Attorney General: Stern "Principal Enabler" in Anna Nicole Drug Case

Official details the eight felony charges faced by alleged conspirators Howard K. Stern and doctors

By Gina Serpe Mar 13, 2009 6:28 PMTags
Howard K Stern, Sandeep KapoorWhittier Police Department

Make no mistake, the California attorney general is not one to mince words.

"What we have in this case is a conspiracy among three individuals," Jerry Brown said of Howard K. Stern, and Drs. Sandeep Kapoor and Khristine Eroshevich, the trio charged yesterday with eight felonies for their roles in the lead-up to Anna Nicole Smith's drug-induced death.

"It was done knowingly and it was done with tragic consequences."

Referring to Stern as the "principal enabler," Brown said during a press conference this morning that the lawyer and onetime reality show star "funneled highly addictive drugs to Ms. Smith."

"We're not talking a few dozen, we're talking hundreds and hundreds of pills," he went on. "The law's been violated, it's a conspiracy, this is bad business."

Brown denounced the two doctors involved for having "violated their ethical obligations as physicians," and said that the patient, in this case Anna Nicole, is not to blame, even if she had a hand in obtaining the drugs.

"These three individuals repeatedly and excessively furnished thousands of prescription pills to Anna Nicole Smith, often for no legitimate medical purpose," he said.

"Doctors are licensed to avoid those pressures."

As for a possible motivation for the accused, Brown said that Smith herself may have been a draw.

"Probing into motives is always a speculative undertaking, but certainly there is a…gain here to be part of the celebrity glitz and glamour.

"These people were caught up with being in a relationship with and being around Anna Nicole Smith."

Meanwhile, Kapoor's medical mentor, Dr. Victor Kovner, who started the Studio City medical center currently run by Kapoor, told E! News that he was "very saddened" by the situation and insisted that Kapoor was "very well trained."

Kovner added that, while he wishes the best for Kapoor, it would indeed be a serious crime if the allegations proved true, particularly the charge that he prescribed medications to false names.

"If they did it under another name to deliberately deceive, that's certainly a felony," he said. "His career is in tremendous jeopardy."

In addition the conspiracy charge, the trio variously faces charges of obtaining an opiate prescription by fraud, deceit or misrepresentation; obtaining an opiate prescription by giving a false name or address; prescribing, administering or dispensing a controlled substance to an addict; and unlawfully prescribing a controlled substance.

Brown said that just one count typically carries a three-year sentence.

"This is serious stuff," he said. "Our goal is to prepare the evidence as well as possible. Now it's up to the District Attorney and his discretion to handle it the best way possible."

They are scheduled for arraignment on May 13.

—Additional reporting by Whitney English

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