Fentanyl was not the cause of what happened on the plane.
That's why people need to pay close attention to the narrative of what happened.
Fentanyl did not show up on the medical reports before the autopsy and the autopsy showed that there was no long term use prior to the fatal dose.
When you realize this you will start to get real upset. | |
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You need to back this up Mule.
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My question was why was he obtaining illegal meds when he could have easily gotten the legit meds via Kirk or someone else. He could have gotten the Vicodin via his own name.
When you take into consideration that the Moline incident was a seperate thing from 4/21/2016 | |
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[Edited 4/5/18 21:05pm] | |
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will you share the 'autopsy' with us? we've all been waiting so patiently for our turn to read it. Please? | |
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Some good points there. Fentanyl is fast acting, it sounds like, and fast to leave. I think the plane incident was probably fentanyl (maybe unknowingly) and they just didn't run the right tests to find it. Maybe that is why Dr Shulbarg was running tests..he figured P's OD was on something stronger than others thought. Is it possible P took quite a few of what he thought was milder pills (in an attempt to end it) because he had some kind of bleak epiphany after the 18th or 19th (he stopped tweeting around then and maybe stopped even making plans) and took quite a few pills (which became overkill due to them having fentanyl. Is it possible P thought he was dying since 2014 due to the way his body seemed to be overreacting to what he thought was much milder pain pills but he needed the pain pills so just thought maybe his fate was sealed. Maybe he couldnot understand why his hydrocodone was having devastating results and chucked it up to his body just breaking down. Maybe they had gotten more careful with the drugs and P dug out of an older stash in a time of desperation, thus the mess of pills in his house.
Hell, maybe Kirk was enabling the usage of what he thought were milder pills only for P to be deceiving him because P knew they were stronger. Maybe these massive conspiracy theories are just a way to explain away a series of errors, naivete, and ignorance on folks parts in P's little circle. Think about it. P's money is still in probate, his vault ain't making a ton of money. If you are going to kill someone you may want to manipulate them or drug them to sign a flipping will making it easier to attain his money. Hell, if they had waited about 10 or 15 years, P's money might have gone to them just as easily. I just can't imagine any of these people being evil enough to kill Prince..maybe I am just naive myself but it seems far-fetched. Otherwise, why are the Rolling stones still walking around alive...why didn't someone taint their drugs years ago and collect.
[Edited 4/5/18 21:22pm] [Edited 4/5/18 21:30pm] | |
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Mulefunk, you're made many claims about things being in the autopsy etc. We've all seen the public autopsy summary and it makes no mention one way or the other of Prince's history with fentanyl (or any drug). Are you claiming you've seen that info in the full autopsy? if so, how did you access that document? - As for "fentanyl not showing up in the medical reports before the autopsy," which of his medical reports have you accessed and how? Or did you get that info from this AP article that states: "Tests on Prince prior to his death did not show fentanyl in his system, which means he wasn’t a long-time abuser of that drug, but likely took the fatal dose sometime in the 24 hours before he died, the official said. The official did not elaborate on those tests." That's not exactly the same thing. -
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[Edited 4/5/18 21:24pm] | |
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Right -- and there's no reason he would have had a hair test prior to his death. - The line from that AP story that says "he wasn’t a long-time abuser of that drug, but likely took the fatal dose sometime in the 24 hours before he died" makes no sense. Obviously he took the fatal dose "sometime in the 24 hour before he died." He likely took it minutes before he died. That sentence makes me feel there was some sloppy reporting/writing going on here, and makes it hard to understand exactly what the "official" said.
[Edited 4/5/18 21:32pm] | |
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Maybe the hospital didn't believe him when he said he only took a few pills and assumed that he took a crap load of vicodin because of Kirk's assumption...and they only ran tests for those pills and not the much stronger fentanyl. Thus. the reason the family are considering lawsuits. they sent P home thinking he was overdosing on two vicodin which was probably confusing as hell. After he was coldturkeyed from the narcan and his body was a wreck. Imagine the helpless and hopeless feelings he would have had as he was trying to hide his addiction and figure out why his dependence had gotten such over the top results.
[Edited 4/5/18 21:41pm] [Edited 4/5/18 21:44pm] | |
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I don't know that they ran test to a ID the specific opioid in Moline. I think he'd have to consent to a test like that, and per the warrant he "refused treatment at the hospital," which make me think he would not have been down with tests of that nature.
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Could he have gotten the tests there (thus Dr. Shulbarg's later visit) but didn't want to stick around in the hospital (due to privacy issues) to get the results and then the results came too late to do him any good. Another reason lawsuits might be forthcoming. Maybe they took their time sending them to his doctor..
[Edited 4/5/18 21:48pm] | |
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Interesting info, benni. To me this makes it seem very unlikely Percocet triggered his plane emergency, because that incident was an opioid OD and "it’s also possible to overdose on the oxycodone [opioid] found in Percocet, but this requires taking enough Percocet that you’d be having issues with the acetaminophen already." Nothing in the description of that night sounds like he was having major "acetaminphen issues" (abdominal pain and vomiting). - His OD was severe and sudden, so he really would have had to take a whole lot of Percocet pills all at once for that reaction, and that would have triggered those other problems first, apparantly.
[Edited 4/5/18 22:14pm] | |
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But wasnt prince complaining of stomach problems and vomiting for months. That night he seemed alright though until the overdose. Its all so confusing.
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I mean that a major Percocet OD -- enough for the opioid to cause him to pass out etc -- would also cause acute acetomenphin poisoning, it sounds like (vomiting etc.). - Whatever was going on with him in previous month seems different; the warrants make many mentions his "history of going through withdrawals" which can cause all kind of similar problems (flu-like symptoms, digestive issues etc).
