responsibility? and he said he would. he followed through and rode with the paramedics in the ambulance right behind me, the short ride to ucla. michael jackson was officially pronounced dead at 2:26 p.m., june 25th, 2009, by a doctor at ucla. that s nearly four hours after dr. murray told investigators he noticed the singer was not breathing. murray, according to the search warrant affidavit, refused to sign the death certificate. the los angeles coroner would rule michael jackson s death a homicide. the cause of death? acute propofol intoxication. and dr. murray would later be charged with involuntary manslaughter. coming up, accusations of a conspiracy. are there others to blame for killing michael jackson? you think someone killed him?
as investigators began to unravel michael jackson s final hours, a timeline emerged. a time line in a sworn affidavit. this is what investigators believe happened based on evidence and eyewitness accounts, including those of jackson s personal physician, dr. conrad murray. on the last night of his life, jackson made his way from l.a. toward beverly hills. as he did, few really knew the dark secrets the pop legend carried with him to 100 north carolwood drive. michael jackson spent his final hours here at this rented mansion in l.a. according to the search warrant affidavit, his personal physician, dr. conrad murray, told police it was a restless and ultimately a drug-filled night with jackson battling his chronic insomnia allegedly
for the children. according to the search warrant affidavit, murray asked jackson s eldest son, prince michael, to come upstairs, and then continued cpr. and if you re putting the pieces together from a prosecution standpoint, you could argue that conrad murray wanted witnesses to say they saw conrad murray trying to revive michael jackson. at 11:18 that fateful morning, police say dr. murray made a series of three cell phone calls, spanning 47 minutes. this timeline suggests more than an hour had passed since jackson was found not breathing. it is a time line that murray and his attorney fiercely contest. i think it s clear that what they are doing is hypothesizing about the timeline. that s not what happened. that s not what the doctor told him. reporter: what is not in dispute is this. we have a gentleman here not breathing. he needs help. yi tpu but h nwere how old is he? he s 50 years old, sir. at approximately 12:22 p.m., jackson security guard alberto alvarez m
hours here at this rented mansion in l.a. according to the search warrant affidavit, his personal physician, dr. conrad murray, told police it was a restless and ultimately a drug-filled night with jackson battling his chronic insomnia allegedly pleading with murray to give him a powerful and dangerous drug called propofol. randy taraborrelli is a jackson biographer and a life-long confidant. he would have paid $1 million for a good night s sleep. that s not an exaggeration. he actually would have. michael jackson was plagued by insomnia for years. journalist jim moret spent years covering michael jackson. he was plagued with this horrible inability to go to sleep and he would rely upon doctors to provide him with medication so that he could sleep. according to police, jackson s final hours, beyond these windows, involved a cocktail of drugs, allegedly administered by dr. murray. based on the affidavit, dr. murray s efforts to get jackson to sleep began with a 10
evidence and eyewitness accounts, including those of jackson s personal physician, dr. conrad murray. on the last day of his life, he made his way from l.a. toward beverly hills. as he did, few really knew the dark secrets the pop legend carried with him to 100 north carolwood drive. michael jackson spent his final hours here at this rented mansion in l.a. according to the search warrant affidavit, his personal physician dr. conrad murray told police was a restless and ultimaul ultimately a drug-filled night with jackson battling his chronic insomnia allegedly pleading with murray to give him a powerful and dangerous drug called propofol. randy taraborrelli is a jackson biographer and a life-long confidant. he would have paid $1 million for a good night s sleep.