Sunday, June 28, 2009

Jackson family order new autopsy, anger mounts



REbbi jackson one of the sister of Michael jackson.









The family of Michael Jackson ordered a second autopsy of the tragic pop icon yesterday as associates told of mounting anger over “unanswered questions” surrounding the superstar’s death.

Los Angeles police yesterday conducted a second interview with doctor Conrad Murray, the only person with him when he collapsed. A spokeswoman for the cardiologist said he “clarified some inconsistencies” over the death.

“Investigators say the doctor is in no way a suspect and remains a witness to this tragedy.” Frustrated by the lack of hard information, the family requested a second autopsy on Jackson’s body which was being kept at an undisclosed location, officials and local media reports said.


Late yesterday, The Los Angeles Times reported the autopsy had been completed but there was no word on the findings.
“We don’t like what’s going on,” family patriarch Joe Jackson told People magazine. The Jacksons later issued a statement to fans describing the death as

“one of the darkest moments of our lives.” The Los Angeles Coroner’s office said Friday a preliminary autopsy on Jackson was inconclusive and a final cause of death would not be known until exhaustive toxicology tests are completed in “six to eight weeks.” According to The Times, which cites Pennsylvania forensic pathologist Cyril Wecht, the coroner’s office probably kept Jackson’s brain even after his body had been released to the family in order to conduct a neuropathology test.

This test could reveal whether the singer’s brain had been damaged by drug abuse and whether he had suffered overdoses in the past, the paper said.

Joe Jackson separately told Fox News that Michael Jackson’s three children — whom the pop star fiercely protected — were in “fantastic” spirits at the musical clan’s compound

Friday, June 26, 2009

Michael Jackson - a childlike, shy genius


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Jackson – weird but in a friendly way, certainly not a freak .Show promoter Tan Sri Syed Yusof Tun Syed Nasir, who was instrumental in bringing Michael Jackson here for a two-night concert in 1996 (Malaysia), said the King of Pop was “weird but in a friendly way”.

“His behaviour was childlike. For instance, he liked to knock on the hotel room doors of his friends and then run away like a kid.

“He was full of love and very generous. During his visit to KL, I got to know him well and realised he was a gentle and talented person. I sympathised with him for the negative media reports.”

Jackson was also a nocturnal creature.

“His mind was hyper active at night,” said Syed Yusof. “That was the time he would write his songs or discuss business. I personally spent many late hours discussing business with him.”

When Jackson was staying at Syed Yusof’s Concorde Hotel here during his concert, the singer would ring up his Malaysian friend in the middle of the night, saying he couldn’t sleep.

“I had to call in a doctor to get him to sleep,” Syed Yusof recollected. “He didn’t like to pop pills. So I asked the doctor to give him a jab.

Syed Yusof has renamed the swanky room that his celebrity friend had stayed in Concorde KL as the “Michael Jackson suite”.

Located on the 18th floor, the room is full of photographs and collectibles of the superstar. Syed Yusof has also put Jackson’s doodles on the wall.

“Aside from music, Michael loved to doodle.

“Michael wanted to be remembered as the greatest entertainer in the world. And I think he achieved that. What’s really disappointing is that I was planning to go to London for his concert on July 8,” said Syed Yusof.



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Saturday June 27, 2009
Jackson – weird but in a friendly way, certainly not a freak

KUALA LUMPUR: Show promoter Tan Sri Syed Yusof Tun Syed Nasir, who was instrumental in bringing Michael Jackson here for a two-night concert in 1996, said the King of Pop was “weird but in a friendly way”.

The iconic pop star was never the freak that the foreign media painted him out to be, he said.

“His behaviour was childlike. For instance, he liked to knock on the hotel room doors of his friends and then run away like a kid.

“He was full of love and very generous. During his visit to KL, I got to know him well and realised he was a gentle and talented person. I sympathised with him for the negative media reports.”

Jackson was also a nocturnal creature.

“His mind was hyper active at night,” said Syed Yusof. “That was the time he would write his songs or discuss business. I personally spent many late hours discussing business with him.”

They had planned to build a theme park here, but the project did not take off due to the economic situation then.

When Jackson was staying at Syed Yusof’s Concorde Hotel here during his concert, the singer would ring up his Malaysian friend in the middle of the night, saying he couldn’t sleep.

“I had to call in a doctor to get him to sleep,” Syed Yusof recollected. “He didn’t like to pop pills. So I asked the doctor to give him a jab.

“I first met Michael in Las Vegas (in 1995),” said Syed Yusof. “I stayed in his hotel room. He then took me on a tour of Neverland and his recording studio in New York. He was a good host, not to mention a good-hearted person. He had a lot of love in him, especially for children.”

The last time that he heard from Jackson was through his older brother, Jermaine, who is also a close friend of Syed Yusof’s.

“I met Jermaine two weeks ago and asked about Michael. Jermaine said his brother was fine.”

Syed Yusof has renamed the swanky room that his celebrity friend had stayed in Concorde KL as the “Michael Jackson suite”.

Located on the 18th floor, the room is full of photographs and collectibles of the superstar. Syed Yusof has also put Jackson’s doodles on the wall.

