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Ops, sorry about that, guys. I opened by TIAI, thought it was a new post, but then I saw the date.Sorry.
Dr. Conrad Murray's statement to LAPD detectives lays out a timeline in which Dr. Murray administered Propofol at 10:40 AM and then ten minutes later (10:50) he walked out of the room, went to the bathroom and returned two minutes later (10:52) to find Jackson was not breathing. He did not have anyone call 911 until 12:21 PM ... approximately an hour-and-a-half later.
QuoteDr. Conrad Murray's statement to LAPD detectives lays out a timeline in which Dr. Murray administered Propofol at 10:40 AM and then ten minutes later (10:50) he walked out of the room, went to the bathroom and returned two minutes later (10:52) to find Jackson was not breathing. He did not have anyone call 911 until 12:21 PM ... approximately an hour-and-a-half later.I see we are back to this time line again. Too bad those cell phone records don't support it.
Quote from: "bec"QuoteDr. Conrad Murray's statement to LAPD detectives lays out a timeline in which Dr. Murray administered Propofol at 10:40 AM and then ten minutes later (10:50) he walked out of the room, went to the bathroom and returned two minutes later (10:52) to find Jackson was not breathing. He did not have anyone call 911 until 12:21 PM ... approximately an hour-and-a-half later.I see we are back to this time line again. Too bad those cell phone records don't support it.We should consider that Murrey was contacting Michael for instructions to see if he is far enough to call 911. Also other personal calls because he was not worry about anything. Nobody was dying that is what I would interpret from those phone calls. If Murrey left Michael intentionally dying, HE WOULD NOT MADE ANY CALLS TO HAVE ALIBI THAT HE WAS NEXT TO MICHAEL ON HIS DUTIES.You don't kill someone leaving bunch of mistakes, wrong track to become a suspect.