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Michael Jackson's doctor gave him Sleep drug

Michael Jackson's personal doctor administered a powerful anaesthetic to make him sleep which officials believed would have killed him by making his heart beat to a halt. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the investigation is ongoing, also provided a glimpse inside Jackson's rented mansion, describing the room Jackson slept in as outfitted with oxygen tanks and an IV drip. Another of his bedrooms was a shambles, with clothes and other items strewn about and handwritten notes stuck on the walls. One read: "children are sweet and innocent."

The official said Jackson regularly received propofol to sleep, relying on the drug like an alarm clock. A doctor would administer it when he went to sleep, then stop the intravenous drip when he wanted to wake up. On June 25, the day Jackson died, Dr. Conrad Murray gave him the drug through an IV sometime after midnight, the official said.

Jackson is believed to have been using the drug for about two years and investigators are trying to determine how many other doctors administered it, the official said.