This story is from March 14, 2009

Anna's beau, doctors charged

Prosecutors say Anna Nicole Smith's ex-boyfriend and two doctors were responsible for feeding the Playboy Playmate's addiction.
Anna's beau, doctors charged
Anna Nicole Smith's death may have been from an accidental overdose, but prosecutors say her ex-boyfriend and two doctors were responsible for feeding the Playboy Playmate's addiction.
Howard K. Stern, her lawyer-turned-confidant and doctors Sandeep Kapoor and Khristine Eroshevich were charged in an 11-count felony complaint, including conspiracy, unlawfully prescribing a controlled substance and prescribing, administering or dispensing a controlled substance to an addict.
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"These individuals repeatedly and excessively furnished thousands of prescription pills to Anna Nicole Smith, often for no legitimate medical purpose," California Attorney General Jerry Brown said in a statement. His office is expected to release more details about the case at a news conference. Prosecutors said the doctors gave thousands of prescription drugs, including opiates and sedatives to Stern, who then gave them to Anna.
The prescriptions were issued between June 2004 and January 2007, just weeks before her death two years ago. Medical examiners have said Eroshevich, a Los Angeles psychiatrist and friend of Anna's, authorised all 11 of the prescription medications found in the Hollywood, Florida, hotel room where the 39-year-old model was found unresponsive shortly before her death on February 8, 2007.
Stern and Kapoor turned themselves at the Whittier police station and each posted $20,000 bond. Eroshevich was expected to surrender on Monday. An arraignment date was not immediately set and prosecutors were unsure how much prison time the three would face if convicted.
Eroshevich's attorney Adam Braun acknowledged his client wrote some of the prescriptions using fictitious names for Anna, but said it wasn't intended to commit fraud.

"It was done for privacy reasons," Braun said. "She did the best she could under difficult circumstances in the best interest of the patient." Braun said Eroshevich began treating Anna in September 2006 when she suffered a nervous breakdown stemming from the death of her 20-year-old son, Daniel Smith, who died of an accidental drug overdose three days after his mother gave birth to a girl.
Eroshevich traveled on several occasions over a six-month period to the Bahamas where Anna was living with Stern and wrote the prescriptions. The criminal complaint also alleges Kapoor gave her excessive amounts of sleep aids, opiates, muscle relaxants and methadone-like drugs used to treat addiction, knowing she was an addict. Kapoor saw Anna in the spring of 2006 when she was treated at a Los Angeles County hospital for opiate withdrawal and prenatal care for the pregnancy with her daughter Dannielynn, according to the complaint.
Messages left with attorneys for Stern and Kapoor were not immediately returned. Rumours swirled for weeks after Anna's death, but police cleared those around her of any wrongdoing and medical examiners ruled she died of an accidental overdose.
Documents obtained after her death showed most of the drugs found in her hotel room were prescribed in Stern's name and none were prescribed in Anna's own name.
The quantity was staggering. More than 600 pills, including about 450 muscle relaxants were missing from prescriptions that were no more than 5 weeks old. Ultimately, it was a syrup the powerful sleeping aid chloral hydrate blamed for tipping the balance in the toxic mix of drugs and causing her death.
Stern, who initially claimed he was the father of Dannielynn, gave up custody of Dannielynn after DNA tests proved Anna's ex-boyfriend Larry Birkhead was the father.
The little girl has been named the sole heir of her late mother's estate, with Birkhead and Stern as co-trustees. Dannielynn could inherit millions of dollars if the estate wins an ongoing court fight over the oil fortune of Anna's late second husband, J. Howard Marshall.
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