Iconic artist PRINCE passes away at age 57

Prince’s Addiction and
an Intervention Too Late


Prince appears to have had a problem with pain pills, one that grew so
acute that his friends turned to an addiction doctor just before his death.

By JOHN ELIGON, SERGE F. KOVALESKI and JOE COSCARELLIMAY 4, 2016
CHANHASSEN, Minn. — Prince Rogers Nelson had an unflinching reputation among those close to him for leading an assiduously clean lifestyle. He ate vegan and preferred to avoid the presence of meat entirely. He was known to eschew alcohol and marijuana, and no one who went on tour with him could indulge either.

But Prince appears to have shielded from even some of his closest friends that he had a problem with pain pills, one that grew so acute that his friends sought urgent medical help from Dr. Howard Kornfeld of California, who specializes in treating people addicted to pain medication.

Dr. Kornfeld, who runs a treatment center in Mill Valley, Calif., sent his son on an overnight flight to meet with Prince at his home to discuss a treatment plan, said William J. Mauzy, a lawyer for the Kornfeld family, during a news conference on Wednesday outside his Minneapolis office.

But he arrived too late.

When the son, Andrew Kornfeld, who works with his father but is not a doctor, arrived in Chanhassen, the Minneapolis suburb where Prince lived, the next morning, he was among those who found the entertainer lifeless in the elevator and called 911, Mr. Mauzy said. Emergency officials arrived but could not revive Prince. He was dead at 57.

As law enforcement officials continue to investigate exactly what killed the pop and rock icon, there is mounting evidence that he had become seriously dependent on painkillers, something sure to rattle some of those who knew him well. Many have insisted in recent days that they never even saw Prince take pills, let alone abuse prescription medication, even though some knew he had had hip surgery years ago.

When his private jet had to make an emergency landing in Moline, Ill., in mid-April after he went unresponsive, friends decided they may need to intervene, according to a person with knowledge of the situation. Prince assured his friends in the following days that nothing was wrong. He had the flu, his publicist said.

“I’m doing perfect,” Prince told his lawyer, L. Londell McMillan, two days after the emergency landing. Three days after that conversation with Mr. McMillan, though, Prince’s representatives were looking for help from an addiction doctor.

A Very Private Star

Prince’s penchant for privacy may help explain how he kept his secret from so many. At the Jehovah’s Witness Kingdom Hall near here, where Prince was a worshiper, congregants scoffed at the first reports that Prince may have been abusing painkillers.

And rarely did he let the musicians who toured with him know how much his hips actually hurt from decades of high-voltage performances, jumping onstage in platform heels. They would only notice small things, like that he stopped doing splits.

“There wasn’t a tour we did where he wasn’t sometimes performing in pain,” said Alan Leeds, Prince’s former tour manager in the 1980s and later the president of the singer’s Paisley Park Records. “He was that kind of old school, the-show-must-go-on guy, so the idea of him medicating himself in order to perform isn’t strange to me.”

But Mr. Leeds and others said Prince never discussed pain pills with him. And questions about how he felt would often be met with a shrug or an assurance that he was O.K.

Unlike many stars of his magnitude, who are known to employ extensive entourages and teams of staffers to handle everyday business, Prince was also surprisingly autonomous, friends and associates said, often driving himself around and making appointments without the knowledge of his assistant. Such insistence on maintaining his independence may have made keeping a secret easier, they said.

Many of Prince’s closest friends, relatives and associates have declined to answer questions about his health. So it is unclear who contacted Dr. Kornfeld, but a person with knowledge of the situation said the musician had willingly sought treatment.

The younger Mr. Kornfeld was sent to Paisley Park to try to get Prince’s condition stabilized, Mr. Mauzy said. Dr. Kornfeld then contacted a doctor in the Minneapolis area who cleared his schedule on the morning that Prince was found dead so that he could have time to meet with and assess Prince, Mr. Mauzy said.

“The hope was to get him stabilized in Minnesota and convince him to come to Recovery Without Walls in Mill Valley,” Mr. Mauzy said. “That was the plan.”

Dr. Kornfeld “felt it was a lifesaving mission,” Mr. Mauzy said.

