LOS ANGELES (AP) - Michael Jackson's doctor has agreed to surrender to
authorities Friday to face a criminal case stemming from the singer's death, his
lawyer said Thursday.
Attorney Ed Chernoff said Dr. Conrad Murray agreed
to turn himself in following discussions with the prosecutor handling the case.
Details about how he would surrender were still being worked out.
"You
tell us where; we'll be there," Chernoff said in a Thursday night posting on his
Web site.
It was not immediately clear when Murray would be arraigned.
Los Angeles County Sheriff's spokesman Steve Whitmore said it would not happen
Friday.
Word that Murray would surrender came after a day of haggling
between prosecutors, defense lawyers and law enforcement officials over whether
the physician should be arrested or allowed to turn himself in.
Officials
from the Los Angeles Police Department, which spent the past seven months
investigating Murray, were unhappy with the idea of him surrendering and wanted
to go to the residence he was staying at to arrest him, a law enforcement
official close to the investigation told The Associated Press.
Various
factors weighed into the desire to arrest Murray, including the possibility he
might flee before arraignment, just as O.J. Simpson did, said the official, who
was not authorized to speak publicly and requested anonymity. Police officials
also worried it could appear Murray was being given special treatment if he was
allowed to turn himself in.
The official said the district attorney's
office opposed an early plan for detectives to make the arrest Friday morning,
upsetting police higher-ups, and negotiated with Murray's attorneys to allow the
doctor to turn himself in.
District attorney's spokeswoman Sandi Gibbons
could not immediately confirm Chernoff's assertion that Murray would surrender
Friday.
"I cannot vouch for the truth of that statement," Gibbons
said.
Chernoff told the AP earlier Thursday that an arrest would be
purely for the benefit of news cameras.
"It's a waste of time, it's just
a show," Chernoff said. "There's no reason to handcuff a guy, drag him downtown
so you can take a photo when he's been sitting here for a week waiting to turn
to himself in."
Gibbons denied there was any discord between the Police
Department and the district attorney's office and said police and prosecutors
had been fully cooperating since the case began.
"There is no big
dispute," Gibbons said. "We are getting along fine."
Jackson, 50, died
June 25 at his rented Los Angeles mansion while under the care of Murray, a
cardiologist with practices in Houston and Las Vegas.
Three law
enforcement officials have told the AP prosecutors plan to charge Murray with
involuntary manslaughter, alleging he gave Jackson the powerful anesthetic
propofol to help him sleep but that instead led to his death.
The
officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to
publicly discuss the case.
It's unusual for the district attorney's
office to negotiate a surrender, with such talks usually occurring in
high-profile cases.
Attorney Mark Geragos, who has represented Jackson
and a string of other celebrities, said defense lawyers in such cases want to
shield their clients from the embarrassing "perp walk," where a suspect is
paraded before cameras in handcuffs.
"It's to let some people maintain
some shred of dignity," Geragos said.
Several other celebrity attorneys,
including Harland Braun and M. Gerald Schwartzbach, said they couldn't
understand why the LAPD would want to arrest Murray if he was being
cooperative.
"Otherwise, you are deliberately arresting someone to make a
statement," Braun said. "It would reflect poorly on the prosecution if they
don't let him surrender."