Saturday, June 25, 2011

The second anniversary of the death of Jackson will be accompanied by visits to Neverland




On Saturday, fans all over the world recall the death of Michael Jackson , the king of the pop world. The second anniversary of the death of Jackson will be accompanied by visits to Neverland, a huge ranch that the artist had in California, Forest Lawn, where he is buried, among other iconic locations such as the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

In addition, the residence of star in Las Vegas (Nevada) will open its doors to the public for the first time by four hours, under strict security measures. "We will allow people to wander where he walked, see what he saw, breathe the same air and feel inspired," said a representative of the house specializing in celebrity site TMZ.com. The final event will be an auction hosted by Julien's Auctions in Beverly Hills, which will be placed within reach more than 200 objects associated with the singer.

Michael died on 25 June 2009 at age 50, victim of acute intoxication with propofol, a powerful sedative that hospital use would have been administered by his personal doctor, Conrad Murray, charged with manslaughter (when there is no intent to kill). At autopsy, showed that propofol as a determining factor in death, were also found other drugs in his blood.

Murray acknowledged that he had given the singer a cocktail of drugs the day of his death, although during the preliminary hearing to defend the accused raised the possibility that the artist has self-medicating with propofol. "Gentlemen, I am an innocent man," the cardiologist said in January. Murray, 58, is free on bail of 75,000 dollars. In case of being proven guilty in the death of the king of pop, Murray could face four years in prison. In May, Michael Shepherd, judge of the Superior Court of Los Angeles (California) decided to postpone the trial began Sept. 8 for the day. Michael's death occurred after a sleepless night preceded by a day of trials that did little to presage, witnesses say, the tragic and sudden end of the musician, who would go on stage this summer (northern hemisphere) in London, on tour This is It , after eight years away from the public. The trials behind closed doors in the pavilion Staples Center, Los Angeles, ended up being the last performances of the singer. The preparation generated one hundred hours of recordings made ​​into a documentary posthumously baptized with the same name and the tour grossed over $ 260 million at the box office. The sequences of the work will focus discarded part of the trial. Murray's defense believes that the images contained evidence that Michael was not in good health before the night of his death, which could sow reasonable doubt in a jury about the true responsibility of the physician. The prosecution, however, reveals that Murray disregard the patient to talk on the phone and it took nearly 30 minutes to alert the emergency services to find the artist inert in his bed. Meanwhile, Michael's legacy lives on in the form of new successes music. In 2009 he was the biggest-selling artist in the U.S., ahead of Taylor Swift and Lady Gaga. The following year, it launched the first posthumous studio album with new songs, called Michael , who soon became the number in many countries. Despite the attempts to control his family fortune, the artist left his inheritance to a position of trust which has the unique benefit his mother Katherine and his three children Prince Michael, Paris and Prince Michael II Blanket. The family has no doubts about the Murray's fault. La Toya, sister of the artist, recently revealed that Michael was convinced of the existence of a conspiracy to end his life due to the large number of albums of songs on which he had rights as well as the value of their properties.

No comments:

Post a Comment