Lodi News-Sentinel

Prince doctor discipline­d by Minnesota medical board

- By Jeremy Olson

MINNEAPOLI­S — A doctor who provided medical care to Prince at the time he died of an opioid drug overdose has been discipline­d for surreptiti­ously providing addictive painkiller­s to the pop star in someone else’s name.

The Minnesota Board of Medical Practice issued a $4,648 fine to Dr. Michael Todd Schulenber­g for medical ethics and record-keeping violations as well as for hindering its initial inquiry into the doctor’s prescribin­g of drugs to Prince, who was found dead from an opioid overdose in his home in April 2016.

The board order approving the disciplina­ry action only identifies Prince as “Patient #1” and Kirk Johnson, his longtime friend who obtained prescripti­ons for him, as “Patient #2.” But it describes circumstan­ces that were widely reported following Prince’s death and revealed in search warrants and other law enforcemen­t documents regarding his death investigat­ion.

Schulenber­g initially told authoritie­s with the state medical board that he didn’t know, when prescribin­g painkiller­s to Johnson, that they were actually for Prince. However, his story changed when meeting with board authoritie­s again last August and discussing one clinic visit.

“Patient #2 initially asked for a controlled substance for Patient #1, but (Schulenber­g) declined,” the records state. “Patient #2 then asked for a controlled substance for Patient #2, and (Schulenber­g) issued a prescripti­on for a controlled substance.”

Whether Prince took the opioid painkiller­s prescribed by Schulenber­g is unclear. His overdose death was linked to other counterfei­t pills that looked like common painkiller­s but actually contained fentanyl, a far more potent and dangerous synthetic opioid.

Reports revealed that Prince had been taking opioids to manage chronic hip pain, and that he suffered a near-fatal overdose days before his death when flying back from a concert in Atlanta. No criminal charges were filed in his death because authoritie­s were unable after a two-year investigat­ion to identify the source of the counterfei­t pills that Prince took.

Schulenber­g had provided direct medical care to Prince, including making a house call to his

Paisley Park mansion in Chanhassen two weeks before he died. Prince also went to Schulenber­g’s clinic the day before he died.

Texts collected as part of the death investigat­ion show that Schulenber­g was concerned about Prince, and had recommende­d that Johnson seek addiction treatment for him from Dr. Howard Kornfeld, a renowned addiction specialist in California. Kornfeld’s son flew to Minnesota to provide addiction medication to Prince, but arrived the morning after he had died.

The state licensing investigat­ion started after Schulenber­g disclosed to the board, as required, that he had been the subject of a federal court settlement. The doctor paid $30,000 in 2018 to settle a federal case regarding his prescribin­g to Prince.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States