Jury rejects Jackson lawsuit in wrongful death trial

Agence France-Presse

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The 12-person panel agreed that AEG Live hired Conrad Murray, but found that he was not unfit or incompetent for the job

CLOSING ARGUMENTS. Brian Panish, attorney for the Michael Jackson family delivers his closing argument to jurors in a packed courtroom in downtown Los Angeles, California, 24 September 2013. EPA/Al Seib / Pool

LOS ANGELES, USA – A California jury on Wednesday, October 2, dismissed a lawsuit brought by Michael Jackson’s family seeking massive damages from tour promoter AEG Live over his 2009 death.

The 12-person panel agreed that AEG Live hired Conrad Murray, but found that he was not unfit or incompetent for the job, which was one of the requirements for the Jackson lawsuit to succeed.

The jury had deliberated for three days after a five-month trial in which the Jackson family alleged that AEG Live negligently hired and supervised Murray.

The verdict took only minutes to be read out at a Los Angeles courtroom, with answers only given to two out of the 16 questions on the jury verdict form.

Jackson died on June 25, 2009 from an overdose of the anesthetic propofol given by doctor Conrad Murray at his rented mansion in Los Angeles, where he was rehearsing for the shows at London’s O2 Arena.

Murray, a Grenada-born cardiologist, was convicted of involuntary manslaughter in a criminal trial in 2011 for giving the drug to the star — who suffered from chronic insomnia — to help him sleep. He was jailed for four years.

In the civil trial, the singer’s mother Katherine Jackson, 83, alleged that AEG Live negligently hired an inappropriate and incompetent doctor and missed a series of red flags about the star’s failing health in the run-up to his death.

The “This is It” tour was Jackson’s bid at a comeback four years after his infamous child molestation trial. He was acquitted, but his image was destroyed, and he desperately needed to make money.

The Jacksons wanted AEG Live to pay $85 million to each of the star’s three children for emotional loss, and an unspecified amount for economic losses, estimated at up to $1.6 billion. AEG’s lawyers called the figures ridiculous. – Rappler.com

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