told a civil jury in a Los Angeles courtroom on Monday May 13, 2013, that she did not see any signs that the singer was ill or might die in his final days and weeks. Walker is AEG&#8217;s first defense witness in a civil case filed by Jackson&#8217;s mother, Katherine Jackson, who claims the concert giant failed to properly investigate or supervise the doctor convicted in 2011 of causing the singer&#8217;s death. (AP Photo/ Kevin Mazur, AEG/Getty Images, file) ** MANDATORY CREDIT. NO SALES, ARCHIVE OUT **
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LOS ANGELES (AP) &#8212; Michael Jackson appeared "a little loopy" after visits with his longtime dermatologist, a choreographer who worked one-on-one with the pop superstar told a jury Tuesday.

Travis Payne said he witnessed Jackson's unusual behavior after the singer visited Dr. Arnold Klein, who Payne believed was performing cosmetic treatments on the singer so that he would be comfortable performing onstage again.

"Sometimes in rehearsal, Michael would appear just a little loopy," Payne said, adding that the singer appeared to be "assisted or under the influence of something."

Payne was working for AEG Live LLC, the company promoting Jackson's the "This Is It" tour, which was canceled after Jackson's June 2009 death.

The choreographer is testifying for AEG, which is being sued by Jackson's mother. Katherine Jackson claims AEG failed to properly investigate Conrad Murray, the doctor who was convicted of involuntary manslaughter for Jackson's death, and that the concert promoter also missed or ignored signs of Jackson's poor health.

AEG denies it hired Murray, and claims Jackson was private about medical treatments and hid the depths of his prescription drug addiction. Jackson died from an overdose of the anesthetic propofol, which Murray was giving him as a sleep aid.

The company also did not hire the dermatologist, Klein.

Klein is listed as a potential witness in the case but it is unknown whether he will testify. His treatment of Jackson, which included Demerol shots, have been scrutinized both during Murray's 2011 criminal trial and the current civil case.

Payne, the choreographer, said he witnessed Jackson's unusual behavior several times in the weeks before his death. The singer also appeared groggy during some morning sessions, Payne said, and Jackson occasionally complained he was having trouble sleeping.

Payne said he did not think that Jackson had a problem abusing prescription medications. He acknowledged that Jackson missed rehearsals and he saw the singer shivering or appear cold in some of his final rehearsals.

He told the jury he thought Jackson was thin, but told the jury he wasn't aware of an email that AEG executives sent seeking to remove footage of Jackson rehearsing from the "This Is It" film in which he was described as looking like "skeletal." The email was not displayed for the jury.

Payne told jurors he met Murray twice, but both encounters were brief.

He worked with Jackson beginning in the 1990s and testified that he never saw Jackson drink alcohol or take any medications. The singer also never discussed his medical treatments, Payne said.
 
Corina Knoll &#8207;@corinaknoll 2m
&#8220;I saw the beauty of their relationships. I saw their loyalty to their father, I saw his loyalty to them."-Travis Payne
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Corina Knoll &#8207;@corinaknoll 2m
MJ encouraged Prince&#8217;s dreams of being a director, allowed Blanket to attend rehearsals, doted on his daddy&#8217;s girl, Paris
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Corina Knoll &#8207;@corinaknoll 6m
&#8220;I don&#8217;t have a dog in this race ... I don&#8217;t want to be painted as somebody who&#8217;s trying to mask anything.&#8221; -Payne
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Corina Knoll &#8207;@corinaknoll 7m
Payne asked about text msg from Faye after MJ's death, accusing him of lying to media. Payne did not recall such a thing
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Corina Knoll &#8207;@corinaknoll 8m
Payne said Karen Faye approached him in "aggressive" manner, concerned about MJ's health. He told her to talk to Ortega.
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Corina Knoll &#8207;@corinaknoll 10m
Photo shown: Frank DiLeo w/cigar, flanked by Kenny Ortega and Randy Phillips, all grinning at a premiere for "This Is It" doc
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Corina Knoll &#8207;@corinaknoll 11m
Payne said he understood #MJ was undergoing "cosmetic procedures so that he could feel great and do a great job."
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Corina Knoll &#8207;@corinaknoll 18m
Jackson didn't work w/physical therapist flown in for him. "He was just not comfortable with the invasion of personal space."
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Corina Knoll &#8207;@corinaknoll 19m
Michael Jackson said, "I'm getting down to my fighting weight," Payne testified.
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Corina Knoll &#8207;@corinaknoll 21m
#MJ sometimes appeared "loopy" or "groggy" at rehearsals, Payne said.
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Corina Knoll &#8207;@corinaknoll 21m
"It ebbed and flowed. Some days were good, some days were not as good." Payne, who was AEG's witness
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Corina Knoll &#8207;@corinaknoll 22m
"He was not at show standards ... I didn't expect him to be as he would be in front of a crowd." Travis Payne on #MJ in 6/09
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Corina Knoll &#8207;@corinaknoll 3h
"God bless you!" "You look very beautiful." -- #MJ fans to Katherine Jackson as she enters the courtroom.
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Corina Knoll &#8207;@corinaknoll 3h
Choreographer Travis Payne to return to witness stand today. #MJ civil trial
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 11 - May 14 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

