Conrad Murray Net Worth is-$500 Thousand
Date of Birth: Feb 19, 1953
Country: Grenada
Net Worth: View Conrad Murray Net Worth
Country: Grenada
Net Worth: View Conrad Murray Net Worth
Conrad Murray is sitting on a net worth of -$500 thousand. Conrad Murray's was the cardiologist and personal physician for Michael Jackson. Doctor Murray moved to the US in 1980, from his native country Grenada. He obtained a degree in pre-medicine and bio science at Southern Texas University. Coming from an underprivileged background, Murray made the most of every opportunity that came his way. Years later, Murray became an associate director of the interventional cardiology fellowship-training program for Sharp Memorial Hospital. By 1999, Murray opened a private practice in Las Vegas. He became a personal physician for Michael Jackson for his 2009 tour - Murray was paid $150,000 a month. Two first met in 2006 and soon became friends. This was the beginning of Murray's demise: during the six weeks he worked with Jackson, it was revealed that Murray administrated a daily drip of propofol to the singer. On the 25th June 2009, Murray administered the daily dose of the propofol, along with other drugs including muscle relaxant, causing the death Michael Jackson. The case went to trial, starting in September 2011. By November 2011, Murray was charged with involuntary manslaughter of Michael Jackson. He was sentenced to four years in prison at Los Angeles County Jail - it's believed that he will serve less than two years of his sentence due to the overcrowding in the prison.
The trial of Conrad Robert Murray (People of the State of California v. Conrad Robert Murray) was the American criminal trial of Michael Jackson's personal physician, Conrad Murray, born (1953-02-19) February 19, 1953 (age 59) in St. Andrews, Grenada, who was charged with involuntary manslaughter of Jackson. The trial, which started on September 27, 2011, was held in the Superior Court of Los Angeles County in Los Angeles, California, before Judge Michael Pastor.
The prosecutors in the case were David Walgren and Deborah Brazil, both Los Angeles deputy district attorneys, who, in their opening statement, told jurors that "misplaced trust in the hands of Murray cost Jackson his life". Murray's defense counsel (Edward Chernoff, Matthew Alford, J. Michael Flanagan and Nareg Gourjian) claimed Jackson, who was tired and under pressure from rehearsing, took eight tablets of lorazepam, a sedative. "When Dr. Murray left the room, Jackson self-administered a dose of propofol that, with the lorazepam, created a perfect storm in his body that killed him instantly. The whole thing is tragic, but the evidence is not that Dr. Murray did it," Chernoff said. Testimony during the trial showed that Murray had stayed with Jackson at least six nights a week and was regularly asked--and sometimes begged--by the insomniac singer to give him drugs powerful enough to put him to sleep. Jackson, Murray told authorities, was especially eager to be administered propofol, a surgical anesthetic that put him to sleep when other powerful sedatives could not. Testimony indicated that propofol, in conjunction with other drugs in Jackson's system, had played the key role in his death on June 25, 2009. In November 2011, the jury found Murray guilty after about eight hours of deliberation, and he was sentenced to four years in prison.
September 27, 2011: Day 1 Both sides made opening statements. The jury viewed a photograph of Jackson lying on a gurney, taken minutes after he was declared dead. T
The prosecutors in the case were David Walgren and Deborah Brazil, both Los Angeles deputy district attorneys, who, in their opening statement, told jurors that "misplaced trust in the hands of Murray cost Jackson his life". Murray's defense counsel (Edward Chernoff, Matthew Alford, J. Michael Flanagan and Nareg Gourjian) claimed Jackson, who was tired and under pressure from rehearsing, took eight tablets of lorazepam, a sedative. "When Dr. Murray left the room, Jackson self-administered a dose of propofol that, with the lorazepam, created a perfect storm in his body that killed him instantly. The whole thing is tragic, but the evidence is not that Dr. Murray did it," Chernoff said. Testimony during the trial showed that Murray had stayed with Jackson at least six nights a week and was regularly asked--and sometimes begged--by the insomniac singer to give him drugs powerful enough to put him to sleep. Jackson, Murray told authorities, was especially eager to be administered propofol, a surgical anesthetic that put him to sleep when other powerful sedatives could not. Testimony indicated that propofol, in conjunction with other drugs in Jackson's system, had played the key role in his death on June 25, 2009. In November 2011, the jury found Murray guilty after about eight hours of deliberation, and he was sentenced to four years in prison.
September 27, 2011: Day 1 Both sides made opening statements. The jury viewed a photograph of Jackson lying on a gurney, taken minutes after he was declared dead. T
(Visited 172 times, 1 visits today)