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Anna Nicole Smith, The Investigation

Posted on 03/09/2007 8:53:08 PM PST by mom4kittys

Edited on 03/09/2007 9:36:53 PM PST by Admin Moderator. [history]

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Comment #7,701 Removed by Moderator

To: All

Tee hee

http://hollywoodsnark.com/2006/11/03/daniel-smith-has-a-hilarious-pop-at-howard-k-stern-from-beyond-the-grave-2/

HollywoodSnark- Nov. 3, 2006

Daniel Smith has a Hilarious Pop at Howard K.Stern from Beyond the Grave

In sealed court documents filed Thursday in Los Angeles County Superior Court, Laurie Payne, a woman who spent considerable time with Anna Nicole during her pregnancy, claims that the former Playboy Playmate confessed to her in phone calls and instant messages that Larry Birkhead is the father of her baby girl. Howard K. Stern, Smith’s lawyer who is listed as the baby’s father on her birth certificate, Payne says Anna Nicole Smith herself said he wasn’t the father. Payne says in her declaration: "I asked her why she did not just go into a relationship with Stern, to which (Anna Nicole) responded, ‘EWWW…GROSS!!! No way!! I would never!’" According to the declaration, during Christmas, 2005, Stern began to tease Anna Nicole’s son Daniel "about being a 19-year-old virgin." Payne says, "….Daniel looked at Stern and stated, ‘I don’t know why you’re worried about me, you’ve been around my mother for 12 years and haven’t had any p*ssy either." And that’s the funniest thing I’ve read in the whole of this sorry saga.


7,702 posted on 03/21/2007 6:33:59 PM PDT by justthinkin
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To: Lizarde


Kimberly Gilfoyle on Hannity:

Howie only wants the cash, not the baby.


7,703 posted on 03/21/2007 6:34:41 PM PDT by Dr. Scarpetta
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To: sodpoodle

Hehehehe

TY for the chuckle


7,704 posted on 03/21/2007 6:36:05 PM PDT by justthinkin
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To: Lizarde



Gilfoyle:

Howard can't get custody. There is a cloud hanging over Howard because of 2 deaths.

Even Colmes agrees!!


7,705 posted on 03/21/2007 6:36:39 PM PDT by Dr. Scarpetta
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Comment #7,706 Removed by Moderator

To: Dr. Scarpetta

Well, Dr., if Hannity and Colmes agree on something, you know HKS is in deep trouble!


7,707 posted on 03/21/2007 6:39:54 PM PDT by KsSunflower
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To: Dr. Scarpetta

Boy, that segment badly needed guests that were part of this story. It's getting down to the point that nobody is talking.

The two babblers in black added nothing. Hope Greta is better.


7,708 posted on 03/21/2007 6:40:13 PM PDT by A Citizen Reporter
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To: justthinkin
Payne says in her declaration: "I asked her why she did not just go into a relationship with Stern, to which (Anna Nicole) responded, ‘EWWW…GROSS!!! No way!! I would never!’"

Even Anna when she was in her 'right mind' thought Howie was GROSS.

7,709 posted on 03/21/2007 6:40:20 PM PDT by Dr. Scarpetta
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To: Lizarde

Social Services?
Eviction Notice Served?
Don't leave the country notice served?
Get your @ss to the inquest on Monday notice served?
Larry Birkhead?
Virgie?


7,710 posted on 03/21/2007 6:40:38 PM PDT by stlnative (The Queen of Spelling & Grammar Errors! - http://community.webshots.com/user/dannielynnhopebirkhead)
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To: sarasota; All

Methadone: deadly painkiller

Synthetic narcotic developed to treat addiction often prescribed as analgesic; deaths up 389 percent in 5 years

Eric Weslander

Wednesday, March 21, 2007

Dr. William McKnelly oversees the Kansas City Metro Methadone Program. Regarding a recent spike in methadone deaths, McKnelly said the problem was not so much with treatment programs for heroin addicts as with medical doctors prescribing the synthetic narcotic for pain relief.

At the clinic, they mix the fix with generic orange drink.

Dr. William McKnelly and his staff at the Kansas City Metro Methadone Program have been doling out sips of methadone for decades as a way to keep addicts from going onto the streets trying to buy heroin or other opiate drugs. Patients pay $9 per day to show up at the clinic, drink their dose and go about their day.

"You're still strung-out, addicted, but you don't have to pay vast sums to your heroin dealer or be at the mercy of what they call ‘the man,'" McKnelly said.

Methadone has been linked to an alarming number of deaths nationwide, including the death of the son of Anna Nicole Smith in September. Smith, who died earlier this year, herself had received a prescription for methadone.

Between 1999 and 2004, the number of methadone poisoning deaths grew nearly fivefold, and in Kansas, deaths grew from four to 25 in that time frame.

Methadone clinics seem an obvious place to look for answers to this trend. But what happens daily at McKnelly's clinic -- essentially a few dozen people showing up to sip from cups -- is just one piece of the picture.

In the bigger picture, a growing emphasis on pain control is causing a dramatic jump in the amount of methadone and other opiate drugs prescribed by doctors to kill pain, not to treat addiction. A 2004 report by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services found that increased prescription of methadone through pharmacies is the driving force behind the growth in methadone-related deaths.

"The pain doctors are starting to use it big-time," McKnelly said, but some "have no clue" about the drug and its powers.

