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Reply #450 posted 04/23/17 2:37pm

PurpleDiamonds
1

cloveringold85 said:



benni said:




cloveringold85 said:



.


You can't deny that Dr, K and Andrew played a part in Prince's untimely death. How can you not? The first thing that they did wrong (Prince's inner circle) was to call an addiction specialist in California, when there are dozens of well-qualified doctor's in the greater Minneapolis area. The second thing they did wrong was to send an unqualified person, such as Andrew (med studen), who was not even treating Prince, nor has he ever met Prince before and neither has/did Dr, K. They both also broke the laws by carrying controlled substances across state lines without a license! That is only the beginning!


.


Yes, Dr. S. prescribed Oxycontin the day before Prince's passing. I do not know how involved Dr. S. was in regards to getting proper treatment for Prince. But, it's obvious KJ knew what the hell was going on because he was picking up Rx's for Prince.






No, they did not play a part. First, it is not Dr. K's fault the inner circle called someone out of state. Again, as I've said before, IF Prince were aware they were being called, you don't get treated in your home area (regardless of treatment facilities around). He felt safe in Chanhassen. This was his home. People saw him as Prince the neighbor, not Prince the rockstar. If he were treated close to home and people began to talk about it, he would not feel comfortable thinking they no longer saw him as Prince the neighbor, but would see him as Prince the rockstar with an addiction.

Second, it doesn't matter who they sent, the individual arrived too late and did not treat Prince. They did not make good choices in how to handle the situation but their choices had no bearing on what ultimately occured. And Andrew covered himself by stating the medication in his bag came from his own medicine cabinet, therefore, could be viewed as his own prescriptions. People are allowed to carry their medications across state lines.

Dr. K and his son just happened to be caught up with what ultimately occured by circumstance. They were not responsible and hold no responsibility for what happended.



.


I respectfully disagree with you. Dr. K and his son both knew their actions were wrong. Dr. K could have said NO, I won't do this, but he went ahead and did it anyway. A doctor has every right to refuse to treat a patient. And, yes it was Prince's inner circle who are also at fault. They both are responsible.


.


Case in point: I can hand you some heroin or other illegal drug, but does that mean you have to take it? Sorry if that sounds harsh, but I'm using that as an example to get my point across.


.


Your answer to that question would hopefully be "No, of course I would not take the heroin if you gave it to me."


.


It's like going to the plastic surgeon for the 50-100th time and the doctor says "No, you've had enough and I won't treat you".


.


Simple as that.


.




[Edited 4/23/17 14:30pm]


Yes and if Dr K really wanted to help he would have called 911 immediately or told whoever contacted him to do so. Not send his son on a plane with his backpack...
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Reply #451 posted 04/23/17 2:51pm

cloveringold85

avatar

PurpleDiamonds1 said:

cloveringold85 said:

.

I respectfully disagree with you. Dr. K and his son both knew their actions were wrong. Dr. K could have said NO, I won't do this, but he went ahead and did it anyway. A doctor has every right to refuse to treat a patient. And, yes it was Prince's inner circle who are also at fault. They both are responsible.

.

Case in point: I can hand you some heroin or other illegal drug, but does that mean you have to take it? Sorry if that sounds harsh, but I'm using that as an example to get my point across.

.

Your answer to that question would hopefully be "No, of course I would not take the heroin if you gave it to me."

.

It's like going to the plastic surgeon for the 50-100th time and the doctor says "No, you've had enough and I won't treat you".

.

Simple as that.

.

[Edited 4/23/17 14:30pm]

Yes and if Dr K really wanted to help he would have called 911 immediately or told whoever contacted him to do so. Not send his son on a plane with his backpack...

.

Amen to that! I just cannot comprehend how a doctor could do that. I mean, I know if I had a sick relative, I certainly would not send some unqualified person to treat my loved one! No, no, no!!

.

Exactly!!......how about call 911? Which none of them did in the days prior.

"With love, honor, and respect for every living thing in the universe, separation ceases, and we all become one being, singing one song." - Prince Roger Nelson (1958-2016)
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Reply #452 posted 04/23/17 2:53pm

benni

cloveringold85 said:

benni said:


No, they did not play a part. First, it is not Dr. K's fault the inner circle called someone out of state. Again, as I've said before, IF Prince were aware they were being called, you don't get treated in your home area (regardless of treatment facilities around). He felt safe in Chanhassen. This was his home. People saw him as Prince the neighbor, not Prince the rockstar. If he were treated close to home and people began to talk about it, he would not feel comfortable thinking they no longer saw him as Prince the neighbor, but would see him as Prince the rockstar with an addiction.

Second, it doesn't matter who they sent, the individual arrived too late and did not treat Prince. They did not make good choices in how to handle the situation but their choices had no bearing on what ultimately occured. And Andrew covered himself by stating the medication in his bag came from his own medicine cabinet, therefore, could be viewed as his own prescriptions. People are allowed to carry their medications across state lines.

Dr. K and his son just happened to be caught up with what ultimately occured by circumstance. They were not responsible and hold no responsibility for what happended.

.

I respectfully disagree with you. Dr. K and his son both knew their actions were wrong. Dr. K could have said NO, I won't do this, but he went ahead and did it anyway. A doctor has every right to refuse to treat a patient. And, yes it was Prince's inner circle who are also at fault. They both are responsible.

.

Case in point: I can hand you some heroin or other illegal drug, but does that mean you have to take it? Sorry if that sounds harsh, but I'm using that as an example to get my point across.

.

Your answer to that question would hopefully be "No, of course I would not take the heroin if you gave it to me."

.

It's like going to the plastic surgeon for the 50-100th time and the doctor says "No, you've had enough and I won't treat you".

.

Simple as that.

.

[Edited 4/23/17 14:30pm]


However, in this situation, the doctor (or his representative) would need to meet with Prince and discuss the situation with him to determine whether or not he would be appropriate for their treatment methods. Also, Prince would need to meet with them, to determine whether he felt their program was appropriate for him. In this type of situation, you don't turn down someone in need just from a phone call with an associate, you need to talk with the patient.