ABC7 Court News @ABC7Courts
Email continues: "The demand in this guy are mentally and physically extraordinary! The show requirements exhaust our 20 year olds."

ABC7 Court News @ABC7Courts
Email continues: "Personally, I feel he should have a top Nutritionist and Physical Therapist working with him on a regular basis."

ABC7 Court News @ABC7Courts
Email continues: "Who is responsible for MJ getting proper nourishment/vitamins/therapy everyday?"

ABC7 Court News @ABC7Courts
Email continues: "Without invading MJ's privacy, it might be good idea to talk to his doctor to make sure everything MJ requires is in place

ABC7 Court News @ABC7Courts
Email continues: "Are Randy and Frank aware of this? Please have them stay on top of his health situation."

ABC7 Court News @ABC7Courts
Bina shows an email from Ortega to Gongaware on Jun 14: "We're you aware that MJ's doctor didn't permit him to attend rehearsal yesterday?"

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts 1m
Payne said that in April, May, June, MJ missed 5 rehearsals with the whole group. He said one time Ortega sent MJ home.

ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts 1m
"There were times he was tired and had to be not convinced but supported," Payne recalls.
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ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts 1m
Payne said there was one day when MJ was cold. He thought the frustration had MJ on edge, but he took it that he was fighting a cold.
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ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts 2m
Payne told the jury he advised MJ he was looking thin and MJ said he was getting down to his fighting weight. "I had no reason to doubt him"
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ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts 3m
Payne said Mr. Jackson explained to him he had trouble sleeping. He's not sure how much weight MJ had lost.
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ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts 4m
Payne said he was concerned about MJ missing rehearsals. He didn't know why he wasn't showing up, but MJ was also working on album and book
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ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts 5m
Payne said AEG didn't want to pay what he regarded as his standard operating cost. Jackson said to pay him what him and his agent requested
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ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts 7m
Travis Payne back on the stand. He's wearing gold wings on the side of his jacket sleeves with the initial "MJ" on them.
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ABC7 Court News ?@ABC7Courts 7m
Day 11 of Jackson Family vs AEG trial is underway at a downtown LA courthouse. Katherine Jackson and Rebbie are present in the courtroom.
 
Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 36s
I apologize for not recalling who all pointed out the discrepancies, but wanted to address it since others reported it differently.
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Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 45s
The attorney&#8217;s question was phrased based on a suggestion by the judge at sidebar. Questioning then turned to other autopsy topics.
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Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 56s
Rogers was only asked about other doctors in light of Jackson&#8217;s death once. An AEG lawyer asked about it.
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Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 1m
My reporting that he responded &#8220;I don&#8217;t believe so,&#8221; is correct. I've reviewed the transcript and my notes.
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Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 1m
Some folks asked about discrepancy in reporting about Dr. Rogers&#8217; testimony yesterday of roles other doctor&#8217;s played in Jackson&#8217;s death.
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Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 52m
Judge excused the jury 15 mins early so attorneys could argue over introducing Dr. Klein's medical records. They will be shown later.
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Anthony McCartney &#8207;@mccartneyAP 53m
We're on the lunch break. There were lots of testy exchanges between plaintiff's attorney Brian Panish and Payne in late morning session.
 
