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Paramedics would not be called until 12:21 p.m., and Murray was making calls for much of the 11 o'clock hour, phone records presented during the five-day hearing show. Neither prosecutors nor Murray's defense attorney on Monday addressed the apparent discrepancies in the police version of the doctor's interview and other evidence. They also did not say whether most of the propofol that Murray ordered was used, although the doctor told Martinez he had been giving Jackson 50 milligrams of propofol six nights a week for roughly two months. According to Murray's attorney, Ed Chernoff, the detective's testimony covered only a portion of the doctor's interview with police. As with other witnesses, more details are likely to emerge if Murray is ordered to stand trial. Preliminary hearings have a lower burden of proof than trials, and defense attorneys rarely present their own witnesses or theories. Prosecutors have so far used phone records and testimony from police, paramedics and Murray's current and former girlfriends to try to show Murray was on the phone throughout the morning of Jackson's death, even after administering propofol to the singer. They hope to convince a judge of several key points: that Murray was distracted when he should have been monitoring Jackson, that he delayed calling 911, that he botched CPR efforts and that the singer was dead before help was summoned. Murray could face up to four years in prison if tried and convicted.
[Associated
Press;
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