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Reply #453 posted 04/23/17 2:58pm

NotACleverName

avatar

PurpleDiamonds1 said:

NotACleverName said:


Very good point, DD55. At the very least, he disregarded his Hippocratic Oath of "first, do no harm" by prescribing those oxy pills to Kirk knowing full well they were going to be used by Prince. He is backpedaling in a desperate attempt to preserve his career. Perhaps he sincerely believed he was acting in good faith but he had a duty to ensure that Prince received the best care possible. An argument could be made that HE failed Prince. Why is no one scrutinizing HIM?
... We were discussing the warrants in order and we were at Andrews warrant..
I agree Dr S has a lot of ??? To jump ahead.. I find it strange the 2 times P saw Dr S Prince seemed to feel sick
..on the 7th (P then had to cancel the first Atlanta concert, when he rescheduled on the 14th Dr S wrote Kirk and I think P a prescription)
Then the last time was on the 20th...

Many unanswered questions.
As Clover said Dr K and Andrew broke the law .
[Edited 4/23/17 14:33pm]

What I am pointing out is that there were plenty of oversights (or mistakes, whatever you want to call it) with regard to this entire event. I just don't understand how someone can accuse another person, that they don't even know, of murder. Boggles my mind. Andrew did not bring illicit pills to PP to kill Prince. He just didn't.
"Go placidly amid the noise and the haste, and remember what peace there may be in silence......." ~ DESIDERATA ~ Max Ehrmann
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Reply #454 posted 04/23/17 3:03pm

cloveringold85

avatar

benni said:

cloveringold85 said:

.

I respectfully disagree with you. Dr. K and his son both knew their actions were wrong. Dr. K could have said NO, I won't do this, but he went ahead and did it anyway. A doctor has every right to refuse to treat a patient. And, yes it was Prince's inner circle who are also at fault. They both are responsible.

.

Case in point: I can hand you some heroin or other illegal drug, but does that mean you have to take it? Sorry if that sounds harsh, but I'm using that as an example to get my point across.

.

Your answer to that question would hopefully be "No, of course I would not take the heroin if you gave it to me."

.

It's like going to the plastic surgeon for the 50-100th time and the doctor says "No, you've had enough and I won't treat you".

.

Simple as that.

.

[Edited 4/23/17 14:30pm]


However, in this situation, the doctor (or his representative) would need to meet with Prince and discuss the situation with him to determine whether or not he would be appropriate for their treatment methods. Also, Prince would need to meet with them, to determine whether he felt their program was appropriate for him. In this type of situation, you don't turn down someone in need just from a phone call with an associate, you need to talk with the patient.

.

I think you are missing the point that Purple D, and myself were trying to make.

.

The fact that Prince was most likely unaware of this intervention that was going to take place with Andrew K. on April 21, 2016 speaks in volumes. It tells me that Prince was not aware and he did not agree to this.

.

The fact remains, there was no reason for Prince's inner circle to contact a doctor in CA, when there are plenty of qualified treatment centers and doctor's in Minneapolis.

.

You totally overlook Dr. K. reputation. He's not a man of good character.

.

Andrew had no business going to PP, as he was not qualified to speak with or treat Prince.

.

It's about being ethical and moral, and they were both neither of those.

.

It's very clear that what they did was very wrong, and could very well be the reason why Prince is no longer with us.

.

[Edited 4/23/17 15:06pm]

"With love, honor, and respect for every living thing in the universe, separation ceases, and we all become one being, singing one song." - Prince Roger Nelson (1958-2016)
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Reply #455 posted 04/23/17 3:07pm

PurpleDiamonds
1

NotACleverName said:

PurpleDiamonds1 said:

... We were discussing the warrants in order and we were at Andrews warrant..
I agree Dr S has a lot of ??? To jump ahead.. I find it strange the 2 times P saw Dr S Prince seemed to feel sick
..on the 7th (P then had to cancel the first Atlanta concert, when he rescheduled on the 14th Dr S wrote Kirk and I think P a prescription)
Then the last time was on the 20th...

Many unanswered questions.
As Clover said Dr K and Andrew broke the law .
[Edited 4/23/17 14:33pm]

What I am pointing out is that there were plenty of oversights (or mistakes, whatever you want to call it) with regard to this entire event. I just don't understand how someone can accuse another person, that they don't even know, of murder. Boggles my mind. Andrew did not bring illicit pills to PP to kill Prince. He just didn't.

Andrew did bring illegal pills to PP...the warrant does say what was recovered in his backpack.
I have no idea if he also brought the fake laced fentanyl pills...no one knows for sure that I am aware of...but IMO
He states he was not there prior to the 20th and he was a new person in the mix that wasn't there before when Prince was still alive and he seems a bit suspicious...
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Reply #456 posted 04/23/17 3:12pm

PurpleDiamonds
1

cloveringold85 said:



benni said:




cloveringold85 said:



.


I respectfully disagree with you. Dr. K and his son both knew their actions were wrong. Dr. K could have said NO, I won't do this, but he went ahead and did it anyway. A doctor has every right to refuse to treat a patient. And, yes it was Prince's inner circle who are also at fault. They both are responsible.


.


Case in point: I can hand you some heroin or other illegal drug, but does that mean you have to take it? Sorry if that sounds harsh, but I'm using that as an example to get my point across.


.


Your answer to that question would hopefully be "No, of course I would not take the heroin if you gave it to me."


.


It's like going to the plastic surgeon for the 50-100th time and the doctor says "No, you've had enough and I won't treat you".


.


Simple as that.


.





[Edited 4/23/17 14:30pm]




However, in this situation, the doctor (or his representative) would need to meet with Prince and discuss the situation with him to determine whether or not he would be appropriate for their treatment methods. Also, Prince would need to meet with them, to determine whether he felt their program was appropriate for him. In this type of situation, you don't turn down someone in need just from a phone call with an associate, you need to talk with the patient.



.


I think you are missing the point that Purple D, and myself were trying to make.


.


The fact that Prince was most likely unaware of this intervention that was going to take place with Andrew K. on April 21, 2016 speaks in volumes. It tells me that Prince was not aware and he did not agree to this.


.