Jackson trying to get 'down to my fighting weight,' witness says

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By Corina Knoll
May 14, 2013, 2:00 p.m.
The choreographer for the &#8220;This Is It&#8221; tour testified Tuesday that he had no doubts about Michael Jackson&#8217;s ability to perform in the series of comeback concerts after seeing the singer at rehearsal in the days before his death.

&#8220;I thought he was on his way to the goals he had set for himself,&#8221; Travis Payne said, adding that he and others were impressed while watching Jackson rehearse at Staples Center on June 23 and 24, 2009.

&#8220;He was not at show standards but he was rehearsing,&#8221; Payne said. &#8220;He was processing &#8212; he was having his process. I didn&#8217;t expect him to be as he would be in front of a crowd.&#8221;

PHOTOS: Jackson-AEG wrongful-death case

Jackson died on June 25 after receiving a dose of propofol administered by Dr. Conrad Murray, who is now serving jail time for involuntary manslaughter.

The wrongful-death trial in which concert promoter AEG is accused of negligently hiring and controlling Murray is now in its third week; testimony has offered insight into Jackson&#8217;s last months of life. While the case, filed by Jackson&#8217;s mother and three children, does not seek a specific amount in damages, it could be worth millions, even billions.

Payne, who was called to the stand by AEG, said that the singer often missed rehearsals and that when he did show up, he never ran through an entire show.

FULL COVERAGE: AEG wrongful death trial

&#8220;It ebbed and flowed,&#8221; Payne said of the music legend's performance. &#8220;Some days were good, some days were not as good.&#8221;

On the less than good days, the singer would appear &#8220;loopy&#8221; or groggy, the choreographer said.

&#8220;My understanding was that preparing to returning to the stage and to the public eye, Michael was undergoing sort of personal cosmetic procedures so that he could feel great and do a great job,&#8221; Payne said.

Payne said he noticed that Jackson looked thin but was satisfied with the singer&#8217;s response.

&#8220;He said, &#8217;I&#8217;m getting down to my fighting weight,' which I took to mean that he was preparing for the performances,&#8221; Payne testified.

At one point the choreographer said he suggested Jackson get a physical therapist and that Kenny Ortega, the director of &#8220;This Is It,&#8221; arranged for one who worked with Olympians to fly in from Salt Lake City.

&#8220;At the last minute we realized that Michael was not going to go through with it,&#8221; Payne said. &#8220;He was just not comfortable with the invasion of personal space.&#8221;

When Jackson needed to be layered in blankets and required a heater to be comfortable, Payne said, he believed Jackson was merely fighting a cold.

Payne, who had worked with Jackson in the past, said he was usually hired by MJJ Productions and that the concerts represented the first time Jackson didn&#8217;t have full control.

He testified that there was a delay in his contract with AEG because the salary was not in line with his standard charges, but that things worked out after he had a conversation with Jackson. Payne also said he believed AEG was paying Murray&#8217;s salary, not Jackson.

During cross-examination, Payne was shown several photos of premieres for the documentary &#8220;This Is It.&#8221; In one, Ortega and AEG executive Randy Phillips flank Jackson&#8217;s manager, Frank DiLeo, who has a cigar hanging out of his mouth. All three are grinning.

Brian Panish, the attorney for Jackson&#8217;s family, remarked that everyone looked pretty happy.

Things became heated when Panish inquired about a text message Jackson's hair and makeup artist Karen Faye sent to Payne that accused him of lying to the media. Payne said he didn't recall such a message. He said that earlier Faye had approached him in an "aggressive" way about her concern for Jackson's health but he told her to take her concerns to Ortega.

Panish reminded Payne that he had testified in his deposition that AEG was trying to protect its &#8220;investment.&#8221;

&#8220;I don&#8217;t have a dog in this race so I&#8217;m not on either side,&#8221; an aggravated Payne countered. &#8220;I&#8217;m just saying I don&#8217;t want to be painted as somebody who&#8217;s trying to mask anything.&#8221;

Payne, who was an associate producer on the &#8220;This Is It&#8221; documentary, said the footage of Jackson had not been retouched or altered.

