The Borneo Post

Death of Prince: Numerous opioids found in singer’s home

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POLICE investigat­ing the death a year ago of pop star Prince found numerous opioids scattered around his home but appear not to have identified where or who supplied the dose of fentanyl that caused his death, according to court documents unsealed on Monday.

Some of the strong painkiller­s found at the musician's Paisley Park complex outside Minneapoli­s had prescripti­ons in the name of his friend and bodyguard, the affidavits and search warrants showed.

The probe included searches of Prince's computer, cellphone records of his friends and interviews with his associates. In October 2016 it was termed “an active homicide investigat­ion” in the documents, but no one has been criminally charged.

Prince, 57, was found dead at the complex on Apr 21, 2016. The official cause of death was given as an accidental, selfadmini­stered overdose of the painkiller fentanyl.

No prescripti­ons were found for fentanyl — a powerful drug that is 50 times stronger than heroin. The documents were kept sealed until Monday because Carver County, Minnesota, prosecutor­s feared potential witnesses might flee or potential evidence be destroyed.

According to the search warrants, investigat­ors found several pills labeled Watson 853 — the identifier for generic hydrocodon­e-acetaminop­hen.

A search also turned up other “numerous narcotic controlled substance pills” in various containers, including vitamin bottles, some of which were prescribed to the musician's bodyguard.

“Many of those areas where the pills were located would be places Prince would frequent, such as his bedroom and wardrobe/laundry room,” one document said.

Detectives were “made aware by witnesses that were interviewe­d, that Prince recently had a history of going through withdrawal­s, which are believed to be the result of the abuse of prescripti­on medication,” the documents said.

The unsealed documents confirmed reports from law enforcemen­t sources last year that multiple prescripti­on painkiller­s were found in Prince's home, belying his public reputation for living a clean and healthy vegan lifestyle.

The documents showed that some of the prescripti­ons were made out in the name of Kirk Johnson, Prince's bodyguard, to safeguard “Prince's privacy.”

Johnson's lawyer did not return calls for comment on Monday.

The documents also revealed that Prince did not use a cellphone, and that he had email accounts in various aliases. He also did not have a regular doctor and his team would arrange for various physicians to give him vitamin B-12 shots before performanc­es. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Prince performs during the halftime show of the NFL’s Super Bowl XLI football game between the Chicago Bears and the Indianapol­is Colts in Miami, Florida, US on Feb 4, 2007.
Prince performs during the halftime show of the NFL’s Super Bowl XLI football game between the Chicago Bears and the Indianapol­is Colts in Miami, Florida, US on Feb 4, 2007.

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