Bangkok Post

No charges in Prince death after two-year probe

- EMILY SOHN

Two years after Prince’s death, prosecutor­s said last Thursday they would not file any criminal charges as they could not determine how the pop icon obtained the counterfei­t painkiller­s that killed him.

Prosecutor­s reached a settlement with one doctor in Prince’s native Minnesota who had prescribed drugs for the pop superstar, but said they found no evidence that he gave the lethal dose to the Purple One.

“The bottom line is we simply do not have sufficient evidence to charge anyone with a crime related to Prince’s death,” Mark Metz, the attorney of Carver County, home to Prince’s Paisley Park estate, told reporters.

Prince died on April 21, 2016, from an accidental overdose of the ultra-potent drug fentanyl as the singer had just started to reach out for help for his dependency.

Metz concluded that Prince thought he was taking another drug, Vicodin, when instead the pills he had were packed with fentanyl. Where those pills came from remains a mystery.

“In all likelihood, Prince had no idea he was taking a counterfei­t pill that could kill him,” Metz said.

“There is no evidence that the pill or pills that actually killed Prince were prescribed by a doctor. There is also no evidence to suggest any other sinister motive.”

Metz acknowledg­ed that someone gave Prince the deadly pills, saying: “There is no doubt that the actions of individual­s around Prince will be criticised, questioned and judged in the days and weeks to come.”

But he added: “Suspicions and innuendo are categorica­lly insufficie­nt to support any criminal charges.”

Prince’s death stunned fans and bandmates as the 57-year-old was outwardly a model of health and temperance who rarely drank alcohol, ate a vegetarian diet and would boot musicians who abused drugs out of his studio.

But the Purple Rain star — so versatile he could literally play guitar blindfolde­d behind his back — secretly suffered from pain stemming from a hip operation.

In his death, Prince — who had kept pills in bottles marked with over-the-counter labels such as Bayer and Aleve — became the most famous face of the epidemic of painkiller abuse in the United States.

Last year, more than 42,000 people died and 2.1 million others abused opioids around the country, according to the Department of Health and Human Services, with lower-middle-class white communitie­s especially hard-hit.

“Prince’s death is a tragic example that opioid addiction and overdose deaths do not discrimina­te, no matter the demographi­c,” Metz said.

Prince’s sudden death set off a messy battle to determine control of his estate — estimated to be worth up to US$300 million (9.3 billion baht) with an untold number of songs still pending in his legendary vaults.

Prince left no will and had no spouse or surviving child, meaning control went to his siblings.

His Paisley Park estate, once a hideaway of mythic proportion­s which fans boasted of being able to enter, has since been opened for tours as his estate looks to monetise his legacy.

 ??  ?? Fans of US musician Prince still leave notes and flowers on a fence outside his home.
Fans of US musician Prince still leave notes and flowers on a fence outside his home.

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