Coroner denied leaking of the autopsy of Michael Jackson




LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The medical legal institute in Los Angeles this Monday denied reports of a British newspaper in which Michael Jackson was magérrimo and almost bald when he died in an unexpected way on Thursday.



While the family met Jackson in Los Angeles to decide about a funeral worthy of worldwide demonstrations of affection by the "King of Pop", the singer's mother lodged a claim for custody of their three children.



Katherine Jackson asked the Superior Court of Los Angeles in the custody of Prince Michael, 12, Paris Katherine, 11, and Prince Michael II, 7, saying that "they have no relationship with his biological mother."



The first two are children of Jackson with his ex-wife Debbie Rowe is the third child of a mother's rent unidentified. A hearing to decide on the matter was scheduled for August 3.



The body of Jackson has undergone two autopsy inconclusive: a medical legal institute of the County of Los Angeles and another held by a particular pathologist. The results of toxicological tests should take several weeks to leave.



Michael Jackson died suddenly of cardiac arrest at his rented house in Los Angeles, for 50 years, last Thursday, weeks before a planned series of 50 concerts that would in London.



The assistant coroner Ed Winter said on Monday that the details released by the British tabloid Sun on the condition of the body of Jackson did not come from the county or private autopsies.



"I do not know where that information came from or who. It is not accurate. Part of it is totally false," Winter told the journalists.



Claiming to have seen a leaked report on the autopsy, The Sun said that when he died, Jackson was wearing wig to hide his hair sparse, only weighed about 51 pounds, their hips, shoulders and thighs were covered with needle marks, and that his stomach was empty, with the exception of partially dissolved tablets.

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