The fact remains, there was no reason for Prince's inner circle to contact a doctor in CA, when there are plenty of qualified treatment centers and doctor's in Minneapolis.


.


You totally overlook Dr. K. reputation. He's not a man of good character.


.


Andrew had no business going to PP, as he was not qualified to speak with or treat Prince.


.


It's about being ethical and moral, and they were both neither of those.


.


It's very clear that what they did was very wrong, and could very well be the reason why Prince is no longer with us.


.





[Edited 4/23/17 15:06pm]



Yes, I agree...
I would even say it seemed Prince was handling his meds with control even breaking them in pieces as to be cautious. I do not think Prince needed help with an intervention. Even his associates comments on this are conflicting.
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Reply #457 posted 04/23/17 3:16pm

benni

cloveringold85 said:

benni said:


However, in this situation, the doctor (or his representative) would need to meet with Prince and discuss the situation with him to determine whether or not he would be appropriate for their treatment methods. Also, Prince would need to meet with them, to determine whether he felt their program was appropriate for him. In this type of situation, you don't turn down someone in need just from a phone call with an associate, you need to talk with the patient.

.

I think you are missing the point that Purple D, and myself were trying to make.

.

The fact that Prince was most likely unaware of this intervention that was going to take place with Andrew K. on April 21, 2016 speaks in volumes. It tells me that Prince was not aware and he did not agree to this.

.

The fact remains, there was no reason for Prince's inner circle to contact a doctor in CA, when there are plenty of qualified treatment centers and doctor's in Minneapolis.

.

You totally overlook Dr. K. reputation. He's not a man of good character.

.

Andrew had no business going to PP, as he was not qualified to speak with or treat Prince.

.

It's about being ethical and moral, and they were both neither of those.

.

It's very clear that what they did was very wrong, and could very well be the reason why Prince is no longer with us.

.

[Edited 4/23/17 15:06pm]


Regardless of whether Prince knew or did not know, the FACT remains they did not treat Prince, period. Also, whether Prince knew or did not know, they could NOT provide treatment without his consent. Therefore, they would have still needed to meet with Prince to discuss their program, make sure he was appropriate for their treatments, and he would need to listen to what they had to say to determine whether he felt like their program was appropriate to him. They cannot be held responsible for being called by his inner circle and them showing up at Paisley Park to discuss their program with Prince. That in no way contributed to his passing.

Again, you are overlooking what I've said several times. When you are high profile, as Prince is, you do not get treated in your hometown. People talk. Prince felt comfortable at home and would not have agreed to treatment at home. Why? Because people in Chanhassen viewed him as a neighbor. If he were to be treated, and people talked, he would stop being a neighbor and would start being the addicted rock star. Prince would NEVER have agreed to that.

And Andrew did have business going to Paisley Park to meet with Prince as a representative of his father's business. Now, he would not have had any business treating Prince, that's for sure. But to discuss his father's treatment facility and what they could offer Prince, then yes, he would have been qualified to give Prince the facts of his dad's business.

And ethics and morals aside, they did nothing wrong. They came when they were called. They never treated Prince. They arrived too late. It is NOT their fault the inner circle waited until days after the plane incident to call them for help.

Whether Prince knew or not, is beside the point. The point remains that before they could treat him, they would need to see if he was appropriate for their treatment, and he would need to be given the chance to make an informed decision about accepting treatment from them.

[Edited 4/23/17 15:18pm]

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Reply #458 posted 04/23/17 3:26pm

TopazGirl

avatar

NotACleverName said:

PurpleDiamonds1 said:
... We were discussing the warrants in order and we were at Andrews warrant.. I agree Dr S has a lot of ??? To jump ahead.. I find it strange the 2 times P saw Dr S Prince seemed to feel sick ..on the 7th (P then had to cancel the first Atlanta concert, when he rescheduled on the 14th Dr S wrote Kirk and I think P a prescription) Then the last time was on the 20th... Many unanswered questions. As Clover said Dr K and Andrew broke the law . [Edited 4/23/17 14:33pm]
What I am pointing out is that there were plenty of oversights (or mistakes, whatever you want to call it) with regard to this entire event. I just don't understand how someone can accuse another person, that they don't even know, of murder. Boggles my mind. Andrew did not bring illicit pills to PP to kill Prince. He just didn't.


Right, I agree, NotACleverName. Andrew and his father had nothing to do with Prince's death. Prince was already gone before Andrew arrived. Andrew did not touch, treat, or force Prince to take pills. How Andrew got there, why, and what he brought with him is void because he did not treat Prince or even speak to the man. Any actions by Andrew Kornfeld has no bearing on why or how Prince died, so no, he did nothing wrong. Additionally, if Dr. Kornfeld doesn't have a good reputation (I did not say this, however, some are pointing this out), this is also void because neither he or Andrew gave treatment to Prince. There is no reason to call into question Dr. K's credibility as an addiction specialist and apply it to these arguments, in my opinion.


"And I know you're not just what you say to me
And I'm not the only moment you're made of..."
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Reply #459 posted 04/23/17 3:30pm

TopazGirl

avatar

cloveringold85 said:

PurpleDiamonds1 said:

cloveringold85 said: Yes and if Dr K really wanted to help he would have called 911 immediately or told whoever contacted him to do so. Not send his son on a plane with his backpack...

.

Amen to that! I just cannot comprehend how a doctor could do that. I mean, I know if I had a sick relative, I certainly would not send some unqualified person to treat my loved one! No, no, no!!

.

Exactly!!......how about call 911? Which none of them did in the days prior.


I understand where you're coming from, cloveringold85, however, this is Prince we are talking about, and I think we all understand about "special star treatment". That is really what this comes down to, I believe.


"And I know you're not just what you say to me
And I'm not the only moment you're made of..."
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Reply #460 posted 04/23/17 3:41pm

LOVESYMBOLNUMB
ER2

benni said:



cloveringold85 said:




benni said:




However, in this situation, the doctor (or his representative) would need to meet with Prince and discuss the situation with him to determine whether or not he would be appropriate for their treatment methods. Also, Prince would need to meet with them, to determine whether he felt their program was appropriate for him. In this type of situation, you don't turn down someone in need just from a phone call with an associate, you need to talk with the patient.



