Jury
selection was to begin Tuesday in a long-awaited trial in which Michael
Jackson’s mother is seeking billions of dollars from tour promoters she
says are responsible for her son’s 2009 death.
Katherine
Jackson, 82, accuses AEG Live of negligently hiring doctor Conrad
Murray to look after the King of Pop as he rehearsed in Los Angeles for a
doomed series of London shows.
Murray,
jailed after being convicted of involuntary manslaughter in 2011 for
giving the singer an overdose of the drug propofol, could be called to
testify in the wrongful death case, although he may refuse to do so.
Katherine
Jackson herself, as well as the late pop star’s two elder children,
will also give evidence in the trial that comes nearly four years after
his death, and could last more than two months.
Jury
selection in the Los Angeles Superior Court was delayed early Tuesday
over a legal argument about television coverage of the proceedings.
Broadcasters
CNN and NBC are pressing Judge Yvette Palazuelos to allow live
coverage, noting that it was granted for the Murray trial two years ago.
Their lawyers pressed her again Tuesday, after she denied a CNN request
on March 7.
Jackson
died aged 50 at his Los Angeles mansion on June 25, 2009, from an
overdose of propofol, a powerful sedative administered by Murray to help
the “Thriller” legend deal with chronic insomnia.
At
the time of his death, he was rehearsing for a series of 50 shows in
London, organized with Anschutz Entertainment Group in what was seen as
an attempt to revive his career and also ease his financial woes.
Jackson’s mother argues that AEG Live pushed her son too hard to prepare for the performances.
But
AEG says Jackson had a history of drug abuse long before the singer met
Murray, who was hired to care for him before and during the shows at
London’s O2 Arena.
The
trial on Katherine Jackson’s civil lawsuit was put off until after
Murray’s 2011 criminal trial was over, and legal wrangling also delayed a
scheduled September start.
Lawyers have notably argued over what should and should not be admitted as evidence.
Palazuelos
has granted an AEG demand for testimony about child molestation charges
against Jackson to be heard — which his mother says are irrelevant —
claiming it could explain the star’s stress and medical woes.
But
she has refused to allow testimony notably about the parentage of
Jackson’s three children, or a bizarre incident in which his mother was
allegedly kidnapped by family members and taken to Arizona last year.
Murray
may be called from prison to give a deposition, but only with the jury
out of the courtroom. And he may invoke his Fifth Amendment right to
decline to testify in a case that might incriminate him further.
A CNN interview with Murray, conducted before the start of the trial, was to be aired later Tuesday.
AEG claims it was not responsible for hiring and supervising Murray.
“He
was chosen by Michael Jackson, to be there at Michael Jackson’s behest,
to be Michael Jackson’s doctor alone,” AEG lawyer Marvin Putman told
CNN. “Michael Jackson was the only person who could get rid of him.”
According
to celebrity news website TMZ, Jackson’s mother and his three children —
Prince, 16, Paris, 14 and 11-year-old Blanket — want more than $40
billion from AEG for loss of future earnings and other damages.
AEG
claims the figure is “preposterous” because Jackson’s career was in a
downward spiral following the child molestation allegations, as well as
self-imposed exile in the Middle East, TMZ reported.
Jackson family attorney Kevin Boyle rejected the report, telling CNN: “No demand has been m
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