BREAKING NEWS: Doctors and Pharmacies called out in death investigation
LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles County coroner’s office has issued
subpoenas for medical and pharmacy records from Whitney Houston’s
doctors and medical providers, which is standard procedure in such
investigations, an official said.
Assistant Chief Coroner Ed Winter said the request is made in
virtually all death investigations because it can shed additional light
on how people died and whether they had any serious medical conditions.
“We’ve already contacted a number of doctors with requests for records,” he said.
Winter
said that at this point, there is nothing unusual about how his office
is proceeding with the Houston death investigation and that requests for
medical records are requested through subpoenas.
“If somebody even dies in a crash, a blunt force trauma, we will still take medical issues into account,” he said. “Anything helps.”
Investigators
in the Houston case found several bottles of prescription medication in
the Beverly Hills, Calif., hotel room where she died Saturday, although
Winter has said they weren’t an unusually large number. Detectives have
declined to disclose which medications were seized.
Authorities
said an autopsy found no indications of foul play or obvious signs of
trauma on Houston. She was underwater and apparently unconscious when
she was pulled from a bathtub, officials said.
It could be weeks before the coroner’s office completes toxicology tests to establish the cause of death.
Medical
records have become crucial in celebrity death investigations,
including inquiries into what killed actor Corey Haim, actress Brittany
Murphy and pop superstar Michael Jackson. Haim’s and Murphy’s causes of
death were not drug-related, the coroner’s office determined.
In
Jackson’s case, state and federal investigators spent months looking
into Jackson’s medical history and doctors who had prescribed him
medication. They decided not to file charges against seven doctors who
treated Jackson, although they referred one unnamed physician to the
state’s medical board for prescribing medications to Jackson under an
alias.
Jackson’s personal physician, Conrad Murray, was convicted
of involuntary manslaughter for the singer’s death. He had been giving
the entertainer nightly doses of the anesthetic propofol in Jackson’s
bedroom as a sleep aid but kept no records of the treatments.
Prosecutors
and experts said during Murray’s trial that his decision not to keep
records was reckless and deprived Jackson’s family from having a full
account of how he died.
Law enforcement can access California’s
prescription drug monitoring database known as CURES, which contains
more than 100 million prescriptions and receives anywhere from 4 to 6
million additions every month.
The data culled from pharmacies can
determine whether doctors are prescribing outside the course of normal
medical practice and see if a patient is getting multiple prescriptions
from various physicians, commonly known as doctor shopping.
Gov.
Jerry Brown touted the CURES program several years ago when he was
attorney general, and under his leadership high-profile investigations
were launched into the deaths of Jackson, Haim and Anna Nicole Smith.
In
the Smith case, charges eventually were filed against two doctors and
her boyfriend-lawyer in connection with her death after the database
showed the former Playboy Playmate was receiving a myriad of
prescription drugs. A jury acquitted the trio of most to all of the
felony counts and a judge dismissed two convictions, while reducing one
to a misdemeanor.
Houston died just hours before she was scheduled
to perform at producer Clive Davis’ pre-Grammy Awards bash.
Her family
plans a private church service in her hometown of Newark, N.J.
Houston,
a sensation from her first, eponymous album in 1985, was one of the
world’s best-selling artists from the mid-1980s to the late 1990s,
turning out such hits as “I Wanna Dance With Somebody,” ‘’How Will I
Know,”
‘’The Greatest Love of All” and “I Will Always Love You.” But as
she struggled with drugs, her majestic voice became raspy, and she
couldn’t hit the high notes.
Interest in her music has skyrocketed since her death, pushing her songs back on to charts and into heavy rotation on the radio.
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