.


I think you are missing the point that Purple D, and myself were trying to make.


.


The fact that Prince was most likely unaware of this intervention that was going to take place with Andrew K. on April 21, 2016 speaks in volumes. It tells me that Prince was not aware and he did not agree to this.


.


The fact remains, there was no reason for Prince's inner circle to contact a doctor in CA, when there are plenty of qualified treatment centers and doctor's in Minneapolis.


.


You totally overlook Dr. K. reputation. He's not a man of good character.


.


Andrew had no business going to PP, as he was not qualified to speak with or treat Prince.


.


It's about being ethical and moral, and they were both neither of those.


.


It's very clear that what they did was very wrong, and could very well be the reason why Prince is no longer with us.


.






[Edited 4/23/17 15:06pm]




Regardless of whether Prince knew or did not know, the FACT remains they did not treat Prince, period. Also, whether Prince knew or did not know, they could NOT provide treatment without his consent. Therefore, they would have still needed to meet with Prince to discuss their program, make sure he was appropriate for their treatments, and he would need to listen to what they had to say to determine whether he felt like their program was appropriate to him. They cannot be held responsible for being called by his inner circle and them showing up at Paisley Park to discuss their program with Prince. That in no way contributed to his passing.



Again, you are overlooking what I've said several times. When you are high profile, as Prince is, you do not get treated in your hometown. People talk. Prince felt comfortable at home and would not have agreed to treatment at home. Why? Because people in Chanhassen viewed him as a neighbor. If he were to be treated, and people talked, he would stop being a neighbor and would start being the addicted rock star. Prince would NEVER have agreed to that.

And Andrew did have business going to Paisley Park to meet with Prince as a representative of his father's business. Now, he would not have had any business treating Prince, that's for sure. But to discuss his father's treatment facility and what they could offer Prince, then yes, he would have been qualified to give Prince the facts of his dad's business.

And ethics and morals aside, they did nothing wrong. They came when they were called. They never treated Prince. They arrived too late. It is NOT their fault the inner circle waited until days after the plane incident to call them for help.

Whether Prince knew or not, is beside the point. The point remains that before they could treat him, they would need to see if he was appropriate for their treatment, and he would need to be given the chance to make an informed decision about accepting treatment from them.

[Edited 4/23/17 15:18pm]






When dr k was called prince was alive, but in grave condition, does not sound good, had he simply said "because of my location and the described condition of the patient, my best medical recommendation is to handle this locally, right now, I will make some calls". Also a person in grave medical condition is not going to any rehab, they are going to the hospital to get stabilized, then go to rehab. Since dr k said he would handle it, princes people waited for him and now we all know that was the wrong decision, prince dies while they were waiting for cali to get to Minnie. Based on what we know about the last few weeks of princes life he was not mentally capable of making sound decisions regarding his health, you know full blown o.d. Ect, so who cares what he wanted, get him to the f*cking hospital, save his life, and deal with the fall out later.
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Reply #461 posted 04/23/17 3:51pm

zenarose

I feel that Dr K was negligent from the start. When Dr.K got the call from KJ or whomever, if he TRULY thought at that moment P's life was in grave danger, he should have immediately placed a call to 911. That one fact "life in danger" should have been the ONLY consideration in how to proceed to save a life. Not who the person was or anything else. A HUMAN LIFE IN A GRAVE MEDICAL EMERGENCY. Instead he sends his son that is not a licensed Physician with a pack pack full of illegal drugs, the NEXT DAY. And may I ask if these drugs were Andrew's personal stash, how and why were they acquired?? Why would he intentionally and knowingly commit a crime....State and Federal??
The story makes me question if there even was an emergency. Otherwise I would think that a MD would surely follow the law and the Hippocratic Oath. Look at what he has to lose if prosecuted or sued. Why would he risk everything he owns??
Just my thoughts.....😣 If Dr. k had called 911 ( if there was truly an emergency) P might be alive today. He mighta been super PO'd but alive.
[Edited 4/23/17 15:54pm]
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Reply #462 posted 04/23/17 3:58pm

disch

Prince WAS treated locally on April 20. Per this warrant, Dr S saw Prince on that day and prescribed him some medication. Perhaps that made others feel that Prince's situation was under control, at least enough to tide him over until the next day.

-

Prince was an adult and still in charge of his own healthcare. I don't know how he could be forced to recieve treatment he didn't agree to, and we don't know what he was telling those around him about what he was feeling/doing.

LOVESYMBOLNUMBER2 said:

benni said:


When dr k was called prince was alive, but in grave condition, does not sound good, had he simply said "because of my location and the described condition of the patient, my best medical recommendation is to handle this locally, right now, I will make some calls". Also a person in grave medical condition is not going to any rehab, they are going to the hospital to get stabilized, then go to rehab. Since dr k said he would handle it, princes people waited for him and now we all know that was the wrong decision, prince dies while they were waiting for cali to get to Minnie. Based on what we know about the last few weeks of princes life he was not mentally capable of making sound decisions regarding his health, you know full blown o.d. Ect, so who cares what he wanted, get him to the f*cking hospital, save his life, and deal with the fall out later.

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Reply #463 posted 04/23/17 4:03pm

PennyPurple

avatar

zenarose said:

I feel that Dr K was negligent from the start. When Dr.K got the call from KJ or whomever, if he TRULY thought at that moment P's life was in grave danger, he should have immediately placed a call to 911. That one fact "life in danger" should have been the ONLY consideration in how to proceed to save a life. Not who the person was or anything else. A HUMAN LIFE IN A GRAVE MEDICAL EMERGENCY. Instead he sends his son that is not a licensed Physician with a pack pack full of illegal drugs, the NEXT DAY. And may I ask if these drugs were Andrew's personal stash, how and why were they acquired?? Why would he intentionally and knowingly commit a crime....State and Federal?? The story makes me question if there even was an emergency. Otherwise I would think that a MD would surely follow the law and the Hippocratic Oath. Look at what he has to lose if prosecuted or sued. Why would he risk everything he owns?? Just my thoughts......😣 If Dr. k had called 911 ( if there was truly an emergency) P might be alive today. He mighta been super PO'd but alive. [Edited 4/23/17 15:54pm]

Why didn't Kirk call 911?

