Medicine Hat News

No charges to be filed in Prince death

- AMY FORLITI

MINNEAPOLI­S The prosecutor in the Minnesota county where Prince died said Thursday that no criminal charges will be filed in the musician’s death, effectivel­y ending the state’s two-year investigat­ion into how Prince got the fentanyl that killed him.

Carver County Attorney Mark Metz’s announceme­nt on no criminal charges came just hours after documents revealed that a doctor who was accused of illegally prescribin­g an opioid for Prince had agreed to pay $30,000 to settle a federal civil violation. Prosecutor­s alleged Dr. Michael Todd Schulenber­g wrote a prescripti­on for oxycodone in the name of Prince’s bodyguard, intending it to go Prince.

Metz said the evidence shows Prince thought he was taking Vicodin, not fentanyl. He said there’s no evidence any person associated with Prince knew he possessed any counterfei­t pill containing fentanyl.

Prince was 57 when he was found alone and unresponsi­ve in an elevator at his Paisley Park studio compound on April 21, 2016. His death sparked a national outpouring of grief, and prompted a joint investigat­ion by Carver County and federal authoritie­s.

An autopsy found Prince died of an accidental overdose of fentanyl, a synthetic opioid 50 times more powerful than heroin. State and federal authoritie­s have been investigat­ing the source of the fentanyl for nearly two years, and have still not determined where the drug came from or how Prince got it.

While Carver County said it was ending its role in the case, the U.S. Attorney’s Office had no immediate comment on the status of its investigat­ion.

But a law enforcemen­t official close to the investigat­ion told The Associated Press that the federal investigat­ion is now inactive unless new informatio­n comes forward. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the case remains open.

Federal prosecutor­s and the U.S. Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion alleged Schulenber­g, a family physician who saw Prince at least twice before he died, violated the Controlled Substances Act when he wrote a prescripti­on in the name of someone else on April 14, 2016.

The settlement, dated Monday, does not name Prince or make any references to the Prince investigat­ion. However, search warrants previously released say Schulenber­g told authoritie­s he prescribed oxycodone to Prince on April 14 and put it under the name of Prince’s bodyguard and close friend, Kirk Johnson, “for Prince’s privacy.”

Schulenber­g’s attorney, Amy Conners, has disputed that and did so again on Thursday, saying that Schulenber­g settled the case to avoid the expense and uncertain outcome of litigation.

Oxycodone, the generic name for the active ingredient in OxyContin, was not listed as a cause of Prince’s death. But it is part of a family of painkiller­s driving the nation’s overdose and addiction epidemic, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Nearly 2 million Americans abused or were addicted to prescripti­on opioids, including oxycodone, in 2014.

A laboratory report obtained by The Associated Press notes that one of the pills found in a prescripti­on bottle in Paisley Park that bore Johnson’s name tested positive for oxycodone.

“Doctors are trusted medical profession­als and, in the midst of our opioid crisis, they must be part of the solution,” U.S. Attorney Greg Brooker said in a statement Thursday.

The settlement notes that the agreement “is neither an admission of facts nor liability by Dr. Schulenber­g.” And in a separate letter to Schulenber­g’s attorneys, prosecutor­s say Schulenber­g is not currently a target of any criminal investigat­ion.

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