Prince began taking painkillers for his ailment years ago and ultimately decided to have hip surgery in the mid-2000s, after which he was prescribed more pain medicine, according to a person who worked with him and requested anonymity because of the nature of the case.

Jason Kamerud, chief deputy at the Carver County Sheriff’s Office, which is investigating the death, said that investigators are looking into, among other things, whether Prince may have overdosed from painkillers at his residence. But Deputy Kamerud declined on Wednesday to comment on Mr. Mauzy’s statements. The sheriff’s office has said that it did not believe suicide or murder were to blame for Prince’s death.

Officials with the Drug Enforcement Administration and the United States Attorney’s Office announced Wednesday that they were joining the investigation.

The mystery of Prince’s death mirrors the enigma of his life. He shunned the selfie culture and didn’t allow people to take his picture at his estate. Yet at the same time, he regularly opened his doors here and invited the public in for house parties where he would address the crowd.

On the Saturday before he died, Prince had done just that, giddily unveiling a new purple guitar and piano before about 200 guests. He had just started on his memoir, tentatively titled “The Beautiful Ones.” He had tour dates lined up in eight cities across the country.

Talk of Depression

Yet people who knew Prince wondered whether he was in a malaise, his ailments limiting his ability to tour, and battling melancholy after the death in February of Denise Matthews, also known as Vanity, a former girlfriend and collaborator. In Australia during a show on Feb. 16, the day after she died, he became emotional.

“Someone dear to us has passed away,” Prince told the crowd before dedicating the song “Little Red Corvette” to her, according to local news media accounts of the show. Later, he told the audience, “I’m trying to stay focused, it’s a little heavy for me tonight.”

Concerned friends said they had recently been discussing Prince’s emotional state. He had told some people that he was feeling depressed, and some suspected he was going through a period of professional stagnancy.

In fact, Prince shunned an $85 million offer to do a large-scale world tour in favor of smaller shows, said Kim Worsoe, his tour coordinator. “I don’t do tours, I do events,” Mr. Worsoe recalled Prince telling him.

Others said they did not detect any depression. His small concerts, said Damaris Lewis, a friend and dancer, were an indication that he had found peace with himself. “His fans were his family,” she said.

For his final acts, Prince, who on New Year’s Eve had given a powerful show in the Caribbean, shunned his high-energy performances with a big band for something more intimate and less taxing: just himself, playing piano and singing. The “Piano and a Microphone” tour, he called it.

In March, he held a last-minute party and performance in New York to announce his memoir. He held three concerts in Canada before returning home on March 23 and attending a service at his Jehovah’s Witness Kingdom Hall, dressed in a suit and tie, his hair slicked back.

Prince was baptized into the faith in 2003 under the guidance of Larry Graham, a bass guitarist whose band regularly performed with Prince and who moved his family to Minnesota to be near the entertainer. As a witness, he would go door to door with a fellow congregant in their three-suburb territory, quoting the Bible and introducing himself as Rogers Nelson.

“He was very into spiritual things,” Mr. Graham said. “He already had been interested in the Bible and a love for God.”

Associates said that Prince’s dedication to religion, in addition to his commitment to pure living, may have contributed to a sense of shame about his growing dependency on medication.

Prince’s next scheduled tour dates were two back-to-back shows on April 7 at the Fox Theater in Atlanta. But as she was brushing her teeth around 10 on the morning of the show, Lucy Lawler-Freas, the Atlanta promoter, said she got a call from Mr. Worsoe: Prince was sick with the flu.

“He can barely speak; his voice is really hoarse,” she recalled Mr. Worsoe telling her.

It was the first time in the more than a quarter-century that he had worked with Prince that the artist canceled a show, Mr. Worsoe said.

But two days later, Prince rescheduled the show for the 14th.

On the rescheduled date, Prince landed in Atlanta late day and needed a police escort to make it to the theater on time. He said he was still feeling sick, but back in the dressing room where water and fresh fruit was awaiting Prince, Mr. Worsoe said he did not notice any visible signs of illness.

With his Afro picked out, Prince took the stage, sidling up to his purple piano and surrounded by candelabras. He performed two sets, at 7 and 10 p.m.

“He was epic,” Ms. Lawler-Freas said. No signs of the flu.

