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Jackson had a well-known history of using prescription medications, especially painkillers. Following his death, Cherilyn Lee, a registered nurse who had worked for Jackson, told the AP she repeatedly rejected his demands for the drug Diprivan, also known as Propofol. It's a potent anesthetic used in operating rooms and it would be highly unusual to have it in a private home. Uri Geller, a former Jackson confidant, said he tried to keep Jackson from abusing painkillers and other prescription drugs, but others in the singer's circle kept him supplied. "When Michael asked for something, he got it," Geller said in a telephone interview from his suburban London home. Jackson had multiple doctors and many others like Geller who came in and out of his life. Which people are being interviewed by police is unclear because the LAPD has said virtually nothing about the probe. "I am not going to make any comments on the investigation," Commander Patrick Gannon, the designated police spokesman on the Jackson case, said by e-mail Thursday. Any evidence would be turned over to the district attorney's office, which has final say on criminal charges. One of the key questions is why it took four days for police to issue a search warrant and remove medications from Jackson's home. Although the home wasn't declared a crime scene, police did tow Murray's car the evening of the death to look for potential evidence. Vernon J. Geberth, former commanding officer of the Bronx Homicide Task force in New York, said police should have known they were dealing with an extraordinary situation. "If it's a high-profile person, you have to do more than you would do ordinarily," he said. Still, Geberth, who now acts as a private forensic consultant, said he believes the LAPD acted appropriately. "Having a doctor present altered the equation. It was not a homicide scene. It was an emergency medical scene," he said. Police spokesman Lt. John Romero declined to comment when asked if the LAPD was reviewing its handling of the investigation. Rosenbluth said if the case ends up as a criminal prosecution, any defense attorney would seize on the LAPD's failure to immediately seal Jackson's home. "If you can get even one juror (to) think, I don't know, maybe somebody fiddled with the medicine before the police came in and collected it, that's reasonable doubt," she said. "All that the defense attorney needs is one juror."
[Associated
Press;
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