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Reply #464 posted 04/23/17 4:03pm

TopazGirl

avatar

zenarose said:

I feel that Dr K was negligent from the start. When Dr.K got the call from KJ or whomever, if he TRULY thought at that moment P's life was in grave danger, he should have immediately placed a call to 911. That one fact "life in danger" should have been the ONLY consideration in how to proceed to save a life. Not who the person was or anything else. A HUMAN LIFE IN A GRAVE MEDICAL EMERGENCY. Instead he sends his son that is not a licensed Physician with a pack pack full of illegal drugs, the NEXT DAY. And may I ask if these drugs were Andrew's personal stash, how and why were they acquired?? Why would he intentionally and knowingly commit a crime....State and Federal?? The story makes me question if there even was an emergency. Otherwise I would think that a MD would surely follow the law and the Hippocratic Oath. Look at what he has to lose if prosecuted or sued. Why would he risk everything he owns?? Just my thoughts......😣 If Dr. k had called 911 ( if there was truly an emergency) P might be alive today. He mighta been super PO'd but alive. [Edited 4/23/17 15:54pm]


Dr. K did not make Prince wait until he could get there. Dr. K did contact Dr. S to intervene until he could arrive. It wasn't 911, but it was medical intervention nevertheless:

"After he was first contacted by Prince's representatives, Howard Kornfeld requested that a Twin Cities physician check on Prince and stabilize him, sources said."

Reference:

http://www.startribune.co...378051471/


"And I know you're not just what you say to me
And I'm not the only moment you're made of..."
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Reply #465 posted 04/23/17 4:07pm

TopazGirl

avatar

PennyPurple said:

zenarose said:

I feel that Dr K was negligent from the start. When Dr.K got the call from KJ or whomever, if he TRULY thought at that moment P's life was in grave danger, he should have immediately placed a call to 911. That one fact "life in danger" should have been the ONLY consideration in how to proceed to save a life. Not who the person was or anything else. A HUMAN LIFE IN A GRAVE MEDICAL EMERGENCY. Instead he sends his son that is not a licensed Physician with a pack pack full of illegal drugs, the NEXT DAY. And may I ask if these drugs were Andrew's personal stash, how and why were they acquired?? Why would he intentionally and knowingly commit a crime....State and Federal?? The story makes me question if there even was an emergency. Otherwise I would think that a MD would surely follow the law and the Hippocratic Oath. Look at what he has to lose if prosecuted or sued. Why would he risk everything he owns?? Just my thoughts......😣 If Dr. k had called 911 ( if there was truly an emergency) P might be alive today. He mighta been super PO'd but alive. [Edited 4/23/17 15:54pm]

Why didn't Kirk call 911?



Exactly. It is not all up to Dr. K. I don't understand how Dr. K is ultimately responsible for all or a majority of this as some are suggesting.


"And I know you're not just what you say to me
And I'm not the only moment you're made of..."
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Reply #466 posted 04/23/17 4:10pm

disch

I agree. And frankly, even if anyone had called 911, who's to say Prince would have agreed to be carted off in an ambulence? There aren't reports that Prince wasn't conscience and sentient on April 20 and I assume if he wanted to be in a hospital that day, he would have gone to one.

TopazGirl said:

PennyPurple said:

Why didn't Kirk call 911?



Exactly. It is not all up to Dr. K. I don't understand how Dr. K is ultimately responsible for all or a majority of this as some are suggesting.


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Reply #467 posted 04/23/17 4:16pm

NotACleverName

avatar

TopazGirl said:



zenarose said:


I feel that Dr K was negligent from the start. When Dr.K got the call from KJ or whomever, if he TRULY thought at that moment P's life was in grave danger, he should have immediately placed a call to 911. That one fact "life in danger" should have been the ONLY consideration in how to proceed to save a life. Not who the person was or anything else. A HUMAN LIFE IN A GRAVE MEDICAL EMERGENCY. Instead he sends his son that is not a licensed Physician with a pack pack full of illegal drugs, the NEXT DAY. And may I ask if these drugs were Andrew's personal stash, how and why were they acquired?? Why would he intentionally and knowingly commit a crime....State and Federal?? The story makes me question if there even was an emergency. Otherwise I would think that a MD would surely follow the law and the Hippocratic Oath. Look at what he has to lose if prosecuted or sued. Why would he risk everything he owns?? Just my thoughts.....😣 If Dr. k had called 911 ( if there was truly an emergency) P might be alive today. He mighta been super PO'd but alive. [Edited 4/23/17 15:54pm]


Dr. K did not make Prince wait until he could get there. Dr. K did contact Dr. S to intervene until he could arrive. It wasn't 911, but it was medical intervention nevertheless:


"After he was first contacted by Prince's representatives, Howard Kornfeld requested that a Twin Cities physician check on Prince and stabilize him, sources said."


Reference:


http://www.startribune.co...378051471/



Good find, TopazGirl. And additionally, Andrew took a red eye flight the late eve of April 20th. There was no waiting until the next day.

"Andrew Kornfeld was expected to meet with Prince early Thursday after taking a red-eye flight from San Francisco the night Prince’s representatives called, Mauzy said."

Found in this article: http://www.startribune.co...378051471/

This article also speaks to the process of "evaluating"/"assessing" Prince's condition. Basically confirms benni's train of thought.
"Go placidly amid the noise and the haste, and remember what peace there may be in silence......." ~ DESIDERATA ~ Max Ehrmann
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Reply #468 posted 04/23/17 4:16pm

TopazGirl

avatar

disch said:

I agree. And frankly, even if anyone had called 911, who's to say Prince would have agreed to be carted off in an ambulence? There aren't reports that Prince wasn't conscience and sentient on April 20 and I assume if he wanted to be in a hospital that day, he would have gone to one.

TopazGirl said:



Exactly. It is not all up to Dr. K. I don't understand how Dr. K is ultimately responsible for all or a majority of this as some are suggesting.



