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Birkhead Testifies on Anna Nicole's Drug Use
Suspected his new girlfriend was being written extra prescriptions under pseudonyms by a second doctor.
Proximity is turning out to be everything in the Anna Nicole Smith hearings: Where Smith’s TV remote was when she reached for it and fell out of bed, dislocating her shoulder; how close her Coach bag of meds was to the reality TV star’s bed during a detox stay at Cedars-Sinai; the next-door location of Studio City homes belonging to Smith and her psychiatrist – and who was in Smith’s bed there or in a guest room.
Friday saw the much-anticipated appearance of Smith’s onetime paramour, Larry Birkhead, who claimed he saw her morbid obsession with the paparazzi and tabloid media “bring on a seizure or two.”
The morning session brought the end of bodyguard Maurice “Mo Mo” Brighthaupt’s testimony for the prosecution.
A massive figure somberly dressed in a blue shirt and cobalt slacks, Brighthaupt regaled listeners in his deep, narcotizing voice.
He told how he prevented a distraught Smith from jumping onto the casket of her son, Daniel, as it was lowered into the earth one month after the 20-year-old had died of a methadone overdose; and how Smith’s lawyer-lover, Howard K. Stern, would take pictures of Smith when she was blotto.
(For Brighthaupt's earlier testimony, see "Anna Nicole Smith Hearing: a Woman in Pain."
Brighthaupt, whose IMDb rating has shot up 77 percent this week, claimed Stern was a controlling influence in her life.
“She relied on him for everything – picking up food, picking up drugs,” the bodyguard recalled, as Stern smiled malevolently from the defense side of the court.
The hearing before Superior Court Judge Robert Perry could become a reliable curtain-raiser to a trial, if Perry decides that what he hears is enough to put Stern and doctors Khristine Eroshevich and Sandeep Kapoor in the dock on charges they conspired to illegally supply Smith with a breathtaking spectrum of sedatives and painkillers.
Again and again, however, an agitated Deputy District Attorney Renee Rose found herself talking to Perry’s hand as the judge cut off her attempts to introduce results of the tox screen that coroner’s officials produced following Smith’s death in February 2007.
“Time out! Time out!” Perry ordered. “Miss Rose, calm down!”
Brighthaupt’s appearance produced some sparks during cross-examination by Stern attorney Steven Sadow. The testimony of Stern’s onetime romantic rival for Smith, Larry Birkhead, however, proved as soporific as the chloral hydrate Smith favored.
Birkhead, 34, a photographer Smith had met at the 2004 Kentucky Derby, wore a dark chalk-stripe suit and sported what could be called an A-frame haircut. He strode uncomfortably to the witness stand while clutching a bottle of water.
For the rest of the day, the Louisville native was asked about his two-year romance with Smith and allegations about her abuse of drugs. Birkhead was no Fighting Kentuckian, however, refusing to engage his interrogators as had Brighthaupt – instead, he politely answered questions in a soft drawl.
When asked by Rose, Birkhead rattled off the contents of Smith’s medicine chest like a seasoned pharmacist:
“Topamax, Klonopin, Lasix, Valium and some sort of potassium pill,” Birkhead inventoried.



Comments
Janequecitizen Says
Great article Steve. And please. Whoever is holding the gun to "Allen's" head, put it down. Nobody should be forced to read the work of any writer they don't like. Oh, wait...
Sprocket Says
Wonderful to see Steven covering a trial again and writing pieces more than just a sound bite.
bass Says
WHO Cares??!
Vicky B. Says
It is no wonder there are huge, long, drawn-out scenarios after Anna's death, especially when drugs have been involved. LOTS of them, apparently. Otherwise private videos hasn't helped much, either, but it does show the truth to what was happening.
One person, maybe more, are liable and justice WILL find the culprit(s).
I feel so bad for this poor, miserable woman who died. Though she was beautiful, she was not very smart and easily persuaded, thus... she has met her demise.
Very sad, tragic story here. Just terribly sad.
Allen Says
This article is TERRIBLY written. Use a thesaurus much?
Larry L Says
If all this were not so unnecessarily tragic, it would be laugh-out-loud funny, and parodied on Saturday Night Live.
Perhaps Ms. Nicole's propensity to throw herself on top of and into her son's (unnecessarily premature) grave has something to do with other cultures where the widow is, by tradition, restrained from throwing herself into her deceased husband's grave.
Perhaps it was related to her own shortly imminent demise from the same causes which took her son so early in his life - DRUGS.
Drugs kill. Period. They kill lots of different ways. But they claim many lives. They destroy many lives. And that includes both licit drugs such as for elites who have physician drug dealers glad to supply the likes of Ms. Nicole. Of course, the main licit drug is alcohol which does incalcuable damage and destruction to the lives of mankind around the world.
And they include illicit drugs of the type consumed by poor people, which are acquired from dealers and street dealers, and for which harsh, brutal prison sentences ensue if caught before death sets in.
Drugs kill.
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