Whitney Houston death probe focuses on drugs found in her room

05:00 PM
Feb 15
2012
Whitney Houston death probe focuses on drugs found in her room

The investigation into the death of Whitney Houston is shifting to a new phase, with officials focusing on the prescription drugs found in her hotel room and who prescribed them to her.

Investigations are expected in the next few days to serve subpoenas on the doctors and pharmacies where Whitney Houston obtained the prescriptions as they try to determine her cause of death, according to a source with knowledge of the case.

Authorities have collected several bottles of drugs from Houston's suite at the Beverly Hilton Hotel. But officials have said the amounts of drugs did not seem unusually large, leaving it unclear whether the medications had anything to do with the singer's death. Officials are awaiting results of toxicology tests on Houston's body.

The source would not discuss specifics of the case but said it was standard practice to examine whether the drugs were dispensed properly and if there was any indication that she was receiving too many prescriptions. The source spoke on the condition of anonymity because the case was ongoing.

Dave Campbell, a retired captain from the coroner's office, said investigators would count the tablets in each container and compare them against the date of the prescription to see if the person was taking the correct dosage.

"Sometimes you find other medications inside" the bottles, he said.

Defense attorney Ellyn Garofalo, who won acquittal for a physician charged with overprescribing drugs to Anna Nicole Smith, said investigators were probably going to be looking at several specific areas.

They will compare the amounts of prescription medications gathered from Houston's room with the amount of medication that was dispensed. They will look at which pharmacies dispensed the drugs and which doctor or doctors prescribed it. That information could be compared against the prescribing history of one or more doctors who treated Houston.

A red flag would be a single doctor prescribing enormous amounts of medication, Garofalo said.

After Michael Jackson died in 2009, authorities spent months looking at bags full of prescription drugs found at his home. Prosecutors charged his doctor, Conrad Murray, in connection with the star's death.

Investigators will probably also use a database the state created with more than 100 million entries for controlled substances prescribed in California. The database has been used in past cases to determine the amount of drugs patients are receiving and how much doctors are prescribing.

Houston's death is being investigated by the L.A. County coroner's office and the Beverly Hills Police Department. Police said they have no plans to launch a criminal investigation, and the coroner's office said it won't have a final cause of death until toxicology results come back.

Tracking Houston's medication could take time. L.A. County Sheriff's Sgt. Steve Opferman, who oversees a prescription drug task force but is not involved in the Houston case, said "celebrities often get their prescription drugs from doctors who are more than willing to give them what they want and sometimes using members of their entourage." Celebrities say they do this to protect their privacy.

Garofalo said building a case against a doctor or pharmacist is difficult.

"It's a very high bar to prosecute a doctor who has wide latitude to prescribe medication and deniability because there are clear directions about how prescription medications should be used," she said.

Experts also stressed that it's difficult to draw conclusions until the tests are done.

In 2010, actor Corey Haim died unexpectedly. The attorney general's office found that in the months before his death Haim, 38, got 553 painkiller pills.

But the coroner's office determined that Haim died of respiratory distress related to pneumonia with the presence of an enlarged heart and narrowing of blood vessels. The low level of eight drugs, some acquired by prescription, did not contribute to his death.

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By Richard Winton and Andrew Blankstein - Los Angeles Times (MCT)

(c)2012 the Los Angeles Times

Visit the Los Angeles Times at www.latimes.com

Distributed by MCT Information Services

Comments

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Feb 16, 2012
04:24 PM

Kottage Kat says

Will aqnyone be influenced by her bad choices? If someone is or was, maybe, just maybe then she died not for naught. Death is so permanent, and the kids and adults today feel they are immortal. There have been enough drug related deaths here in Huron County make someone wake up and smell the coffee. Keep praying that will happen. How do these local addicts afford to buy drugs? Good grief I was too busy paying bills and keeping the wolf away from the door to even think about doing something so stupid. Boggles my mind, besides my parent would have disowned me with lots of "Tough love", they were parents, not my friends.
Feb 17, 2012
11:07 AM

swiss family says

Moderators have removed this comment because it contained personal attacks. Discussion Guidelines
Feb 17, 2012
12:42 PM

Kottage Kat says

Swiss, 22 YEARS SOBER, pretty good example, eh.
Feb 17, 2012
05:03 PM

swiss family says

Moderators have removed this comment because it contained personal attacks. Discussion Guidelines
Feb 16, 2012
12:02 AM

CRock says

Let's keep this short and sweet. While we lost a Tremendous artist in Whitney, once again we hear the story of a young famous person who made poor choices that ultimately cost them their life. Case Closed. We need to stop making this about "who" we lost and focus on How We End the Type of Behavior that Caused this Senseless Loss in the First Place!! Use this situation as a learning experience for your kids as to why you make Wise Choices, Every Time! Especially when no one is watching! I totally was a Huge Whitney fan back in the day. Once she married Bobbi Brown and started down that path, I lost interest....She became one of those faces you saw in the gossip rags in the supermarket aisles.....
Feb 15, 2012
05:45 PM

rbenn says

whats 6 inches long and is not being used? Whitneys crack pipe!
Feb 15, 2012
05:07 PM

nobodycares says

i am so sick of reading and hearing about her and then to top it off the n.j. govenor is ordering flags be put at half staff in there state !!! what an insult to all veterans ,fireman , and police who put there lives on the line every single day and all she did was sing take drugs and die !!!! never served a millasecond of public office or military !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Feb 15, 2012
06:21 PM

tadpole says

I agree with you 100%!

Would it bother you if Saturday mail delivery ended?

Yes
26% (40 votes)
No
70% (109 votes)
Not sure
3% (4 votes)
Other (and I'll share my thoughts in the comments below)
2% (3 votes)
Total votes: 156