Prince said it was his best show ever, Mr. Worsoe recalled. But afterward, Prince said that his stomach hurt. Prince wanted to go back to Minneapolis to get checked out by a doctor, Mr. Worsoe said, and asked to postpone shows in St. Louis, Nashville and Washington that were scheduled, but not yet announced, for the next week.

Prince and two other passengers boarded his private jet, which left at 12:51 a.m. Eastern on the Friday after his Atlanta show. Just over an hour in, the pilot radioed to air traffic controllers that he had an unresponsive passenger on board. The plane, only about 48 minutes from its destination of Minneapolis, turned around and quickly landed in Moline, touching down at 1:18 a.m.

Prince’s bodyguard carried him off the plane to emergency responders waiting on the ground, according to city records. They rushed him to a hospital. Prince was treated with a Narcan shot, typically administered to those suffering from an opioid overdose, according to published reports. But he stayed at the hospital for only a few hours before flying back home.

A master of image control, Prince started shaping the narrative right away.

He hastily organized a party at his home for the following evening. Later, he casually rode a bicycle in a stripmall parking lot.

Prince’s representatives asked Jeremiah Freed, a blogger who runs drfunkenberry.com, to help spread the word of the party on Saturday night. Before that night, Mr. Freed said, he never really had any concerns about Prince’s condition, though he was struck by something that the musician told him in January. Prince spoke of David Bowie’s death, Mr. Freed recalled, saying he was having lucid dreams in which he communicated with people who died.

When Prince first strolled into the party, before he was in full view of the public, “He looked upset to me,” Mr. Freed recalled. They locked eyes, he added. “When I saw him, there was no smile.”

Other friends reached out to Prince over the weekend, concerned about what had happened to him on the plane. He had a resounding message: I’m O.K.

Knowing how much Prince, who didn’t use a cellphone but was constantly surfing his silver MacBook, valued his privacy, friends said they did not press him.

On Monday, April 18, Ms. Lawler-Freas, the Atlanta promoter, said that Prince’s representatives told her to hold off on confirming the eight tour dates she had arranged for him. He was going to take a break that week, and they would get back to her the next Monday, April 25, to confirm the concerts.

Prince seemed to lead a mundane life from there, stopping by a show at the Dakota Jazz Club in Minneapolis on Tuesday, April 19. The next day, police said, someone dropped him off at his compound at about 8 p.m. He was found dead the next morning, setting off the sweeping investigation.

“If we really want to be accurate and get it right, I think you have to pump the brakes,” said Deputy Kamerud of the Carver County Sheriff’s Office. “Some investigations are like 50-piece puzzles, some are like a 10,000-piece puzzle. This one is the latter.”

Mr. Freed, the blogger, said he could hardly believe reports of the painkiller dependency. Prince, he said, would help anyone in his band with a drug problem and even pay the cost of their recovery.

If you abused drugs, he said, “you weren’t going to work with him. You didn’t have a job.”

Reporting was contributed by Sheila M. Eldred, Christina Capecchi and Matt Furber in Minneapolis; Lori Rotenberk and Dirk Johnson in Moline, Ill.; Ben Sisario and Colin Moynihan in New York; Ian Lovett in Los Angeles; and Stephanie Seymour in Mill Valley, Calif. Susan C. Beachy and Elisa Cho contributed research.

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/05/a...t-region&region=top-news&WT.nav=top-news&_r=0
 
Reading the comments on the Rolling Stone article and its interesting how many people disagree with the "emperor" bit and don't like with the comparison. Just my opinion but I don't think Stevie Wonder was dishing MJ but I do think it was a poor choice of wording.
Wonder how many people would have read the article if they hadn't used MJ's name in the headline for click bait.
 
Pink Diamond Princess;4148087 said:
Stevie wonder on Prince



Stevie Wonder remembered his good friend Prince Tuesday afternoon with a touching letter about the singer's legacy in Rolling Stone. "If Michael [Jackson] was the King of Pop, Prince should be the Emperor," Wonder wrote in the piece. "Prince fought for his artistic freedom. He didn't allow anyone or anything to get in his way. By following his own path, Prince took music to a whole other place, like the Beatles did. He wanted to change the way things were, like Marvin Gaye did. When you do that, you have to be very sure of yourself."

