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Murray already is deeply in debt, and pleading to a felony would open him to liability in a civil damages trial. The Jackson family has spoken of suing Murray for wrongful death.
To gain a conviction at trial, prosecutors will have to walk jurors through Jackson's complicated medical history as well as the events leading up to his death. That will be crucial, said Ellyn Garafalo, a prominent defense attorney who is representing a doctor charged in the Anna Nicole Smith drug case.
"The biggest hurdle they have is to show whatever Dr. Murray did caused Michael Jackson's death," she said. "They're going to have to say he knew or should have known that what he did could have resulted in death."
An element of the defense theory, Braun said, may be that Jackson was a demanding patient who insisted on propofol, a drug he had taken for a long time.
"The defense theory is Michael Jackson needed it, wanted it, knew the danger and took the risks," Braun said.
Garafalo said that while such an argument can be made in an effort to persuade the jury, it is not a legal defense.
"It's like saying I asked someone to shoot me and he did, so he's not guilty," she said.
Prosecutors will argue that the doctor bears the ultimate responsibility for his actions and can't be absolved because the patient may have pressured him to do something he should have known was dangerous.
Jackson's celebrity is sure to influence the case and Chernoff worries about seating a jury.
"There is a real concern that we have about getting a group of jurors that are going to come into court and are not going to have any preconceived notions of guilt," he said.
But publicity in this case is everywhere, he said, so seeking a change of venue is unlikely.
"The problem is we have this around-the-world stuff," said Chernoff. "Even in the O.J. Simpson trial, people in Uganda didn't care about it. But in this case, they care in Uganda and everywhere else."
[Associated
Press;
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