The parallels between the end of Michael Jackson’s and Elvis Presley’s lives are getting to be chillingly and eerily similar.
Both had become isolated and miserable recluses. Both had become helpless slaves to their drug addictions. And both had “assistants” and quasi-doctors who acted as liaisons between themselves and the doctor’s offices that enabled them to procure far more prescriptions than the human body can withstand.
The amount of powerful prescription medicine the megastar was consuming around the time of his death in the summer of 2009 was enormous. And at the center of this international tragedy is his personal physician, the vilified and very indicted Dr. Conrad Murray, who has given conflicting and damaging testimony on the hours leading up to, and moments after, MJ’s death.
The Los Angeles Police Department found the following drugs at Jackson’s home — a jaw-dropping list that explains all the trash bags that were taken from the Bel Air, Calif., estate. It is a list that rivals the amount reportedly taken by Elvis at the time he expired.
3 – 10 milligram/milliliter 1% lydocaine vials (2 empty, 1 3/4 full)
– 1 empty bottle propofol 200 milligrams
– 1 pulse monometer
– 1 empty vial lorazepam 4 milligrams
– 2 empty vials midazolam 10 milligrams
– 1 empty vial propofol 1 gram/100 milliliter
– 1 black nylon bag
– 1 dark blue costco bag
– 1 light blue canvas bag
– 1 pill bottle with 13 tablets containing 25 milligrams ephedrine, 200 milligrams caffeine, 80 milligrams aspirin
– 4 vials propofol 200 milligrams/20 milliliters
– 2 vials 5 milligrams flumazenil
– 1 vial lorazepam
– 1 vial lidocane
– 200-milligram vials of propofol (1 full, 1 1/4 full)
– 1 empty bag I.V. drip of sodium chloride with syringe
– 1 ziplock baggy containing 18 tubes of Benoquin
Murray can only hope that the LAPD and other police agencies failed to follow proper procedures in the collection of this extremely damning evidence. –terry shropshire