He also expressed an appreciation for Prince's art and music, which so many fans and artists have shared since the singer's tragic death. "Prince's music was so picturesque that even I could see it. I could see his boss Mr. McGee, who thought Prince was never going to be shit. I could see Old Man Johnson's farm. I could feel that "Purple Rain" too. Prince's songs were that vivid, the images were

Wonder touched on the last conversation he ever had with Prince, where they talked about making the world, and specifically the U.S., a better place. "When Prince and I spoke last, we talked about how we needed to fix this world. All this bullcrap about getting our country back and 'Make America Great Again'—it's always been great. We just have to stop people filling their minds with lies and prejudice and
open them up to the possibilities."

That spirit that drove him gave us an incredible reservoir of music. He loved funk, so he really needed to know how to make things funky. He loved jazz, so he needed to break down what made things truly swing. If Prince wanted to talk about love and sex, he got really into that – deep. And he made us see and feel it all with him. In fact, I'm trying to figure out which child of mine was born because of listening to Prince.






TBH after reading this Stevie Wonder can go kick rocks.
He belittled MJ, and to the Rolling Stone no less(I'm sure they LOVED that).

Come to think of it wasn't his dumb self just on the off the wall doc?
They should edit his part out, he doesn't deserve to be on a documentary about the one and only King/Emperor of Pop, and I'm not going to drag Prince in here, but almost everything Stevie said about him is EXTREME hyperbole ( he was AMAZING at what he did, but he didn't change or have impact on the music industry like MJ).

I guess that having owned half of the largest music publishing company and still owning your own music and others in your own personal catalogue "isn't fighting for your artistic freedom".

He probably only said the things he did not to praise Prince, but to put down MJ while in the process trying to make it seem like Prince was better/ bigger then MJ when he wasn't (this isn't shade at Prince, no one has reached MJ's level of success) because when it comes down to it people lie but numbers don't, and numbers show that Prince wasn't at anytime anywhere near MJ's level.

It disgust me to see his own peers downplay a man that was WORKING HIS TAIL OFF, AND PERFORMING nearly from birth.

Also let me go edit my siggy real quick because MJ is both the King AND Emperor of and pop (yeah I'm giving him two titles LOL), I've been meaning to edit it to say that anyway :).
I swear MJ has more fake friends and fans then any other artist, so Stevie not so wonderful can have an entire stadium of seats because he's not needed.

Honestly, I wonder if Stevie doesn't understand MJ's greatness because he's never seen him perform, but even then that's not really an excuse because I'm sure that not all of MJ's fans have vision, that's why MJ wrote Seeing Voices.
I guess Stevie not so wonderful is just a hater.

I honestly think that when it all comes down to it People hate on MJ SO much because deep down they know he's best to ever do it , and they all want to "take down the giant" so to speak.
Combine that with how people love to root for the underdog and it's easy to see why so many people are bashing MJ to try and uplift Prince.

Well, IMO, Stevie Wonder is stating his opinion and he is not bashing Michael in his text. He talks about Prince and Prince´s music. And, well, if he likes it so much, it is okay for me. Michael cannot be everyone´s favorite.

.. and please, Pink Diamond Princess, think about yourself talking mean about Stevie for stating an opinion. He´s not taking anything away from Michael :)

I think that Michael Jackson and Prince are like apples and pears - you just can´t compare them.
 
Reading the comments on the Rolling Stone article and its interesting how many people disagree with the "emperor" bit and don't like with the comparison. Just my opinion but I don't think Stevie Wonder was dishing MJ but I do think it was a poor choice of wording.
Wonder how many people would have read the article if they hadn't used MJ's name in the headline for click bait.
Oh, I agree-bad choice of words and as an avid Michael fan I'm going to jump on it and take offense.
BUT considering the source, I just can't.
I've seen the comments and fights it stirred up wherever this article was printed. But...
He's talked about his love and admiration for both of them (especially Michael) for too many years for me to suddenly think he's a jerk.
 
He's talked about his love and admiration for both of them (especially Michael) for too many years for me to suddenly think he's a jerk.
IMO that makes it worse though.
No matter what he's said about MJ before he still saw fit to bash MJ just to praise Prince now.
If he truly "loved" and "admired" MJ he wouldn't have done that, and instead would've just praised Prince.
I used to hold Stevie in high esteem, but not anymore.
When it comes to Michael people seem to have NO problem turning their backs on him, so I don't take any comment lightly.

