A former attorney for two of Prince’s dead siblings says they revealed Prince had an addiction to Percocet decades before his sudden death in April.
Prince’s half-brother, Duane Nelson, said he used to get the drug for Prince to help him come down after shows, Michael B. Padden said.
“Duane told me that he witnessed him taking the drugs and he also procured Percocet for him,” Padden said.
Nelson was adamant that Prince was in no way just a recreational user, Padden said. He started using the drug to help him deal with the rigors of performing. Another half-sibling, Lorna Nelson, confirmed Prince’s drug use but was not involved in getting drugs for him, Padden said. She died in 2006.
Duane Nelson worked for Prince at Paisley Park but was fired at some point and ended up suing his half-brother. Because the two siblings are dead, CNN could not independently confirm the lawyer’s account. The attorney said he last talked to Nelson socially in 2005. Nelson died in 2013.
The revelation adds to information swirling around the singer’s death. After weeks of assisting the Carver County Sheriff’s Office, the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Minnesota and the Drug Enforcement Administration formally opened a federal investigation with local officials. As part of that investigation, federal prosecutors and DEA investigators will look into how Prince obtained prescription medication and from whom, the agencies said Wednesday.
A ‘life-saving mission’
The day before Prince died, his team called an eminent opioid addiction specialist in California seeking urgent help for the singer, an attorney working for the specialist and his son said Wednesday.
The specialist, Dr. Howard Kornfeld, couldn’t get there immediately so he sent his son, Andrew Kornfeld, on an overnight flight to Minnesota. The goal was for the younger Kornfeld to help evaluate Prince’s health and encourage him to enter treatment for pain management and potential addiction issues, attorney William Mauzy told reporters.
“He set in motion a plan to deal with what he felt was a life-saving mission,” Mauzy said of the elder Kornfeld.
But by the time Andrew Kornfeld arrived at the singer’s Paisley Park complex on the morning of April 21, it was too late. He and two Prince representatives found the 57-year-old entertainer unresponsive in an elevator.
It was Andrew Kornfeld who called 911, Mauzy said.
Mauzy’s account is the most public yet pointing to issues with opioid pain medication as a significant, life-threatening issue in Prince’s last days.
A law enforcement source told CNN last week that investigators had found opioid medication with Prince’s body.
The attempted intervention, first reported in the Minneapolis Star Tribune, also appeared to raise a potential legal issue.
Mauzy said Andrew Kornfeld, who works at his father’s pain management and addiction clinic, had a small quantity of a medication used to treat pain and opiate addiction.
The younger Kornfeld is not a doctor, and the medication — buprenorphine — is a controlled substance.
Buprenorphine is a medication approved by the FDA for the treatment of opiate dependence such as heroin addiction. It binds to the same receptors as opiates and renders them ineffective, according to experts.
Investigators took Andrew Kornfeld into custody, interviewed him and told him they were conducting a criminal investigation, Mauzy said.
Authorities have also said the probe into Prince’s death is a criminal investigation. It was not immediately clear if Kornfeld is the subject of a separate investigation.
The Carver County Sheriff’s Office has declined to comment on the investigation, and the results of search warrants executed in the case have been sealed.
Mauzy said the medication in Andrew Kornfeld’s possession was intended for a Minnesota doctor who had been put on standby to evaluate and potentially treat Prince. The attorney said Kornfeld never intended to give the medicine to Prince directly and never gave him any medication.
He also said the state’s Good Samaritan laws would give Andrew Kornfeld immunity from any prosecution since he was the one who called 911.
The Minnesota doctor who was to receive the medicines never saw Prince, Mauzy said. He declined to name the physician.
Howard Kornfeld runs “Recovery Without Walls,” which specializes in treating opioid addiction among other issues, according to its website. His son is a practice consultant there.
Neither the Kornfelds nor Prince representatives responded to CNN efforts to contact them for comment.
Call to help with a ‘grave medical emergency’
The Kornfelds’ involvement began just hours before Prince’s death, Mauzy said.
Someone from Prince’s camp called Kornfeld’s Mill Valley, California, offices on April 20, the evening before Prince died, seeking help with what Mauzy told the Star Tribune was a “grave medical emergency.”
Kornfeld couldn’t clear his schedule, Mauzy said, so he sent his son, Andrew Kornfeld in his place.
Andrew Kornfeld’s job at the clinic is to visit with prospective clients and explain the treatment process, Mauzy said.
The elder Kornfeld planned to fly out the next day, and hoped to bring Prince back to California for long-term treatment.
Andrew Kornfeld took an overnight flight to Minnesota, where a Prince representative met him at the airport and drove him to a hotel.
The next morning, Prince representatives met him at the hotel and brought him to Paisley Park, where Kornfeld was to meet with Prince before taking him to the Minnesota doctor for evaluation and treatment pending a decision to travel to California.
But Prince’s representatives could not initially find the musician, Mauzy said. They eventually found Prince, unresponsive, inside an elevator.
It fell to Andrew Kornfeld to call 911 because the Prince representatives were too distraught, Mauzy said.
Officials have yet to publicly comment on what killed Prince. Results of an April 22 autopsy are still pending.
A law enforcement source told CNN that a health scare that caused the unscheduled landing of his airplane about a week before his death was likely the result of a reaction to the pain medication, a law enforcement source said.
Last week, a Carver County, Minnesota, judge appointed Bremer Trust to manage Prince’s estate after it was revealed he did not have a will.