RHONDOR DOWLAT
Senior Reporter
rhondor.dowlat@guardian.co.tt
Leading cardiologist, Dr Conrad Murray, who has deep Grenada/Trinidadian roots, officially opened his DCM Medical Institute in El Socorro, San Juan, last night.
Speaking at the launch, Murray said his heart is in T&T and he chose here because he wanted to make that difference.
“When I came back to Trinidad, most of the colleagues whom I had trained felt that I was too much of a threat to be present, when all I was willing to do was to collaborate, further educate and instil care for more and more. So they decided to eventfully lock the doors when they saw the cases I was performing ...” said Murray, who grew up in T&T as a boy after migrating here with his parents from Grenada, before moving to the US where he established himself in the field of medicine.
Murray said he built the institution through tears, pain and struggle.
“It was tough. I dealt with the country locking its borders for two years but I did not give up. I felt that I had to be relentless,” he told the gathering.
The institute was officially consecrated by Texas-based American preacher and televangelist Joel Osteen via a video presentation.
Osteen extended his apologies for not being here in person but endorsed Murray’s work in cardiology and disclosed that they are good friends.
“Because of your efforts, T&T has become a centre not only for the treatment of heart diseases, vascular diseases but also a worldwide hub for medical treatment and preventative medicine. You have created a place where people from all over the world can come to be treated with compassion and expertise. That’s the heart of Doctor Murray,” Osteen said in the video.
Murray also said Osteen will soon visit the country “to celebrate not only with you in Trinidad but the entire Caribbean.”
In 2018, Murray took legal action against the Medical Board of Trinidad and Tobago (MBTT) over its refusal to accept his annual registration fees to allow him to practice medicine locally, after he returned from the US following his imprisonment over his involvement in the death of US pop icon Michael Jackson.
Murray, then 62, was convicted of involuntary manslaughter in Jackson’s death in 2009 from cardiac arrest.
In the aftermath of the Jackson case, Murray had his Texas, California and Nevada medical licenses suspended. He was first registered to practice in T&T after he qualified as a medical doctor and returned here following his release in 2013.
Murray began practising medicine at a private nursing home in Chaguanas. However, the MBTT refused to accept his annual registration fees on the grounds that he needed to furnish a certificate of good standing. The MBTT contended that when fees are not paid over several years, such a certificate is required in order to issue a licence to a doctor to practice medicine in accordance with the Medical Board Act.
In 2018, attorneys acting for Murray sent a pre-action protocol letter to the MBTT threatening legal action and requesting the fees be accepted. Attorneys acting for Murray condemned the MBTT’s previous contention that Murray was not registered to practice in T&T and noted that the council’s March 7, 2018 list of medical practitioners cited Murray as a registered medical doctor.