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He also testified about Jackson&#8217;s relationship with his three children and mother, Katherine, who on Tuesday was greeted by fans outside the courtroom with calls of &#8220;God bless you&#8221; and &#8220;You look very beautiful.&#8221;

When rehearsing with Jackson at his Holmby Hills residence, Payne said the singer clearly delighted in being a father. Jackson encouraged his son Prince&#8217;s dreams of being a director, allowed son Blanket to attend his dance rehearsals, doted on his daddy&#8217;s girl, Paris, and shared meals with all three.

&#8220;I saw the beauty of their relationships,&#8221; Payne said. &#8220;I saw their loyalty to their father, I saw his loyalty to them.&#8221;
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 11 - May 14 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

Choreographer: Michael Jackson's 'impressive' last rehearsals
By Alan Duke, CNN
updated 5:39 PM EDT, Tue May 14, 2013
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
"This Is It" choreographer Travis Payne testifies in the Jackson wrongful death trial
Jackson "was not at show standards, but he was rehearsing," last two nights
Jackson was "on his way to the goals he had set for himself" before his death, Payne says
Payne described Jackson's close relationship with his children
Los Angeles (CNN) -- A choreographer who worked closely with Michael Jackson on his comeback concerts testified Tuesday the pop icon in his final days was "not at show standards but he was rehearsing, he was processing."
Travis Payne was called as a witness by AEG LIve to counter Jackson witnesses who testified in the ongoing wrongful death trial that Michael Jackson was emaciated, paranoid and so ill they feared for his life as rehearsals continued until shortly before his death on June 25, 2009.
The trial, in which Jackson's mother and three children contend AEG LIve is liable in his death, is in its third week in a Los Angeles courtroom. The lawsuit accuses the concert promoter of negligent hiring of Dr. Conrad Murray, the physician who was convicted of involuntary manslaughter in Jackson's death.
"I don't have a dog in this race, so I don't want to be painted as a guy whose trying to mask anything," Payne said when Jackson lawyer Brian Panish suggested he was downplaying concerns about Jackson's health in the days before he died.
"Mr. Jackson just explained to me that he had trouble sleeping, that he was tired, and that satisfied me," Payne testified.
He told Jackson, "You're looking thin," and Jackson responded, "Well, I'm getting down to my fighting weight," according to Payne, who added, "I didn't have a reason to doubt him."
The Jacksons contend AEG Live executives ignored warning signs, including Jackson's weight loss, because they did not want to delay the premiere of the "This Is It" concerts set for July 2009.
"Sometimes in rehearsal Michael would appear a little loopy, under the influence of something, but mostly when he would come to the rehearsals from the dermatologist," Payne testified. That happened two to four times in the weeks before his death, he said.
"Michael was undergoing personal cosmetic procedures, so he could feel great and do a good job," Payne said.
Medical records showed Jackson visited his Beverly Hills dermatologist nearly two dozen times in the two months before his death, receiving injections of the powerful painkiller Demerol.
"Sometimes he was tired and lethargic and had to be, not convinced, but supported throughout rehearsals," Payne said.
Payne, though, said Jackson's rehearsals the last two nights were "impressive" when he "was able to do chunks of the show."
"He was not at show standards, but he was rehearsing, he was processing," he said. "I didn't expect him to be as if he was in front of a crowd. The last two days were pretty good."
Was he ready to perform for an audience, Panish asked.
"I thought he was on his way to the goals he had set for himself," Payne answered. "All I saw was improvement and getting closer to the goals."
One of those goals was for Jackson to be able to sing all of his songs, while dancing, without the aid of pre-recorded tracks, Payne testified Monday. Jackson relied on recorded vocal tracks in previous tours, but he didn't want to use them in London, he said.
Michael's kids: Enlightened and loyal
Payne was often inside Jackson's home rehearsing with him during his final weeks. He got an intimate view of what he called "the beauty" of Jackson's relationship with his three children.
Payne saw "their loyalty to their father" and their father "enlightened them and taught them," he testified. "I was very proud to see Michael as such a loving father."
His description of the close relationship Paris, 15, and Prince, 16, had with their father four years ago could foreshadow the significance of the children's testimony later in the trial.
Paris, who was 11 at the time, was "a very retentive young lady who was very, very smart, very astute," Payne testified.
"She had full knowledge of the day-to-day operations, from the time of lunch and what it was going to be, she was hands on -- far beyond her age," he said. "She had a lot of responsibility, which I think she welcomed.
Payne said she was "the female of the house," and also "a daddy's girl."
"She really loved her father," he said. "At that time, she was coming to find out his global successes and presence, so she would wear her Michael Jackson t-shirt, headband and bag," he said.
It was Paris who would bless the food when they were have lunch with their father at home, he said.
"She was always the most vocal of the three children and was very concerned about many of the details of the house, was the temperature correct, what do you want to eat," Payne testified. "She just handled a lot for her young age."
Jackson's relationship with son Prince, then 12, was "awesome," Payne said.
"It was great to see how they interacted," he said. "Prince wants to be a director, so Michael would share conversations with him about that process and point out things during our rehearsals,."
Blanket, who was 7 his father died, liked to watch his father rehearsing his dances with Payne in the basement studio of their home, Payne said.
"He was quiet, but always right there with his dad," he said.
 