I agree also that Prince probably wouldn't have agreed to being carted off. Also, I doubt that Prince wanted to draw any more attention to himself given the previous OD.


"And I know you're not just what you say to me
And I'm not the only moment you're made of..."
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Reply #469 posted 04/23/17 4:21pm

NotACleverName

avatar

disch said:

I agree. And frankly, even if anyone had called 911, who's to say Prince would have agreed to be carted off in an ambulence? There aren't reports that Prince wasn't conscience and sentient on April 20 and I assume if he wanted to be in a hospital that day, he would have gone to one.



TopazGirl said:



PennyPurple said:

Why didn't Kirk call 911?





Exactly. It is not all up to Dr. K. I don't understand how Dr. K is ultimately responsible for all or a majority of this as some are suggesting.




And to further expound upon disch's thoughts I bolded.....he would have stayed in the hospital in Moline. Let's not forget he left that hospital as quickly as possible.

"Go placidly amid the noise and the haste, and remember what peace there may be in silence......." ~ DESIDERATA ~ Max Ehrmann
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Reply #470 posted 04/23/17 4:23pm

benni

And the one thing people are not taking into consideration, is that Prince has the right to accept or refuse treatment. Working as a medical social worker, people have the right to self-determination. As for "grave medical condition" this is what Prince's representatives said, however, they are not medical people and if they honestly felt Prince was in that type of situation, they would not have left him alone. PERIOD. Obviously, they did not think that this was something that was imminent. If they had, they would have been baby sitting him that night and remained with him until help arrived.

Also, if they felt he was in grave medical condition, they could have gotten a "hold" on Prince if they felt he was a danger to himself. Dr. K did recommend someone local stabilize Prince and make sure that he would be stable until he could get to treatment. Dr. K followed the protocol in that regards. As far as he knew, Prince was being looked after by a local doctor until his representative could get there to discuss their facility and what they could offer Prince. Dr. S apparently met with Prince the 20th, prescribed some medication (and obviously it was not narcotics since he stated he never prescribed Prince any narcotics and the investigation was unable to find a prescription of narcotics for Prince), and felt Prince was stabilized and would be safe until Dr. K's rep arrived the next day.

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Reply #471 posted 04/23/17 4:27pm

GoneCrazy2016

Wow! This is quite a thread. I agree with lots of what I read, some not so much. I know what the autopsy says, and it is hard to swallow. I have also read all of the warrants. I am not disputing what killed Prince, but so many things don't make sense, which is why I personally have not been able to find closure. Like:

*If KJ was really P's friend, why the heck did he drop him off in front of Paisley Park and leave him? He just the day before told Dr. Kornfeld it was an urgent situation, so he knew P was in bad shape. He just finished taking P to the Dr. to help with withdwarl symptoms....but he left him alone? He definitely took him in for withdrawals. None of the 4 RX were for pain. I do not care if Prince (possibly said) he wanted to be alone, there is a time when you do what is right for people that you care for. Did his job mean more to him than Prince's life?

The pics at Walgreens show that Prince had his clothes on correct. But he was found with them backwards? We all know Prince did not go to bed until the middle of the night...so if he had not gone to bed, why would his clothes be backward? Let us just assume that he did not feel well and did go to bed. Okay, so he started feeling real funky, and got up to get help? Maybe he put his clothes on, in the dark? My confusion is, he died and was found with his hat on. If I was that sick or thought something was wrong, and was getting up in the middle of the night, I don't think I would be taking time to add on accessories.

If he was in bed feeling funky, and needed help, why not grab the landline? The elevator he was found in, was all of the way at the front of Paisley Park, by the front door. What would he have been doing there? With his clothes on backwards? And his socks inside out, without his boots that he never took off? But with his hat on?

*Why on earth would Dr. S. Prescribe Benzodiazepines for a patient whom he just prescribed Opiates for the prior week. These two drugs both suppress breathing and are an extremely dangerous combination. It seems pretty clear, based on the search warrant, that the prescriptions were meant for Prince. It also seems clear that the Oxycodone was prescribed to ease his withdrawal symptoms (because you cannot just stop cold turkey), so it seems he knew about the situation. But even if he did not, those are not drugs that should be taken together by anyone. Both were found in Prince's blood work from the autopsy. Perhaps this contributed to his overdose?

We are all asking about the RX bottles and how long of a history Kirk had of giving RX to Prince. Is no one questioning the Vitamin D RX? It was an RX from CVS, and it had Kirk Johnson's name on it, and it did have 7 Vitamin D pills in it, along with 8 of the Ondansetron (anti nausea) pills mixed in. What was the date on the Vitamin D bottle? Clearly it was not from 4/20. This definitely adds to the contradictions with what he told investigators.

All of the Watson pills were found in either bayer or aleve bottles. I find it interesting that the other meds were combined to RX bottles, but all of the Watson pills were in separate bottles. Wonder if they fingerprinted the bottles. How does anyone know Prince put those bottles there? He did not have any Fentanyl in his blood the week before, and did not show long term use of the drug (yes, I know, he took other opiates). It just seems odd that he had 100 of the Watson pills stashed (like he HAD to have them, but there is lack of evidence that he had been taking them prior to his overdose (as stated by authorities). Kirk had full access to Paisley Park. We keep asking why he did not remove the pills. Maybe we need to reverse the question. I do not understand. IF he did get the pills for Prince, it does not make sense he would just drop him off at 8 pm knowing the pills were there, and not so much as check on him.

What are the chances that you have 100 pills for Watson (Vicodin), all identical, but only a few contain Fentanyl, and they are all mixed together? Can we say Russian Roulette? And Prince would grab the pills and take them, when he just got home with a bag full of RX from the doctor to help him through withdrawals, after he almost died one week before? And that the pill would have a large enough dose of Fentanyl to kill him. Also why did the police have a search warrant for neck swabs? Admistration through the neck would have required a patch, which was not in the warrant. Probably over reaching here, but have not forgotten that famous "Just when you thought you were safe" tweet.