“Aside from music, Michael loved to doodle.

“Michael wanted to be remembered as the greatest entertainer in the world. And I think he achieved that. What’s really disappointing is that I was planning to go to London for his concert on July 8,” said Syed Yusof.

Stephen Yap, who was promotions manager with Sony Music (M) in 1996 when Jackson was here said: “There wasn’t the usual ‘diva’ fanfare surrounding him. Even with his bodyguards present, he was pleasant to us. In fact, we even had tea with him. He wasn’t one of those stars who was just waiting for his social commitments to be over and done with. He really cared about the things around him.”

Cynthia Chen, project director for Jojo Events, said: “The concert was the biggest and most expensive production for a solo artiste I have worked on. He seemed like a nice but shy person. Do you know that the Concorde Hotel was closed for bookings the whole time he was here? And we completely refurnished the presidential suite for him.”

Michael Roche, regional director of Lushington Entertainments, the promoter responsible for bringing Jackson to this region in 1996, said: “I remember at the Merdeka Stadium concerts, there were a few restrictions that we were meant to adhere to. And we told Michael to try and refrain from doing his famous crotch-grabbing routine. He politely assured us he wouldn’t. And as he hit the stage, that’s exactly what he did, sending the audience wild with excitement.

“He had this mischievous streak in him. When he checked in at the Concorde Hotel, he felt it was very cold and said he wanted heaters, even though it was 30-odd degrees outside. We had to scramble and try to sort that out for him, and that was the element of fun about him ... he was always delightful and charming about it all.”


Apparently, Jackson was not one of those stars who liked to stay cooped up in their hotel room. He went out on the town and took in some sights while in Kuala Lumpur, said his Malaysian pals.









Thursday, June 25, 2009

Pop star Michael Jackson dead at 50

Michael Jackson
Photo of Michael Jackson's kids masked in public
Michael Jackson Comeback

http://img.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2007/12_03/025JacksonDM_468x561.jpg


Pop star Michael Jackson was pronounced dead today after paramedics found him in a coma at his Bel-Air mansion, city and law enforcement sources told The Times.

When they arrived, Jackson was not breathing. The paramedics performed CPR and took him to UCLA Medical Center.

The circumstances of Jackson's death remain unclear. Law enforcement sources said that Los Angeles Police Department robbery-homicide detectives have opened an investigation into the death, though they stressed there is no evidence of criminal wrongdoing. The detectives plan to interview relatives, friends and Jackson's doctors to try to figure out what happened. The L.A. County coroner's office will determine a cause of death.

TMZ said on its website that Jackson suffered a cardiac arrest on Thursday afternoon at his Holmby Hills home and paramedics were unable to revive him. "We're told when paramedics arrived Jackson had no pulse and they never got a pulse back," the site said.


In May, The Times reported that Jackson was living in a Bel-Air mansion and rehearsing for a series of 50 sold-out shows in London's O2 Arena. Jackson had won the backing of two billionaires to get the so-called King of Pop back on stage.

The shows for the 50 London concerts sold out within minutes of going on sale in March.

Jackson has three children -- sons Prince Michael 7, and Michael Joseph Jackson Jr., 12, and daughter Paris Michael Katherine, 11.

Michael Jackson and his covered childrenMichael Jackson's kids Paris, Prince, and Prince Michael
The Michael Jackson kids - Paris, left, Prince and younger brother Prince Michael, aka “Blanket” - usually go about complately masked.


Michael Jackson, the child star turned King of Pop who set the world dancing but whose musical genius was overshadowed by a bizarre lifestyle and sex scandals, died on Thursday. He was 50.

His lifetime record sales tally is believed to be around 750 million, which, added to the 13 Grammy Awards he received, made him one of the most successful entertainers of all time.

Jackson, who had lived as a virtual recluse since his acquittal in 2005 on charges of child molestation, had been scheduled to launch a comeback tour from London next month.

Outside the hospital in Los Angeles about 200 fans and reporters gathered on Thursday, waiting for confirmation of Jackson's death or condition.

Some fans were crying and hugging each other, and others were climbing atop fences to get a better look at a microphone stand where a news conference was supposed to take place.

Johnny Caswell, a principal at Centerstaging, the Burbank soundstage where Jackson rehearsed for his London concerts, watched many of the run-throughs and said he was "absolutely shocked" by the performer's death.

Jackson, he said, was "very frail" but approached the rehearsals with boundless energy.Screeners "declared him healthy," Phillips said. "His cholesterol level is better than mine."

But a physical may not have revealed a looming heart attack, said Dr. John Harold, a Cedars-Sinai Medical Center cardiologist."This is the type of patient who could have a stress test the day before and it could be completely normal, and the next day could have a plaque rupture and a fatal heart attack," said Harold, who did not treat Jackson.

