July 31, 2009 2:30 PM

Jackson a Lifeline for Money-Troubled Doc

(AP)  Dr. Conrad Murray needed a big payday when he became Michael Jackson's personal physician last spring.

The Las Vegas cardiologist owed at least $780,000 for settlements against his business, outstanding mortgage payments on his house, delinquent student loans, child support and credit cards. And that doesn't include the $68,000 the distributor of an energy drink says Murray, a one-time business associate, owes for skipping out on payments.

Court records chronicling Murray's woes in Las Vegas, where authorities searched his home this week as part of their manslaughter investigation into Jackson's death, help explain why. Beyond basking in a celebrity's aura, Murray might have jumped at the $150,000-a-month Jackson's promoter was prepared to pay him to keep the star healthy through a series of concerts in London.

Murray hooked on with Jackson in May, as his bleak financial picture threatened to worsen. He already was under court orders to pay more than $363,000 for equipment for his heart clinic and $71,000 in student loans dating to the 1980s, a judgment that hit in April. Two lawsuits claiming he owes $240,000 more for unpaid equipment are pending in Nevada courts.

And Murray had appeared unable or unwilling to settle more modest debts - a nearly $3,700 judgment for not paying child support and two recent credit card company claims totaling $2,600.

Murray's 5,268-square-foot home near the 18th hole of a golf course offers no refuge - he's in "pre-foreclosure" after failing to make payments on his $1.66 million loan, records show. He stopped paying the $15,000-per-month mortgage in December and could lose the home by November, said Mary Hunt, the foreclosure officer handling the case for Stewart Title company.

Authorities investigating Jackson's death at his rented Los Angeles mansion believe Murray gave the star a fatal dose of the anesthetic propofol to help him sleep, according to a law enforcement official who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the investigation is ongoing. Propofol is commonly used for surgeries and is not meant as a sleep agent or to be given in private homes. Because of its potency, only trained anesthesia professionals are supposed to administer it and patients are to be constantly monitored.

Police have not labeled Murray a suspect but have said in search warrants they are seeking evidence he committed manslaughter and prescribed drugs to "an addict," an apparent reference to Jackson.

Murray, 56, has not spoken publicly since Jackson's June 25 death. His lawyer, Ed Chernoff, has said the doctor did not prescribe anything that "should have" killed Jackson.

Neither Jackson nor AEG Live, the promoter for the London concerts, paid Murray for the two months the doctor worked for the pop star, according to Chernoff.

"Dr. Murray has lost the ability to make a living as a result of this investigation," he said. "His hope is he can forestall foreclosure until he can once again begin working as a doctor."

Murray's financial background could become an important part of the case, if prosecutors file charges, said Rebecca Lonergan, a University of Southern California law professor and former federal prosecutor of health care fraud cases.

"It does potentially provide evidence of good motive for financial-based crimes, including prescribing when there is not a medical necessity," she said.

Murray's cresting financial woes fit into a history of money problems. He filed for bankruptcy in California in 1992 and had a string of tax liens from Sacramento and San Bernardino counties as well as Maricopa County, Arizona, between 1993 and 2003.

Several years ago, Murray branched out, striking up a deal with John Thomas, distributor of an energy drink called Pit Bull. Thomas said in 2005 and 2006 Murray had the rights to distribute the drink in Trinidad and Tobago, the Caribbean island nation where Murray lived and worked before coming to the United States in the 1980s to study medicine.

The drink never gained popularity there. Murray paid his bill for a first shipment, then didn't pay for three subsequent shipments, Thomas said.

Though Thomas said Murray owes him $68,000, he remained friendly with the doctor and spoke briefly with him days before Jackson's death, when he invited Murray to the opening of a mixed martial arts gym in Las Vegas. Murray told him he was out of town and wouldn't be able to attend.

"You always think you know a guy," Thomas said. "All the dirt is coming out now."

By Associated Press Writers Ken Ritter and Justin Pritchard; AP reporters Juan Lozano in Houston, Thomas Watkins and Tony Fraser, and AP Researchers Judith Ausbel and Barbara Sambrinski contributed to this report

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 13 Comments
by edgy44 August 1, 2009 12:03 AM EDT
All I can say, is if I were the doctor, and I was protecting my license, and career, is that I wouldn't be carrying oxygen tanks up and down the stairs. I'd have had the patient committed to a mental facility and locked-up until they got all the drugs out of his system. Then they could start to analyze what medication he really needed. There is no way he could do 50 shows in his condition, so that option was never on the reality table.
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by User0000isbanned August 1, 2009 7:06 AM EDT
Actually, a pretty good point, edgy44. MJ seemed to surround himself with the typical entourage of enablers and sycophants. . . . people who appeared to be simply exploiting him.