Someone mentioned that maybe he did it on purpose and made it look accidental. As krypton as he was, I don't believe Prince would go out making himself look like an addict. He cared too much about his image. I am not a conspiracy theorist, there are just so many things that do not feel right. The elevator, the clothes, the tweets, no will (which I still don't believe), the sisters comments about his knowing he was goin, the rush to cremate him... am I the only one that did not find it appropriate that all of those people were all up in Paisley 2 days after he was found? He has a secret hidden space at Paisley where he hid things. I wonder if the police found and searched it. Kind of seems if he wanted to hide "his pills" that would have been a go to spot. Might even find a will??

Okay, just need to go click print and publish this. Sorry for goin on and on. Ya'll got my brain ticking.
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Reply #472 posted 04/23/17 4:30pm

312131213121

why does this honestly need to be unsealed? Can't we focus on celebrating his life and music and not focusing on what happened?

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Reply #473 posted 04/23/17 4:39pm

LOVESYMBOLNUMB
ER2

benni said:

And the one thing people are not taking into consideration, is that Prince has the right to accept or refuse treatment. Working as a medical social worker, people have the right to self-determination. As for "grave medical condition" this is what Prince's representatives said, however, they are not medical people and if they honestly felt Prince was in that type of situation, they would not have left him alone. PERIOD. Obviously, they did not think that this was something that was imminent. If they had, they would have been baby sitting him that night and remained with him until help arrived.

Also, if they felt he was in grave medical condition, they could have gotten a "hold" on Prince if they felt he was a danger to himself. Dr. K did recommend someone local stabilize Prince and make sure that he would be stable until he could get to treatment. Dr. K followed the protocol in that regards. As far as he knew, Prince was being looked after by a local doctor until his representative could get there to discuss their facility and what they could offer Prince. Dr. S apparently met with Prince the 20th, prescribed some medication (and obviously it was not narcotics since he stated he never prescribed Prince any narcotics and the investigation was unable to find a prescription of narcotics for Prince), and felt Prince was stabilized and would be safe until Dr. K's rep arrived the next day.






Well i guess he was in grave medical condition since he died less than a day later , and people deeply messed up on drugs are admitted to the hospital all the time without consent as you mentioned, a 72 hour hold. And dr s was some family practice m.d with no experience or expertise in drug addiction and he was not legally able to prescribe or dispense the suboxone, which is dr k's main treatment protocol. So great plan all around, right
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Reply #474 posted 04/23/17 4:46pm

PurpleDiamonds
1

TopazGirl said:



zenarose said:


I feel that Dr K was negligent from the start. When Dr.K got the call from KJ or whomever, if he TRULY thought at that moment P's life was in grave danger, he should have immediately placed a call to 911. That one fact "life in danger" should have been the ONLY consideration in how to proceed to save a life. Not who the person was or anything else. A HUMAN LIFE IN A GRAVE MEDICAL EMERGENCY. Instead he sends his son that is not a licensed Physician with a pack pack full of illegal drugs, the NEXT DAY. And may I ask if these drugs were Andrew's personal stash, how and why were they acquired?? Why would he intentionally and knowingly commit a crime....State and Federal?? The story makes me question if there even was an emergency. Otherwise I would think that a MD would surely follow the law and the Hippocratic Oath. Look at what he has to lose if prosecuted or sued. Why would he risk everything he owns?? Just my thoughts.....😣 If Dr. k had called 911 ( if there was truly an emergency) P might be alive today. He mighta been super PO'd but alive. [Edited 4/23/17 15:54pm]


Dr. K did not make Prince wait until he could get there. Dr. K did contact Dr. S to intervene until he could arrive. It wasn't 911, but it was medical intervention nevertheless:


"After he was first contacted by Prince's representatives, Howard Kornfeld requested that a Twin Cities physician check on Prince and stabilize him, sources said."


Reference:


http://www.startribune.co...378051471/



That was not mentioned in the warrants, there has been a lot of misinformation in the media given by unnamed sources.
Our local news even misspoke and said Dr S was on the plane with P
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Reply #475 posted 04/23/17 4:49pm

benni

PurpleDiamonds1 said:

TopazGirl said:


Dr. K did not make Prince wait until he could get there. Dr. K did contact Dr. S to intervene until he could arrive. It wasn't 911, but it was medical intervention nevertheless:

"After he was first contacted by Prince's representatives, Howard Kornfeld requested that a Twin Cities physician check on Prince and stabilize him, sources said."

Reference:

http://www.startribune.co...378051471/


That was not mentioned in the warrants, there has been a lot of misinformation in the media given by unnamed sources. Our local news even misspoke and said Dr S was on the plane with P


No, why would it be mentioned in the search warrants? They did not release information on interviews they did with those involved, which is where you would find that information, not in a search warrant.

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Reply #476 posted 04/23/17 4:58pm

PurpleDiamonds
1

GoneCrazy2016 said:

Wow! This is quite a thread. I agree with lots of what I read, some not so much. I know what the autopsy says, and it is hard to swallow. I have also read all of the warrants. I am not disputing what killed Prince, but so many things don't make sense, which is why I personally have not been able to find closure. Like:

*If KJ was really P's friend, why the heck did he drop him off in front of Paisley Park and leave him? He just the day before told Dr. Kornfeld it was an urgent situation, so he knew P was in bad shape. He just finished taking P to the Dr. to help with withdwarl symptoms....but he left him alone? He definitely took him in for withdrawals. None of the 4 RX were for pain. I do not care if Prince (possibly said) he wanted to be alone, there is a time when you do what is right for people that you care for. Did his job mean more to him than Prince's life?

The pics at Walgreens show that Prince had his clothes on correct. But he was found with them backwards? We all know Prince did not go to bed until the middle of the night...so if he had not gone to bed, why would his clothes be backward? Let us just assume that he did not feel well and did go to bed. Okay, so he started feeling real funky, and got up to get help? Maybe he put his clothes on, in the dark? My confusion is, he died and was found with his hat on. If I was that sick or thought something was wrong, and was getting up in the middle of the night, I don't think I would be taking time to add on accessories.