I really wonder how many true friends Michael had.....
 
IMO that makes it worse though.
No matter what he's said about MJ before he still saw fit to bash MJ just to praise Prince now.
If he truly "loved" and "admired" MJ he wouldn't have done that, and instead would've just praised Prince.
I used to hold Stevie in high esteem, but not anymore.
When it comes to Michael people seem to have NO problem turning their backs on him, so I don't take any comment lightly.

I really wonder how many true friends Michael had.....
Ill just add that Stevie is above that level of getting into the petty fake rivalry stuff.

He is an incredible artist who loved, respected and admired them both for their music and themselves as people, and it was definitely not his intent to stir up silly controversies.
 
Ill just add that Stevie is above that level of getting into the petty fake rivalry stuff.

He is an incredible artist who loved, respected and admired them both for their music and themselves as people, and it was definitely not his intent to stir up silly controversies.

OMG that's the worst part though!
I REALLY did think that someone like Stevie would be above that mess.
That's why coming from him what he said shocked, and angered me.
Despite what many people seem the believe, it is possible to Praise Prince without bringing up and bashing Michael, so I really thought a person like Stevie would do the right thing and just praise Prince, but he didn't and I don't like him anymore.
It also makes it worse that he said that to the Rolling Stone too.

That isn't to say that you or anyone else can't still like him, but I personally don't. :)
 
The media got so used to digging on Michael that he became only Michael Jackson (the product) over Michael the person.. It became easy to speak about him like he's a business which is easier to bash..

They say "Walmart treats employees poorly" not the 'Walton family'... with Michael his business was himself, a very large business at that..

Prince luckily stayed safe in that regard and stayed out of radar for the most part..
 
The media got so used to digging on Michael that he became only Michael Jackson (the product) over Michael the person.. It became easy to speak about him like he's a business which is easier to bash..

They say "Walmart treats employees poorly" not the 'Walton family'... with Michael his business was himself, a very large business at that..

Prince luckily stayed safe in that regard and stayed out of radar for the most part..

You have celebs out there that have ACTUALLY DONE some vile things yet they don't get raked over the coals like MJ.

Some people are just full of hatred so they bash Michael, and others bash Michael because they're jealous/mad at the fact that no matter how much they bash him that it won't change the fact that he's the best solo entertainer to ever do it.

You have many different types of haters, but the ones that are the worst are the ones that seek to ruin MJ's reputation, and belittle his accomplishments and talent.
I know that Michael isn't going to be everyone's fav artist, but no matter what, people should RESPECT what he's done for not only the music industry, but the world as a whole.
In comparison to all the he has accomplished and everything that he's done, I wholeheartedly believe MJ is the least respected artist to have ever graced this earth.

TLDR: Not Everyone has to love Michael, but everyone SHOULD respect him, his talent, and his place in music history.
 
I am not fretting over stevie wonder. It seems when a global music talent dies almost everyone rushes to proclaim that person the best ever. Prince death taught me to take what certain people say with a grain of salt. People like Sherly Crow, Carson Daly, Alan light, and many others. when MJ pass they said he was the greatest entertainer ever, put mtv on the map, best music videos, best concerts, best super bowl performance, on and on. Now they are shamelessly saying the same things about prince.
 
I am not fretting over stevie wonder. It seems when a global music talent dies almost everyone rushes to proclaim that person the best ever. Prince death taught me to take what certain people say with a grain of salt. People like Sherly Crow, Carson Daly, Alan light, and many others. when MJ pass they said he was the greatest entertainer ever, put mtv on the map, best music videos, best concerts, best super bowl performance, on and on. Now they are shamelessly saying the same things about prince.

That's most certainly true:D

I cannot remember who was it who said that molecules changed when Prince entered, which was exactly the same what Sheryl C said about MJ in Bad 25 doc:smilerolleyes:
 
Bubs;4148202 said:
That's most certainly true:D

I cannot remember who was it who said that molecules changed when Prince entered, which was exactly the same what Sheryl C said about MJ in Bad 25 doc:smilerolleyes:

LOL.

