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Wednesday, February 24, 2010
Doubts about purported Michael Jackson 911 tape
A recording purported to be a call from the ambulance rushing Michael Jackson to a hospital the day he died was not "typical" of paramedic procedure, according to a Los Angeles Fire Department official.
A British tabloid posted the recording online, suggesting it was evidence that Jackson had no pulse at that time -- contrary to what his personal doctor said.
The Sun newspaper did not reveal the source of the recording, but characterized it as a "911 tape."
Brian Humphrey, a spokesman for the Los Angeles Fire Department, said he was skeptical about the authenticity of the audio, adding that it "did not come from our agency."
A male -- who says he is a paramedic in an ambulance -- is heard speaking to a female, who supposedly is at the UCLA Medical Center emergency room.
"We have a male, 50. Pop star Michael Jackson. Unresponsive, no pulse. Tried to resuscitate him. Unsuccessful. We are en route," the male voice said.
"OK. We'll have doctors standing by," the female voice replied.
"We've done everything we can here in the ambulance. Hopefully, when we get there -- we should be there in five minutes," the male said. "It doesn't look good."
Humphrey said it is routine for paramedics to use a cell phone or a two-way radio to talk to an emergency room as they rush to a hospital, but they "don't normally speak like this in a medical response."
Specifically, the paramedic would not be likely to use a patient's name in the conversation, even if it is a celebrity, Humphrey said.
It would be routine for the hospital to record the conversations for legal reasons, he said.
UCLA Medical Center spokesman Dale Triber Tate said, "There is no way we could authenticate it even if we had patient/estate authorization, which we do not have."
The fire department released an authenticated recording of the 911 call for help from Jackson's Holmby Hills, California, home the day after the pop icon's death.
A Jackson bodyguard, who was in the room as Murray tried to revive him, spoke to the 911 operator:
"He's not breathing and we're trying to pump him, but he's not breathing," the bodyguard said. "He's not responding to CPR or anything,"
"We're less than a mile away and we'll be there shortly," the operator said.
Hoax recordings have emerged since Jackson's death, including a video produced by a German TV show that purported to show a living Jackson stepping out of a coroner's van.
A spokeswoman for RTL, the leading private broadcaster in Germany, later said it was an experiment to show how easy it is to spread rumors online.
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