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[Edited 4/5/18 22:50pm] | |
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this makes sense. Perhaps, Prince's usage was mostly percocets but the acetaminophen was wrecking his liver and he knew it. He may not have known that the pills he was purchasing against doctor's wishes were stronger than he thought and OD'd on them that night on the plane. Like I said, maybe all they tested for was percocet or vicodin and didn't bother with other tests. The test results that he was waiting for might have been from the hospital but not the right tests to discover the tainted pills. Prince's liver might have been shot andmaybe he knew it and tried to OD on what he thought was Percocet but ended up overkilling himself with pills tainted with fentanyl. Although the cops don't think it was suicide maybe it is still considered homicide(by way of drug dealers who throw fentanyl in wrongly labeled pills) because Prince may have had a change of heart and attempted to rectify what he did when he entered the elevator. In other words, an intentional percocet OD could have been treatable, a fentanyl OD of that volume was most definitely not. I bring up suicide becuase I am not at the murder conspiracy stage and am trying to account for the massive amount found in his body.
[Edited 4/5/18 23:09pm] [Edited 4/5/18 23:12pm] | |
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I dunno. It doesnt matter how much I try and make sense of it all, I am always led back to the conclusion that it is just a sad story of someone losing control and making irrational decisions. We are all trying to understand why this and that happened the way it did. And the more we grasp at strawers, the more we concoct elaborate stories to explain the non-connected dots.
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Everything we know about Prince? That is like picking up a brand new Russian Doll and only taking off the two outer layers and then presuming to know exactly what the innermost layer would look like. We also never thought the man would overdose on drugs either. I don't know about Prince being so anti-suicide due to religion. his religion also would have been against taking his son off the machines. sex outside of wedlock, and even birth control in the first place. I think he could justify suicide to himself because his religious (although conservative) is actually rather forgiving. It believes in a second resurrection in wich every sinner (no matter when or presumably how they died as long as they didn't openly denounce and go to war with God) gets to come back to the earth and live forever after redeeming themselves. ALso he might justify it on a personal level by saying that his body's ability to be an instrument of God was no longer (it was broken down) and therefore he had no reason to stick around. Also, he was dealing with a drug addiction in a serious bout of withdrawal. Suicide is not inconceivable to those who are going through massive pain and addiction. They will do anything to escape their pain even rationalizing an action that seems to go against their beliefs.
[Edited 4/6/18 3:29am] [Edited 4/6/18 3:32am] | |
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At what point are people going to realize they’re never going to be able to make sense of it all so why keep trying? Paisley Park is in your heart
#PrinceForever 💜 | |
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There are answers somewhere (maybe not all of them but a lot more than we are getting). | |
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rogifan said: At what point are people going to realize they’re never going to be able to make sense of it all so why keep trying?
We will probaply never know, but I think we witnessed some Princely Confusion!!! Maybe to avoid copycat-behaviour by desperate Prince fans all over the world. [Edited 4/6/18 5:05am] | |
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purplerabbithole said: There are answers somewhere (maybe not all of them but a lot more than we are getting). Maybe but more than likely you’ll never get them. Paisley Park is in your heart
#PrinceForever 💜 | |
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The problem with letting some one make decisions about how to treat their drug addiction is the addiction makes the decisions.
Thus no hospitalization after returning to Paisley. He should have gone directly to a world class treatment center, but he was still in charge, and the call for help to Kornfield was probably not his idea. RIP [Edited 4/6/18 8:32am] No More Haters on the Internet. | |
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I agree that the idea that every.single.thing about his death will ever make perfect and total sense to all of us is wishful thinking. Even in the best of circumstances, much in life is a mystery and we can't completely understand the thoughts and reasons of other people (hell sometimes I don't even understand my own!) -- especially when we ultimately "know" those people only though a carefully crafted puplic persona. - Some of Prince's behaviors were probably fairly typical of someone struggling with dependence/addiction; others were unique to his very unusual station in life, which made his choices perhaps different than what people like us might be inclined to make. -
[Edited 4/6/18 8:31am] | |
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Thank you for saying this and I agree completely. I find it frustrating when people make assumptions about what another person 'definitely would do' or 'definitely wouldn't do'. It seems presumptious and unfair to say what another person would or wouldn't do or what is going through their mind at any given time because the truth is, no one EVER REALLY KNOWS what's going on in another's mind. Everyone's reactions and actions are different in response to prolonged pain/suffering or to situations that cannot, or even just seemingly cannot, be changed, and these responses or actions might even be in direct contradiction to the person's apparent personal beliefs. And we're talking about Prince - a person who was a living contradiction and who, all his life, made choices and decisions that were often baffling to anybody looking in from the outside, especially in regards to his religious beliefs and his personal relationship with God. I agree with you, purplerabbithole, about how Prince may have rationalized a choice of suicide in regards to God; he believed in a loving, forgiving God and if he (Prince) reached that horrible point where all he wanted was escape from the pain and suffering and being unable to make his body do what he needed and wanted it to do, then...well, it's my opinion that discounting the possibility of suicide by saying "it's just something he wouldn't do" is rather flimsy. No disrespect intended towards anyone else's personal thoughts and opinions, but I just feel it's not right to ever claim to know what another person would or wouldn't do, especially when it's someone as complex and enigmatic as Prince, and even more so when you throw in prolonged physical pain and probably other factors none of us as fans are privvy to. Thanks for reading. An old soul | |
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