Yes, I heard that - or similar things - about Michael, too. Like "you could feel him before he entered the room". I honestly believe that to be true.

... and I also believe that people commenting on Prince´s death may choose similar words / expressions because they simply are in their heads and sound good.

I guess it´s partly psychology: A celebritiy dies and everybody is talking about him, another celebrity dies and people use similar words.


Aargh, I hope you guys get what I mean lol
 
TBH another thing that really ticked me off about what Stevie said is that he said it to the Rolling Stone.
The same magazine that dislikes/hates MJ for some reason, and the same magazine that has been trying to make MJ a lesser to other artist that aren't even half as good as him for as long as I can remember.
I'll never forget when that waste of paper called the Rolling Stone tried to say that Justin Timberlake (who I dislike for various reasons) was the "new" King of Pop when Justin Timberlake wasn't, Isn't, and will NEVER be even 1/4th of Michael.
Heck, Michael at 12 years old was 10x better then Justin Timberlake could ever hope to be, but the rolling stone saw fit to put him on the same level as MJ, and give him a title that MJ dedicated his life to earning.
They triiiiiiied it to the 10th power with that mess.
Which is why Stevie shading MJ to that magazine in particular has/had me ticked off. :yes:
 
Why the Pre-Med Student Who Found Prince Dead Could Face Drug Charges

724SHARES
blank.png
Reprint



262 Comments subscribe now

andrew-kornfeld-435.jpg

Andrew Kornfeld
Source: LinkedIn

By Lindsay Kimble
@lekimble 05/05/2016 AT 07:50 PM EDT

Andrew Kornfeld, the son of the California addiction specialist who was hired to treat Prince, could face legal charges for possessing a prescription drug used to help kick opiate addiction, a top Minnesota criminal defense attorney tells PEOPLE.

Kornfeld was at Prince's Paisley Park estate when the singer was found dead in an elevator. The pre-med student – who was sent to Minnesota by his father, Dr. Howard Kornfeld, to speak with Prince about addiction to prescription painkillers – made the 911 call to authorities, according to the Kornfeld family's attorney.

Kornfeld was on the scene in his capacity as a consultant for his father's California outpatient addiction clinic Recovery Without Walls. Recovery Without Walls had been hired to Prince's representative to begin emergency treatment on the star of prescription drug addiction, lawyer William Mauzy said during a on Wednesday.



Kornfeld was carrying a starter dose of Suboxone, a drug with buprenorphine, which is used to treat opiate addiction, Mauzy said. The drug is considered a controlled substance in Minnesota – similar to narcotics like Percocet.

Keep up with your favorite celebs in the pages of PEOPLE Magazine by subscribing now.




The drugs were taken into possession by the Carver County Sheriff's office after Kornfeld found Prince dead and called 911, Mauzy said. Kornfeld should be granted "statutory immunity" for possessing the Suboxone without a prescription under Minnesota's Good Samaritan law, the attorney said.

Eric Nelson, a partner at Halberg Criminal Defense, tells PEOPLE, however that the Good Samaritan law doesn't protect Kornfeld from drug charges.

What is the Good Samaritan law?
In Minnesota, the Good Samaritan law says that a person who gives aid at the scene of an emergency is not liable for civil damages in any resulting case.

"What the statute says is, that if you're at an emergency and you know that another person is seriously injured to the extent that you're able to help without injuring yourself or another person, you have to give reasonable assistance to the person," Nelson explains.

Nelson says that by calling 911, Kornfeld did right by the Good Samaritan law. However, while "the Good Samaritan Law can be a defense in certain cases, Nelson believes it would not protect Kornfeld from criminal charges in this case because he had the drugs prior to Prince's death.

prince-symbol-1024.jpg
Prince in 2007
Chris O'Meara / AP




What charges could he face?
Possessing Schedule III controlled substances, like Suboxone, without a prescription is punishable by up to five years in prison and a $10,000 fine.

Kornfeld never intended to administer the drugs to Prince, his lawyer, Mauzy, said during Wednesday's press conference, and was merely transporting it to a Minnesota doctor who Prince was scheduled to meet with on April 21 – the day he was found dead.

Moving the drugs across state lines – from California to Minnesota – however, invokes federal jurisdiction, Nelson says, and could lead to further legal drama.

