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Tests confirm Prince died of opioid overdose, police official says Tests confirm Prince died of opioid overdose, police official says
(35 minutes later)
A law enforcement official said on Thursday that tests show the music superstar Prince died of an opioid overdose.
Related: Prince's final days: few clues pointed to secret behind star's untimely deathRelated: Prince's final days: few clues pointed to secret behind star's untimely death
The 57-year-old singer was found dead on 21 April, at his Minneapolis-area estate. Tests show that Prince died of an opioid overdose, a law enforcement official said on Thursday.
The 57-year-old singer was found dead at his Minneapolis-area estate on 21 April.
The official, who is close to the investigation, spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.The official, who is close to the investigation, spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.
Investigators have been reviewing whether Prince died of an overdose and whether a doctor was prescribing him drugs in the weeks before his death. The findings confirm suspicions that opioids played a role in the musician’s death. After Prince died, authorities began reviewing whether an overdose was to blame and whether he had been prescribed drugs in the preceding weeks.
More follows Prince’s death came less than a week after his plane made an emergency stop in Moline, Illinois for medical treatment as he was returning from an Atlanta concert. The Associated Press and other media reported, based on anonymous sources, that Prince was found unconscious on the plane, and first responders gave him a shot of Narcan, an antidote used in suspected opioid overdoses.
At least two doctors’ names have come up in the death investigation being conducted by the Carver County sheriff’s office, the US attorney’s office in Minnesota and the Drug Enforcement Administration.
Dr Michael Todd Schulenberg, a family practitioner, treated Prince twice in the weeks before his death and told investigators he prescribed medications for the singer. The medications were not specified in a search warrant for the Minnesota hospital that employed Schulenberg at the time.
Schulenberg saw Prince on 7 and 20 April – the day before his death – according to the warrant. Schulenberg’s attorney has declined to comment on the case.
On 20 April, Dr Howard Kornfeld, a California addiction specialist, was asked by Prince’s representatives to help the singer. Kornfeld sent his son Andrew on a redeye flight that night, and Andrew Kornfeld was among the people who found Prince’s unresponsive body the next morning, according to Kornfeld’s attorney, William Mauzy.
The younger Kornfeld, who is not a doctor, was carrying buprenorphine, a medication that can be used to treat opioid addiction by easing cravings and withdrawal symptoms, Mauzy said, explaining that he intended to give the medication to a Minnesota doctor who had cleared his schedule to see Prince on 21 April.
Mauzy has refused to identify that doctor. Schulenberg is not authorized to prescribe buprenorphine.
Prince’s death came two weeks after he canceled concerts in Atlanta, saying he wasn’t feeling well. He played a pair of makeup shows on 14 April in that city, and then came the emergency landing in Moline. He was scheduled to perform two shows in St Louis but canceled them shortly before his death.
The superstar had a reputation for clean living, and some friends said they never saw any sign of drug use. But long-time friend and collaborator Sheila E has told the AP that Prince had physical issues from performing, citing hip and knee problems that she said came from years of jumping off risers and stage speakers in heels.