About methadone

Methadone, created in a lab by Germans to replicate morphine, first gained attention in the mid-20th century as a promising cure for heroin addicts. McKnelly, a professor of psychiatry, says he had the first methadone program west of the Mississippi, founded in 1966 in affiliation with the Kansas University Medical Center.

Deaths rising

Methadone isn't just dispensed in liquid form. It can also be prescribed as tablets and diskets.

Methadone-related poisoning deaths grew 389 percent between 1999 and 2004, according to the National Center for Health Statistics, from 786 to 3,849. At the same time, heroin deaths declined slightly.

Recent years have seen a shift from methadone as an addiction-treatment drug to an analgesic, or painkiller, prescribed by doctors.

"We need to better determine why the use of prescription opioids has increased so markedly over the course of the last several years, especially the prescription of methadone as an analgesic," the American Association for the Treatment of Opioid Dependence said in a 2005 statement. "It would appear that physicians are prescribing methadone as an analgesic to an increasing number of patients without providing appropriate therapeutic safeguards."

Methadone is just one of a number of opiates on the rise. Oxycodone prescriptions grew 50 percent between 1999 and 2002, and morphine prescriptions grew 60 percent, according to a study cited in January's Journal of the American Medical Association. The single-most prescribed drug nationwide is the painkiller hydrocodone, with more than 100 million prescriptions in 2005.

Why such an increase? The American Medical Association article attributed it to a growing emphasis on treatment of pain, a trend that's only likely to increase in coming years as the population ages and more people suffer from arthritis, cancer and back pain.

"This increase in legitimate use of these medications has paralleled ... a rise in abuse of these drugs," the article said.

McKnelly and his staff members say they've seen more patients in recent years who come into the clinic hooked, not on heroin, but on prescription pills. McKnelly calls OxyContin -- which is often crushed into powder and snorted to bypass its time-release feature -- "the worst thing in the world."

Biological dependency

Methadone-maintenance therapy has three goals: to block cravings, to dull any euphoric sensations related to taking other drugs and to keep the person from going into withdrawal.

"Trying to get off any opiates is awful. It's hell," said Kerry McLay, a Lawrence substance-abuse counselor. "You have extreme body aches and nausea. Most people need to go to the hospital and medically detox."

McKnelly said he started his program with the view that he would work his "magical psychotherapeutic skills" on patients to help cure them of their addiction. He saw his first patients three to five times per month and, eventually, he recalls them saying, "These talks are great, but do we have to talk to get the medicine?"

That's when he realized it may be an unrealistic goal to wean people from the drug. For a certain group of people -- regardless of their class or moral character -- the pull of opiate addiction is just too strong.

"It wouldn't matter who you were, whether you were Mother Teresa, or Rush Limbaugh or a junkie down here by the mission," McKnelly said. "There are a lot of things you can do to assist people around the edges, but you can't talk them out of a biological dependency."

He realizes that clinics such as his "bother some idealistic people" who see it as swapping one drug for another. But he said dispensing the drug in a legal setting reduces crime and the chances of people getting HIV or hepatitis from a needle.

"If we had something like this for cocaine, I could get the Nobel Prize nomination," he said.

http://www.basehorinfo.com/section/news/story/8990


7,711 posted on 03/21/2007 6:40:39 PM PDT by TexKat (Just because you did not see it or read it, that does not mean it did or did not happen.)
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To: KsSunflower

You know it! It only happens once every 5 years or so.....


7,712 posted on 03/21/2007 6:41:08 PM PDT by redgirlinabluestate
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To: Dr. Scarpetta

LOL, yes


7,713 posted on 03/21/2007 6:41:35 PM PDT by justthinkin
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To: Lizarde

Oops

Get your UGLY @ss to the inquest on Monday notice served?


7,714 posted on 03/21/2007 6:41:53 PM PDT by stlnative (The Queen of Spelling & Grammar Errors! - http://community.webshots.com/user/dannielynnhopebirkhead)
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To: KsSunflower
if Hannity and Colmes agree on something, you know HKS is in deep trouble!

How true. That's bad news for Howie...

7,715 posted on 03/21/2007 6:41:55 PM PDT by Dr. Scarpetta
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To: Lizarde
Did Howard ASS U ME that people would feel sorry for him??? That here he was, all alone with a tiny baby, the only thing left of his Anna.

Well, that's the way he's been playing it. Too bad it didn't work!!!

7,716 posted on 03/21/2007 6:43:03 PM PDT by Sacajaweau
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To: uncitizen

7,717 posted on 03/21/2007 6:44:44 PM PDT by TrishaSC (Still Team Birkhead)
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To: TexKat
The single-most prescribed drug nationwide is the painkiller hydrocodone, with more than 100 million prescriptions in 2005.

I had arthroscopic surgery on my knee last year, and the surgeon prescribed hydrocodone for me. I tried taking it the first day because of the pain, but it made me so sick I threw it out! Evidently it's a common prescription these days.

7,718 posted on 03/21/2007 6:46:06 PM PDT by Dr. Scarpetta
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Comment #7,719 Removed by Moderator

To: Dr. Scarpetta

Ex-Shreveport doctor sentenced to 16-plus years in prison
Shreveport Times, LA - 1 hour ago
Evidence presented today showed Hill provided a patient with a fake prescription for methadone and that the patient died just more than a year later from a ...

http://www.shreveporttimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070321/BREAKINGNEWS/70321023/1002/NEWS


7,720 posted on 03/21/2007 6:46:35 PM PDT by TexKat (Just because you did not see it or read it, that does not mean it did or did not happen.)
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