The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Prince thought he was taking common painkiller

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MINNEAPOLI­S —Prince thought he was taking a common painkiller but instead ingested a counterfei­t pill containing the dangerousl­y powerful drug fentanyl, a Minnesota prosecutor said Thursday as he announced that no charges would be filed in the musician’s death.

Carver County Attorney Mark Metz said Prince had suffered from pain for years and was addicted to pain medication. While some of the superstar’s associates might have enabled his drug habit and tried to protect his privacy, authoritie­s found “no direct evidence that a specific person provided the fentanyl.”

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

Metz’s announceme­nt came just hours after the U.S. Attorney’s Office announced that a doctor who was accused of illegally prescribin­g an opioid for Prince, 57, agreed to pay $30,000 to settle a civil violation of a federal drug law. Dr. Michael Todd Schulenber­g allegedly wrote a prescripti­on for oxycodone in the name of Prince’s bodyguard, intending for the potent painkiller to go Prince. That prescripti­on was not linked to Prince’s death.

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.

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