The Drug Enforcement Administration and the U.S. Attorney's Office have already confirmed that they are involved the case and helping local authorities.








Will Minnesota pursue charges?

Nelson tells PEOPLE that while he believes Kornfeld violated the law, his lifesaving intentions could "give him a pass." He thinks, however, that "it would be as likely... that they will charge him because of the circumstances. At least in the state court level."

"You have one of this state's most beloved, iconic citizens. You have intense media scrutiny on a global level. You've got all of the makings sort of of a Lifetime movie here," Nelson explains. "I think, knowing the people in the Carver County Attorney's Office, that they are going to tread lightly. They are going to be extremely cautious and very thorough in their investigation because they know that the world is watching."

The attorney explains that he thinks if Kornfeld is charged, he should argue that carrying the drugs was "necessary," because it was an attempt to save Prince's life.

"This is an exceptionally difficult, if not impossible, standard to meet," he notes. "In order to successfully claim the necessity defense, there has to be no other reasonable alternative. Being in an urban area, where the police can be easily summonsed, and were in fact called, would instantly negate any such claim. In addition, his possession of the drug was not 'necessary' to the life saving efforts administered," Nelson says.

He adds, "I have represented many 'normal' people who have been accused of possessing [Suboxone] when their intent is merely to attempt to quit their use of opiates. Thus, despite their 'good intentions' they run afoul of the law."

http://www.people.com/article/andrew-kornfeld-criminal-charges
 
^^So this explains why the attorney was blabbing about the rehab clinic before the results are even in.
I can not see the state charging them with anything.
This guy could have easily flushed the drugs down the toilet and then called 911.
I wish they could just wait on the toxicology reports.
 
Prince's Family Planning Memorial Service for the 'Near Future'

Prince's family announced today that they are planning a memorial service for the late singer to take place in the "near future."
"We would like everyone to know that, contrary to previous and current reports, there has been no memorial, funeral or tribute service for Prince that was organized or authorized by the family or Paisley Park representatives," Prince's siblings said in a statement. "Together, the family is planning an official memorial service and public event to take place in the near future."
The statement continued: "Prince and his music influenced so many people that we feel inspired to celebrate his life and legacy in just the right way. We appreciate the public’s patience and have been comforted by your outpouring of love, support and condolences. We look forward to sharing with the world this celebration of, and farewell to, our Prince."

http://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment...emorial-service-near-future/story?id=38938646
 
^^So this explains why the attorney was blabbing about the rehab clinic before the results are even in.
I can not see the state charging them with anything.
This guy could have easily flushed the drugs down the toilet and then called 911.
I wish they could just wait on the toxicology reports.



I agree with you on this. And it was mention that the drugs that Andrew had was not going to be given to Prince but to the Doctor there in Minn.
 
Last edited:
In Defense of Prince


Lev Raphael
Author, reviewer, and blogger


The latest news about Prince is that he was getting help from experts in dealing with addiction to pain killers.

But as soon as he died, I read lots of on-line speculation about him being a drug abuser. Today I read that his death was the kind of thing you would expect, given his “lifestyle.”

Well the facts aren’t in and maybe we’ll never know all of them.


2016-05-05-1462407619-372913-princehot-thumb.jpg





But everybody who’s lived with chronic pain knows enough. And if they’re Prince fans, their hearts are likely broken all over again imagining how Prince apparently suffered and how help came too late.


They know what it’s like to have to be at your very best when you can’t count on getting enough sleep and you’re perpetually exhausted.

When the pain is so terrible you feel like a wolf caught in a trap.

You’re frantic, maybe even feeling crazed inside—and if you could chew that leg off somehow, you would.

The medication doesn’t always work, or when it does, it can have debilitating side effects.

And some people around you only make things worse when they offer up advice like “You have to take the good with the bad in life” or they just tell you to “Tough it out.”

You may be so wild with pain you can imagine that killing yourself is the only solution.

That’s not a lifestyle. That’s not drug abuse.

That’s hell. And one in seven of us goes there at some point in our lives.

Too bad more people don’t understand what it’s like, have sympathy, and avoid cavalier judgments.

Lev Raphael is the author of The Vampyre of Gotham and 24 other books you can find on Amazon.