If he was in bed feeling funky, and needed help, why not grab the landline? The elevator he was found in, was all of the way at the front of Paisley Park, by the front door. What would he have been doing there? With his clothes on backwards? And his socks inside out, without his boots that he never took off? But with his hat on?

*Why on earth would Dr. S. Prescribe Benzodiazepines for a patient whom he just prescribed Opiates for the prior week. These two drugs both suppress breathing and are an extremely dangerous combination. It seems pretty clear, based on the search warrant, that the prescriptions were meant for Prince. It also seems clear that the Oxycodone was prescribed to ease his withdrawal symptoms (because you cannot just stop cold turkey), so it seems he knew about the situation. But even if he did not, those are not drugs that should be taken together by anyone. Both were found in Prince's blood work from the autopsy. Perhaps this contributed to his overdose?

We are all asking about the RX bottles and how long of a history Kirk had of giving RX to Prince. Is no one questioning the Vitamin D RX? It was an RX from CVS, and it had Kirk Johnson's name on it, and it did have 7 Vitamin D pills in it, along with 8 of the Ondansetron (anti nausea) pills mixed in. What was the date on the Vitamin D bottle? Clearly it was not from 4/20. This definitely adds to the contradictions with what he told investigators.

All of the Watson pills were found in either bayer or aleve bottles. I find it interesting that the other meds were combined to RX bottles, but all of the Watson pills were in separate bottles. Wonder if they fingerprinted the bottles. How does anyone know Prince put those bottles there? He did not have any Fentanyl in his blood the week before, and did not show long term use of the drug (yes, I know, he took other opiates). It just seems odd that he had 100 of the Watson pills stashed (like he HAD to have them, but there is lack of evidence that he had been taking them prior to his overdose (as stated by authorities). Kirk had full access to Paisley Park. We keep asking why he did not remove the pills. Maybe we need to reverse the question. I do not understand. IF he did get the pills for Prince, it does not make sense he would just drop him off at 8 pm knowing the pills were there, and not so much as check on him.

What are the chances that you have 100 pills for Watson (Vicodin), all identical, but only a few contain Fentanyl, and they are all mixed together? Can we say Russian Roulette? And Prince would grab the pills and take them, when he just got home with a bag full of RX from the doctor to help him through withdrawals, after he almost died one week before? And that the pill would have a large enough dose of Fentanyl to kill him. Also why did the police have a search warrant for neck swabs? Admistration through the neck would have required a patch, which was not in the warrant. Probably over reaching here, but have not forgotten that famous "Just when you thought you were safe" tweet.

Someone mentioned that maybe he did it on purpose and made it look accidental. As krypton as he was, I don't believe Prince would go out making himself look like an addict. He cared too much about his image. I am not a conspiracy theorist, there are just so many things that do not feel right. The elevator, the clothes, the tweets, no will (which I still don't believe), the sisters comments about his knowing he was goin, the rush to cremate him... am I the only one that did not find it appropriate that all of those people were all up in Paisley 2 days after he was found? He has a secret hidden space at Paisley where he hid things. I wonder if the police found and searched it. Kind of seems if he wanted to hide "his pills" that would have been a go to spot. Might even find a will??

Okay, just need to go click print and publish this. Sorry for goin on and on. Ya'll got my brain ticking.

On the same page as you....you bring up some valid and good points :nod:

I don't know why the swabbing of neck, and hands were done or what that could have meant...
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Reply #477 posted 04/23/17 4:59pm

TopazGirl

avatar

PurpleDiamonds1 said:

TopazGirl said:


Dr. K did not make Prince wait until he could get there. Dr. K did contact Dr. S to intervene until he could arrive. It wasn't 911, but it was medical intervention nevertheless:

"After he was first contacted by Prince's representatives, Howard Kornfeld requested that a Twin Cities physician check on Prince and stabilize him, sources said."

Reference:

http://www.startribune.co...378051471/


That was not mentioned in the warrants, there has been a lot of misinformation in the media given by unnamed sources. Our local news even misspoke and said Dr S was on the plane with P


Dr. K was contacted the evening before Prince's death. Dr. S showed up the morning of Prince's death. He was apparently there to deliver test results. Dr. S was there because he was working with Prince. I think it might be safe to say that Dr. S could have been contacted by Dr. K. -- Dr. K. only had less than a day to speak to Dr. S and tell him to get his ass over there. In all appearances, Dr. S got his ass over there.


"And I know you're not just what you say to me
And I'm not the only moment you're made of..."
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Reply #478 posted 04/23/17 5:05pm

PurpleDiamonds
1

TopazGirl said:



PurpleDiamonds1 said:


TopazGirl said:



Dr. K did not make Prince wait until he could get there. Dr. K did contact Dr. S to intervene until he could arrive. It wasn't 911, but it was medical intervention nevertheless:


"After he was first contacted by Prince's representatives, Howard Kornfeld requested that a Twin Cities physician check on Prince and stabilize him, sources said."


Reference:


http://www.startribune.co...378051471/




That was not mentioned in the warrants, there has been a lot of misinformation in the media given by unnamed sources. Our local news even misspoke and said Dr S was on the plane with P


Dr. K was contacted the evening before Prince's death. Dr. S showed up the morning of Prince's death. He was apparently there to deliver test results. Dr. S was there because he was working with Prince. I think it might be safe to say that Dr. S could have been contacted by Dr. K. -- Dr. K. only had less than a day to speak to Dr. S and tell him to get his ass over there. In all appearances, Dr. S got his ass over there.




The warrants do not say that happened so hopefully the LE will check all phone records.
Dr S showed up at PP to give Prince test results, have not heard dr K called Dr S. Would think the LE would have the test results too
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Reply #479 posted 04/23/17 5:06pm

TopazGirl

avatar

benni said:

PurpleDiamonds1 said:

TopazGirl said: That was not mentioned in the warrants, there has been a lot of misinformation in the media given by unnamed sources. Our local news even misspoke and said Dr S was on the plane with P


No, why would it be mentioned in the search warrants? They did not release information on interviews they did with those involved, which is where you would find that information, not in a search warrant.


I wondered this too...whether or not that information had to be in the search warrant.

"And I know you're not just what you say to me
And I'm not the only moment you're made of..."
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