
On
This was a relief to those who wanted to preserve their idealistic image of Presley. Yet in the months after Presley's death, Francisco refused to release the autopsy and toxicology reports to the public, claiming they were not part of an official investigation. He also said that the autopsy had been done at
Then in October,
Francisco held a press conference in response and once more denied that drugs were involved. It appeared that someone was wrong. Was Francisco covering something up?
In 1979, Charlie Thompson from the ABC television news show, 20/20, asked Cyril Wecht to review and interpret the medical reports he had acquired for Presley.
"My task was simple," Wecht writes in Cause of Death. "Review the toxicology report and compare it to the final autopsy report. I was then to determine if there were any disparities, contradictions or irregularities in the medico-legal investigation."
Wecht studied the documents and realized that
"I think this would be a bona fide medical malpractice case that would certainly require further study and possible legal action," he pronounced in an interview.
He also said that if one doctor prescribed all the medication, it would have been "poor, unacceptable, and potentially dangerous medical care."
But there was another matter as well—the matter of professionalism. Dr. Francisco had given several press conferences. Wecht believed he had been unprofessional and had acted in an inconsistent manner. He had offered a cause of death while the autopsy was still being performed and before any official statement had been issued. He had also spoken before getting results from the toxicology lab. Even worse, Francisco had claimed that cardiac arrhythmia was the cause of death, when that is a condition that can be determined only on a living person, and not from an autopsy.
Wecht went public to denounce this behavior.
In response, a judge in
Dr. Nichopoulos, Presley's personal physician, also had made a statement after Presley's death that dismissed the possibility of a drug overdose. But since his reputation—and his practice--was on the line, his statement could not be trusted.
After Wecht's appearance on 20/20, Dr. Nichopoulos was charged with over-prescribing drugs to Presley. It was shown that within the seven months preceding the singer's death, the doctor had prescribed more than 5,300 tablets of various stimulants and downers to him. However, when Nichopoulos' attorney demonstrated he had been attempting to wean Presley from his addiction and prevent him from buying street drugs, the physician was acquitted.
When questioned about this case, Wecht says, "I'm not a hyper-moralist, but when I'm asked about a case in the news media, I'm not going to try to finesse it. I don't dictate anyone's ethical standards, but neither will I be an apologist for them. Jerry Francisco pulled a fast one. Forget that it's Elvis Presley. He was 42 and died unexpectedly. If that's not a medical examiner's case, then I'll eat the protocol of any office—of course it's a medical examiner's case. They [the people around Presley] weren't going to do anything to besmirch the reputation of the number one industry in Tennessee and one of the number one industries of America—the Elvis memorabilia. I don't have time for professional BS in my field."
Despite his reputation for readily expressing his opinion, there are times when he believes the evidence is insufficient to make a definitive call, and such was the case in the controversial Green Beret murders.