Follow Lev Raphael on Twitter: www.twitter.com/LevRaphael


http://www.huffingtonpost.com/lev-raphael/in-defense-of-prince_b_9843844.html
 
^^^^EVERYBODY WHO STILL THINKS DRUG DEPENDENCE AND DRUG ADDICTION ARE THE SAME NEEDS TO READ THIS ARTICLE ABOVE!! I don't know what the problem is-I've read so many articles this week both on speculating about Prince's death being due to drug addiction and also from former celebrity addicts who say they got addicted to pain meds because of chronic pain. On all of these articles, I've written-what did you do about the pain, itself? Did it just mysteriously go away? Did they have an operation to get rid of it or what?

Long before I ever had an inkling that one day I might be dealing with chronic pain-even back when I was a teenager-I understood the difference. Every day it seems the FDA or the DEA or whoever makes it harder and harder and so much more expensive for people to get the meds they need just to lead a somewhat NORMAL life. So afraid of overdoses-it's ridiculous.

I'm still trying to figure out why everyone jumps to the conclusion that a music star/actor/celebrity is always dying of a drug overdose and they're a hopeless junkie. I've come to the conclusion that this is a holdover from the 30's/40's when the jazz and blues great pioneers were using heroin-or maybe from movies like Frank Sinatra's "Man With the Golden Arm." Maybe it's all the LSD/drug use from the 60's/70's or the 80's where cocaine was the drug of choice. But there is such a difference between taking drugs to get high and party and taking drugs so you can be normal-and with that I'm talking drugs for depression, anxiety, etc. too.
I really wish more articles were written like this, so people could learn just a little compassion and understanding.
 
Is there a difference between physical dependence and addiction?


Yes. Addiction—or compulsive drug use despite harmful consequences—is characterized by an inability to stop using a drug; failure to meet work, social, or family obligations; and, sometimes (depending on the drug), tolerance and withdrawal. The latter reflect physical dependence in which the body adapts to the drug, requiring more of it to achieve a certain effect (tolerance) and eliciting drug-specific physical or mental symptoms if drug use is abruptly ceased (withdrawal). Physical dependence can happen with the chronic use of many drugs—including many prescription drugs, even if taken as instructed. Thus, physical dependence in and of itself does not constitute addiction, but it often accompanies addiction. This distinction can be dificult to discern, particularly with prescribed pain medications, for which the need for increasing dosages can represent tolerance or a worsening underlying problem, as opposed to the beginning of abuse or addiction.




How do other mental disorders coexisting with drug addiction affect drug addiction treatment?



Drug addiction is a disease of the brain that frequently occurs with other mental disorders. In fact, as many as 6 in 10 people with an illicit substance use disorder also suffer from another mental illness; and rates are similar for users of licit drugs—i.e., tobacco and alcohol. For these individuals, one condition becomes more difficult to treat successfully as an additional condition is intertwined. Thus, people entering treatment either for a substance use disorder or for another mental disorder should be assessed for the co-occurrence of the other condition. Research indicates that treating both (or multiple) illnesses simultaneously in an integrated fashion is generally the best treatment approach for these patients.


This page was last updated December 2012

https://www.drugabuse.gov/publicati.../there-difference-between-physical-dependence


There is more to this article did not put it all here just to give you a ideas there is a difference.
 
^So Barbee, tell us, what's the difference exactly?
Honestly, if you read all the articles printed here as well as all the personal testimonies on this forum alone or even somewhat followed the Murray/AEG court cases, and still don't understand the difference, you never will.

I think to you, you're either a junkie or not.
 
I remind you all to follow MJJC rules:


Posting Rules

The following posts, signatures, and/or behaviors are NOT allowed on MJJCommunity:


9. Stating that Michael Jackson was a practicing drug addict


Not only this is OFF TOPIC but against MJJC rules. Mods already removed posts in this thread so take this as a hint to not post them again.
 
the difference between the two words can be easily distinguished a simple google search.. They are two different words! The main grey areas is when someone uses the word dependency to cover up an addiction.. Which does happen!

BUT they are very very different..

Any news within the past few days with Prince that is note worthy?
 
Not really but they want to talk to Andrew and his father now. Prince was to meet Andrew on that day Thurs. Apr 21st.
That it so far.
 
Back
Top