Western Mail

‘Where were Prince’s pals when he needed them?’

Failure of singer’s so-called friends to help the police probe into his death has left the star’s family disgusted

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WHEN officials announced they were closing the investigat­ion into Prince’s drug-fuelled death without charging anyone, it marked a failure that is now all too familiar.

While authoritie­s said they found no indication­s of foul play, the singer died from an accidental overdose after unknowingl­y taking a counterfei­t Vicodin pill laced with fentanyl.

But, despite the iconic musician being one of the most famous men on the planet, a multi-million dollar police investigat­ion led to no charges being brought.

It highlighte­d how it doesn’t matter whether someone is a rich superstar or a homeless person on the streets, the drug pushers who fuel their deaths very rarely face the justice they deserve.

The opioid crisis that blights both our nations requires immediate attention, not only because Prince died but also because many of us know someone who has been damaged, sometimes beyond repair, by drug abuse.

Last year saw the number of drug-related deaths recorded in England and Wales hit an all-time high.

The Office for National Statistics said 3,744 people – 2,572 men and 1,172 women – were fatally poisoned in 2016, 70 more than the previous year and the highest number since comparable statistics began in 1993.

In America, some 60,000 die each year from a drugs overdose.

If a terrorist killed that many people, we would find focus and we should do the same with this lethal threat.

But while authoritie­s must fight the war on the drugs, equally those around addicts such as Prince, have a part to play.

None of us know the kinds of things those close to him did to warrant their place within his inner circle or how deep their friendship was, but one thing is clear – several betrayed him.

According to documents from the investigat­ion, the Purple Rain singer had nearly 68 micrograms of fentanyl per litre of blood in his system at the time of his death.

It was 22 times the amount absorbed by a cancer patient who regularly wears a prescripti­on fentanyl patch to manage pain.

There is no question that many of the drugs that killed Prince, hidden in aspirin bottles on a bedside table, were obtained illegally.

With so many people constantly clinging to his fame, someone surely knows how they ended up there.

But according to investigat­ors, none of his supposed friends – the people who’d you thought were looking out for him – talked. No wonder his family are disgusted.

“I’m outraged by people in Prince’s inner circle not speaking up about what really happened. Those people who were around him when he died, they know what went on,” Prince’s cousin, Charles Smith, said.

And he’s right. Their silence is shameful.

True friends are the ones we tell our deepest secrets to or who we can call on, at whatever time of day or night, for help and they’ll be there.

Then there are friends and acquaintan­ces.

But it seems Prince had a fourth group around him – enablers who masquerade­d as pals, but in truth only wanted to use his fame or fortune. That’s not unusual for those in the public eye.

With the fame Prince had he would certainly have been surrounded by a lot of people.

So it is even more tragic now – since it was revealed his death was entirely avoidable – his supposed friends around him at the time could not, or even worse, would not, save him from his downfall.

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 ??  ?? Where the musical genius obtained the drugs that killed him has remained shrouded in mystery at the end of the police probe
Where the musical genius obtained the drugs that killed him has remained shrouded in mystery at the end of the police probe
 ??  ?? Christophe­r Bucktin, right, saw the outpouring of public love for Prince – but it seems the star’s ‘friends’ are less willing to speak out
Christophe­r Bucktin, right, saw the outpouring of public love for Prince – but it seems the star’s ‘friends’ are less willing to speak out

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