Metro

Slay rap, Rx ban for Jacko’s doc

LOS ANGELES — Michael Jackson’s Dr. Feelgood finally faced the music yesterday as prosecutors charged him with involuntary manslaughter in the pop icon’s death.

Dr. Conrad Murray somberly entered a not-guilty plea at his standing-room-only arraignment — which was attended by the late King of Pop’s angry parents and six of his siblings — before a judge sternly barred him from administering any more anesthetics.

“I don’t want you sedating people,” said LA Superior Court Judge Keith Schwartz.

He ordered the disgraced doctor held in lieu of $75,000 bond — triple the usual amount for suspects facing the same crime — which Murray posted two hours later.

Murray, who was with Jacko when he died June 25, has told cops he administered the powerful anesthetic propofol to the singer that fateful morning.

READ THE COMPLAINT AGAINST DR. MURRAY

Jackson had a level of propofol in his system equivalent to what would be used in “major surgery,” according to the scathing autopsy report, which was released yesterday.

He also apparently suffered from incontinence.

He had an enlarged prostate, and on his bed was a blue plastic pad. Near that was a catheter, along with an entire box of more, and a sealed bottle of urine.

The report described how a coroner went to the singer’s crypt at around 6:40 p.m. Aug. 8 to collect more hair samples before his burial — and bumped into Jacko’s sister LaToya and her boyfriend, who were paying a visit.

“[Jackson] was lying supine in a yellow casket with blue lining. The majority of the decedent was covered with multiple white towels/sheets, leaving only the hands and top of the head exposed,” the document said.

“The top of the decedent’s head was covered in a wig with long, dark, apparent hair. Moving the wig revealed short, dark, curly, natural hair . . . measuring approximately 1½ inches in length.

“The hair [in the top front of his head] was sparse,” the report said.

After yesterday’s arraignment, Jackson’s dad, Joe, said the family is livid that Murray is facing only manslaughter and not murder.

“It’s not justice,” the dad said.

Murray faces up to four years if convicted.

The state medical board has asked that his license be immediately revoked, with prosecutors from the California Attorney General’s Office calling Murray “a danger to the public.

“[He showed] utter disregard for the care and well-being of the person entrusted in his care,” the AG’s office wrote to the court.

But the judge refused to take that step.

Murray’s lawyer said his client will “be back in Vegas this week. He’ll open his medical practice.”

With Post Wire Services and additional reporting by David K. Li in New York