Killing Micheal Jackson: new documentary.

      Killing Michael Jackson,  a new true-crime              documentary
                           
Michael Jackson’s death is set to be explored in a new documentary which focuses the three US detectives who led the original investigation into the singer’s death.

Killing Michael Jackson is a new true-crime documentary special airing on Quest Red this Saturday that examines the circumstances surrounding the King of Pop’s death.

On June 25 2009, Michael Jackson was found dead of a cardiac arrest attributed to a fatal dose of the anaesthetic propofol.

His personal physician, Dr Conrad Murray, was convicted of the involuntary manslaughter of Jackson in 2011 and served two years in prison.
                         
Now detectives Orlando Martinez, Dan Myers and Scott Smith have revealed what they found inside the room where Jackson died.

‘There were post-it notes, or pieces of paper taped all over the room and mirrors and doors with little slogans or phrases,’ Detective Martinez says in the documentary.

Photos of treatment room Killing Michael Jackson
Photos of treatment room (Picture: Quest Red)
‘I don’t know if they were lyrics or thoughts. Some of them seemed like poems. The bedroom was… it was a mess.’


Entering the room where Dr Murray treated Jackson, Martinez recounts finding ‘a computer on the bed, there was a lifelike doll on the bed, and there was kind of like advertisements pictures of babies’.

Photos of treatment room Killing Michael Jackson
Photos of the treatment room in the documentary (Picture: Quest Red)
He added: ‘It did not seem like a room fit for any type of medical treatment.’

The detectives also describe discovering Dr Murray’s medical bag hidden in the property, which first arose their suspicions of foul play.

Martinez added: ‘We found a bunch more medicines that were used, like propofol.

He continued: ’We found all the waste, all the trash. The needles, the empty bottles around.

‘So we knew that sometime during this medical emergency, Dr Murray had stopped either giving CPR or had waited to give CPR and cleaned up everything.’

Detective Meyers added: ‘Within 48 hours, it appeared that it was a suspicious death in that there was something more than just an overdose or what do u think? Drop ur comment.

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