Re: Jacksons vs AEG - Day 11 - May 14 2013 - News Only (no discussion)

updated cnn

Choreographer: AEG considered 'pulling the plug' on Michael Jackson's comeback
By Alan Duke, CNN
updated 6:41 PM EDT, Tue May 14, 2013

Travis Payne, shown in a 2011 photo, testified that Michael Jackson looked thin and had told him he was tired.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
NEW: Jackson was having trouble learning dances, choreographer Travis Payne says
NEW: "It was 'We've got to get this together or the plug may be pulled,'" Payne says
Payne testifies in the Jackson wrongful death trial
Jackson was "on his way to the goals he had set for himself" before his death, Payne says
Los Angeles (CNN) -- AEG Live considered "pulling the plug" on Michael Jackson's comeback concerts 11 days before the pop icon died, the show's choreographer testified Tuesday.
Travis Payne, who worked closely with Michael Jackson in his final days, earlier testified that in Jackson's last rehearsals before his death he was "not at show standards but he was rehearsing, he was processing."
Payne was called as a witness by AEG LIve to counter Jackson witnesses who testified in the ongoing wrongful death trial that Michael Jackson was emaciated, paranoid and so ill they feared for his life as rehearsals continued until shortly before his death on June 25, 2009.
The trial, in which Jackson's mother and three children contend AEG LIve is liable in his death, is in its third week in a Los Angeles courtroom. The lawsuit accuses the concert promoter of negligent hiring of Dr. Conrad Murray, the physician who was convicted of involuntary manslaughter in Jackson's death.
The Jacksons contend AEG Live executives ignored warning signs, including Jackson's weight loss, because they did not want to delay the premiere of the "This Is It" concerts set for July 2009.
'Pulling the plug' on comeback
"It was 'We've got to get this together or the plug may be pulled,' " Payne testified under cross examination by a Jackson lawyer Tuesday.
Jackson was having trouble learning some of his dances in the final weeks, he said.
The jury saw an e-mail from show director Kenny Ortega saying Jackson had "been slow at grabbing hold of the work."
He also asked that a teleprompter be placed near the stage to help him remember song lyrics, something Jackson had never used before during a concert, he said.
An e-mail written by "This Is It" band director Michael Bearden to Ortega 11 days before Jackson's death was displayed in court.
"MJ is not in shape enough yet to sing this stuff live and dance at the same time," Bearden wrote. "He can use the ballads to sing live and get his stamina back up, Once he's healthy enough and have more strength I Have full confidence he can sing the majority of the show live. His voice sounds amazing right now, he needs to build it back up. I still need all big dance numbers to be in the system so we can concentrate on choreography."
But Ortega sent Jackson sent home without performing at the next rehearsal three days later because he was ill.
 
updated AP


JACKSON DESCRIBED AS 'LOOPY' AFTER DOCTOR VISITS
By ANTHONY McCARTNEY
&#8212; May. 14 8:20 PM EDT
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FILE - In this March 5, 2009 file photo, Michael Jackson announces several concerts at the London O2 Arena in July, at a press conference at the London O2 Arena. Stacy Walker, a choreographer who worked with Jackson in his ill-fated &#8220;This Is It&#8221; shows, told a civil jury in a Los Angeles courtroom on Monday May 13, 2013, that she did not see any signs that the singer was ill or might die in his final days and weeks. Walker is AEG&#8217;s first defense witness in a civil case filed by Jackson&#8217;s mother, Katherine Jackson, who claims the concert giant failed to properly investigate or supervise the doctor convicted in 2011 of causing the singer&#8217;s death. (AP Photo/Joel Ryan, file)