One begins to wonder if anyone really cared about Jackson. The whole business is a sad commentary on the phenomenon of celebrity.
by hamiltongrad August 1, 2009 11:22 AM EDT
Can these celebrities ever "get off " and just be regular people again ? Poor MJ was in a vortex of excess, expectation and death. The poor doctor stuck a toe in, it seems was pulled down himself. I do not blame the doctor for that reason, he was compromised, and probably forced to do things he was not comfortable doing in that crazy situation. I feel more sorry for him than anyone in this sad, clearly demented drama.
by trapbreaking July 31, 2009 10:01 PM EDT
Put the blame where it belongs. A doper will get his fixes from hang on doctors, or groupie associates, of even go off shore, if necessary. All if it leads to just one place...dope death.

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by bobnjersey July 31, 2009 4:25 PM EDT
[Murray hooked on with Jackson in May, as his bleak financial picture threatened to worsen. He already was under court orders to pay more than $363,000 for equipment for his heart clinic and $71,000 in student loans dating to the 1980s, a judgment that hit in April. Two lawsuits claiming he owes $240,000 more for unpaid equipment are pending in Nevada courts. ]

more like 'latched on'. this guy is a well dressed loser.

was there anyone around michael jackson really looking out for michael jackson ... or were they all just looking out for themselves?
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by brianbwb-2009 July 31, 2009 7:18 PM EDT
Good question Bob, the answer to which is no, they were all out for themselves.

Mr. Jackson was surrounded by professional sharks, vampires, leeches and mosquitoes ever since he was about 15 years old, they even had him cut off from his own siblings.

He had a few close friends around his age, that he thought no one else knew, or at least noticed, and had many deep and confidential discussions with them, occasionally sneaking out to secluded basketball courts, incognito trips to Venice Beach, and yes, he did like KFC. To his last day, it is doubtful he ever knew that those friends were "warned off" by some really nasty people.
by edgy44 July 31, 2009 3:12 PM EDT
The doctor never got paid. Neither did the nurse. It seems no one knows how to do billing in LA, especially with a drug addict 2-steps from the morgue freezer.
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by spiritwalk August 1, 2009 5:46 PM EDT
Jackson was infamous for not paying. The employees at Neverland would go for weeks without getting paid and he wouldn't even pay the bill fo feeding the animals so the employees often paid to feed them out of their own pockets.

Anybody who went to work for Jackson and expectd to get paid was living in a fantasy land.
by sddemocrat July 31, 2009 3:01 PM EDT
The doctor is innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Dr. Murray wouldn't have ended his paycheck on purpose.
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by edgy44 July 31, 2009 2:42 PM EDT
Maybe Jackson refused to pay him, and threatened to turn him in if he didn't keep administering drugs. So the doc did him in.
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by willow0313 August 1, 2009 11:52 AM EDT
Jackson may have been a lifeline to Murray, but Murray sure wasn't the same for Jackson.....
by Kraqulze August 1, 2009 4:41 PM EDT
Wow... You take a giant leap there.

Jackson killed himself through his perpetual drug use.

Michael Jackson sought any doctor that would Help him. Murray was not the first he went to but like any "addict" Jackson exploited Murray's financial needs to his advantage.

The Jackson family witch hunt to find whoever is responsible is just ludicrious at best.

The family had numerous opporitunities in the last 20 years to prevent this and yet chose to do nothing. Even with allegations of child abuse and strange behaviors the family stood idlely by.

At almost any time any one of the Jackson family could have called the police and made them aware of Micheal's problems with drugs.

The police would have went in discovered the aliases on the perscriptions and MJ would have either went into a medical facility and/or jail for a very short time while being treated for drug abuse.

Micheal then would have had years of monitoring and drug testing while he was on parole and these poor children would not be in this situation.

Michael Jackson killed himself... PERIOD.

His family and staff, for thier part, enabled him to continue his downward spiral.
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