Jackson 5’s rise to stardomJoseph Jackson’s wonder groupYoung Michael 'sang his songs with such feeling''Thriller' breaks sales, Grammy recordsChanges in appearanceWith 'Bad,' Jackson begins to reveal demonsAccusations ariseLove and marriageMarried ... with childrenA creative low point: 'Invincible'The baby incidentJackson attempts image rehab in 'Living with Michael Jackson'More allegationsStyle starThe end-all be-allThis is it










Deadly crash of Air France flight 447

recovery of debris from the Air France flight

flight route from Rio de Janeiro to Pariscarrying a body from Air France flight 447

orange debris from af447oil slick believed to be from flight 447a piece of Air France flight 447rudder from Air France flight 447Fernando de NoronhaTail and Rudder, Air France Flight 447http://img.timeinc.net/time/photoessays/2009/flight_447/flight_447_12.jpg

Investigators probing the deadly crash of Air France flight 447 over the Atlantic are running out of time to find the flight data recorders which could prove crucial to working out what caused the disaster.

The U.S. Navy has contributed two high-tech acoustic devices -- known as towed pinger locators -- which have been attached to French tug boats and can search to a maximum depth of 20,000ft (6,100 meters).

The firm which makes the recorders, Honeywell Aerospace, has told CNN it has a 100 percent recovery record from air accidents.Honeywell said it was hard to estimate how much battery life the locator beacon on the recorders had, as it depended on the conditions, but it is typically around 30 days.

In another strange twist to this tragic saga, it’s been revealed that maintenance technicians had been summoned to Paris’ Charles de Gaulle airport on June 1 to replace the Pitot tubes on the Airbus A330 aircraft. The jet, of course, never arrived, instead crashing into the ocean northeast of Brazil, killing 228 people.

Charles Bremner, reporting in the TimesOnline, wrote that Air France officials had confirmed that a maintenance team had been dispatched to the airport after the aircraft sent an automated message reporting a problem with its Pitot tubes. The tubes, sometimes called Pitot probes, are used to measure the airspeed of aircraft.

Rather than appearing to be a rapid response to a problem, Air France’s action instead may be viewed as damning evidence that the airline reacted too slowly to an issue it had known about for months. The website eurocockpit.com, produced by professional pilots, has posted a document which it says originated in June 2008 that shows Air France was aware of problems with the Pitot tubes on Airbus A330 and A340 aircraft.

Faulty Pitot probe readings could have caused the aircraft to automatically fly at the wrong speed for the weather conditions in the stormy Inter-tropical Convergence Zone near the Equator.

French authorities have today revealed that Air France Flight 447 sent 24 error messages shortly before the plane disappeared during the flight between Rio de Janeiro and Paris with 228 people on board. They also said that the plane’s auto-pilot was not active, although they say that from the error messages it is impossible to determine the reason for it being inactive. The crash is said to be the world’s worst aviation disaster since 2001.

Rescuers have long since given up on attempting to find any survivors instead now trying to locate and recover the wreckage of the flight and more importantly the flight data recorders, without which they say they may never know what happened to the flight. The process of recovery is expected to be difficult with the seabed reaching depths of 3,000 to 4,000 meters. Both American and French specialist equipment has been sent to the area with the aim of recovering the recorders, however French officials say that the locator beacons attached to the boxes could possibly have become detached by the force of the impact.

Most bodies were found without clothing

Most of the bodies were found without clothing, which could possibly have been taken off by the wind during their fall (further evidence that they were sucked out of the plane). It's therefore possible that the bodies which have been found were those sucked from the plane, and that the majority of the remaining bodies are fixed to their seats in the hull of the plane (presumably underwater).

No burns

Prelimanary analysis of the bodies indicates that they didn't suffer any burns, indicating that there was not an explosion and that the plane broke apart mid-air.
No water in lungs, multiple fractures

The bodies had no water in the their lungs, indicating they did not die from drowning, but had multiple fractures.

Bodies delivered to Recife

Bodies will be delivered to the airport at Fernando de Noronha island and then to Recife for identification. Rescuers believe that some bodies may have been consumed by sharks or have sunk.

Bodies widely dispersed

The bodies have been found dispersed as much as 85 miles apart, indicating that the plane probably broke up over several minutes whist in the air, with the passengers sitting helpless and occassionally some being sucked out.
Warm water means bodies sink quicker

An intact body will typically float for 2 or 3 weeks. The warmer the water the quicker the process of a body surfacing, floating and then sinking once again; as a result of the increased amount of marine life which breaks the bodies down. The water in which the bodies of flight 447 lies, is 28 degrees celsius.

Personal items

Numerous other personal items belonging to the passengers have been found, but authorities are not revealing what they are. All personal items are being handed to Air France, who will deliver them to the families of the Flight 447 victims.

Two passengers on terrorist watch list

French secret servicemen have established that 2 passengers on board flight 447, are also on highly-classified documents listing the names of radical Muslims considered a threat to the French Republic.

Italian who missed AF447 dies in car crash

Johanna Ganthaler car crash

Johanna Ganthaler, an Italian lady from the Bolzano-Bozen Province - South Tyrol, was lucky enough to arrive late for AF447 and missed the flight. Her and her husband Kurt caught a flight later in the day from Rio de Janeiro to Munich. However, like in the movie Final Destination, fate finally caught up with Johanna and she died in a head-on collission when their car swerved into a truck coming from the opposite direction. The accident occurred near Kufstein, Austria. Kurt Ganthaler was also injured in the accident.









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