FILE - In this June 23, 2009 handout photo provided by AEG, pop star Michael Jackson rehearses at the Staples Center in Los Angeles. Stacy Walker, a choreographer who worked with Jackson in his ill-fated &#8220;This Is It&#8221; shows, told a civil jury in a Los Angeles courtroom on Monday May 13, 2013, that she did not see any signs that the singer was ill or might die in his final days and weeks. Walker is AEG&#8217;s first defense witness in a civil case filed by Jackson&#8217;s mother, Katherine Jackson, who claims the concert giant failed to properly investigate or supervise the doctor convicted in 2011 of causing the singer&#8217;s death. (AP Photo/ Kevin Mazur, AEG/Getty Images, file) ** MANDATORY CREDIT. NO SALES, ARCHIVE OUT **
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LOS ANGELES (AP) &#8212; Michael Jackson appeared "a little loopy" after visits with his longtime dermatologist and was considering using a teleprompter to help him perform some of his songs during his ill-fated comeback concerts, a choreographer who worked one-on-one with the pop superstar told a jury Tuesday.

Travis Payne said he expressed concerns to the director of the "This Is It" shows that Jackson might be misusing prescription medications and was exhibiting troubling signs of insomnia, weight loss and paranoia in his final days.

Some of the behavior occurred after Jackson's visits with dermatologist Dr. Arnold Klein, who Payne believed was performing cosmetic treatments on the singer so he would be comfortable performing onstage again.

"Sometimes in rehearsal, Michael would appear just a little loopy," Payne said, adding that the singer appeared to be "assisted or under the influence of something."

Jackson's condition and missed rehearsals led to talk within the last 10 days of Jackson's life that AEG Live LLC, which was promoting "This Is It," might cancel the concert series.

Payne was working for AEG and said he relayed his concerns about Jackson's possible prescription drug use to tour director Kenny Ortega. Jackson was struggling to get into shape for the shows, and Payne said his voice coach suggested using a voice track for fast-paced songs until the singer's stamina improved.

He said Jackson wanted to use a teleprompter during the shows as "extra security," but it was an aid the performer had not used in his two previous tours.

The choreographer testified for AEG, which is being sued by Jackson's mother. Katherine Jackson claims AEG failed to properly investigate Conrad Murray, the doctor who was convicted of involuntary manslaughter for Jackson's death, and that the concert promoter also missed or ignored signs of Jackson's poor health.

AEG denies it hired Murray and claims Jackson was private about medical treatments and hid the depths of his prescription drug addiction. Jackson died from an overdose of the anesthetic propofol, which Murray was giving him as a sleep aid.

The company also did not hire the dermatologist, Klein.

Klein is listed as a potential witness in the case, but it's unknown whether he will testify. His treatment of Jackson, which included Demerol shots, has been scrutinized both during Murray's 2011 criminal trial and the current civil case.

Under cross examination, Payne acknowledged that some of Jackson's behavior, including grogginess, lethargy, insomnia and occasional paranoia, were possible symptoms of prescription drug abuse. He also said that despite testifying earlier that he worked with Jackson one-on-one five days a week, he couldn't recall how many rehearsals the singer actually attended.

Payne's testimony was similar to two plaintiff's witnesses, dancer Alif Sankey and makeup artist Karen Faye, who testified last week that Jackson was in poor health and paranoid in the weeks before his death and they alerted Ortega about it.

"You could sense that something was wrong, you just didn't know what it was?" plaintiff's attorney Brian Panish asked. Yes, Payne replied.

The choreographer had remained composed throughout most of his testimony, occasionally smiling and politely trying to answer questions. But after several hours of testy exchanges with Panish, his voice quivered and he dabbed his eyes with a tissue.

"I don't have a dog in this race," Payne said at one point. "I'm just trying to have a conversation with you and tell the truth."
 
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