Entertainment Tonight -Interview with Dr. Susan Etok who is from London

see video - scroll down to "The Secret Michael Jackson Witness"
http://www.etonline.com/
Two months after Michael Jackson passed away, the stories surrounding his death continue to break. Now, ET special correspondent Diane Dimond is with Dr. Susan Etok, the doctor that Michael reportedly begged to be his pipeline to drugs during his London tour. Does she believe he was murdered? What did she tell police?
"I basically told the police what I knew, who I thought was involved and what I thought happened to Michael," says Etok, who made it clear that she refused the late King of Pop's request for such prescription drugs as Demerol.
"[Etok] was part of Jackson's inner circle for more than a decade, a confidant the singer ultimately tried to use as a drug connection," says Dimond. "Now, she's assisting in the criminal investigation focused on Michael's broad net of drug suppliers."
Etok spoke with Dimond just hours after the Los Angeles Police Department questioned her in the case, one of many doctors providing the LAPD with insight into his final days. Did the word "manslaughter" come up during her exchange?
"No, we didn't talk about any particular charges because at this stage it's about building the bigger picture," says Etok. "To get an idea of Michael's addiction, his patterns of behavior, the different doctors that may or may not have enabled his drug addiction. They were most interested in the doctors and the doctors I had seen around Michael -- times when I've been over here with Michael, and abroad in the U.K. and other countries."
Etok says the police have interviewed about 35 different people, most of which are physicians, in the case. The first doctor on the cops' list is the last one to see Jackson alive, Dr. Conrad Murray, and Etok says, "I had no dealings with Conrad Murray. They had asked me if I knew anything about him but I didn't know anything about him."
Etok adds that investigators asked her about Jackson's dermatologist Dr. Arnold Klein, who admitted to giving Demerol to Jackson, and Dr. Allan Metzger, who treated the pop icon for Lupus and was reprimanded in 2000 by a medical board for fraudulent medical practice based on writing prescriptions.
As for anyone facilitating getting drugs to Jackson, Etok won't name names, saying, "Obviously this is a very serious police investigation. I wouldn't want to do or say anything that jeopardizes it."
As for whether or not she believes Michael Jackson was murdered, Etok says she believes he was not the victim of foul play, but mishandled by enablers who wanted to give him anything he wanted.
"I think I'm somebody that could look quite objectively at the whole situation and be able to give my version of events and perhaps give the police some pointers," says Etok. "And I think the key thing is the fact that I'm not influenced by anything that's happening here."
Tomorrow on ET, tune in for more shocking revelations in Part Two of our revealing interview with Dr. Susan Etok.