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Video: Why do many child stars battle addiction?

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    >> maria menounos , thank you so much. courtney hazlett is the celebrity correspondent for msnbc.com. good morning.

    >> good morning, al.

    >> there is something kind of sad, besides this tragic, untimely death. less than 24 hours after he's dead, people are going through this is clothes to put them on ebay?

    >> that was definitely a shocking revelation that maria menounos unkouferd right there. i think it's more difficult to mourn this properly and to give the fact that this is a struggle with addiction, whether or not that was the exact cause of his death, this is a serious struggle with addiction. and in hollywood , this at play here, when you hear all of a sudden, oh, we're now putting his jacket on ebay.

    >> how would you describe corey haim , and this longtime addiction to drugs? it obviously has been a big problem.

    >> obviously been a big problem. he's been very outspoken about it, so in some respects, this should come as zero surprise to nobody. he said i will be an addict for life, i will always be an addict. so, this shouldn't come as a huge surprise, but i think because he was off the radar, because he wasn't successful throughout his entire career, he peaked in the '80s and that was about it, that was a it.

    >> is that a problem for these child actors , their careers peaked in their teens or early 20s and now they're dealing with the fact of dealing with reality.

    >> right, i think the struggle is, unlike most people who have careers ups and downs -- we all have it -- when you're a child celebrity, you go from everybody catering your every whim, putting you on planes, dressing you, making sure you have what you want to eat when you want it, to not having your calls returned. but i take issue with the comments corey feldman said, hollywood needs to take better care of his celebrities.

    >> why do you think that?

    >> because i don't think it's hollywood 's job. i don't think it's any industry's job to take care throughout their life.

    >> right.

    >> i think that's the parent's job to take care of a child celebrity.

    >> but back in the '30s, there was legislation enacted, at least to financially make sure that these kids, these young kids were protected.

    >> sure.

    >> should there be something that, at least help -- some sort of counseling that goes into effect when these kids are working and they're at the peak of their powers? because parents may not be --

    >> i think it's past the point of that. i agree completely. i think we're past the point of having new legislation, especially -- that legislation you're referring to was enacted for financial purposes only for scripted programming. now what you see so many kids on is also this unscripted program, reality, which as we know is not real reality. i think it's past time to make sure that our kids who are getting this treatment are protected.

    >> 2008 . heath ledger 's death, accidental overdose, that really kind of woke people up to this prescription pill abuse and a link to celebrities.

    >> prescription pill abuse is the worst unkept secret, whatever you want to call it, in hollywood . because it's socially acceptable to pull out a prescription pill bottle and take something.

    >> sure.

    >> right? a lot more acceptable than doing, clearly, illegal drugs in public. so, i think like you heard before, he was helping his addiction through these prescription pills. they're still dangerous. it's not safe.

    >> charlie sheen , a guy who's grown up in hollywood , grown up around all this, he's managed to keep a successful career while battling fairly publicly his addiction.

    >> sure. teflon charlie has done a fantastic job of this. i think part of the reason he's able to stay successful, he's the highest paid actor on television right now. nobody's going to step in and do some massive intervention, say you need to step aside , charlie, when he's the highest paid actor on television.

    >> quickly, michael jackson , who really brought into light the idea, there are a lot of doctors out there who just say yes to celebrities when they should be saying no.

    >> it's not only michael jackson 's doctor, i would argue it was probably corey haim 's doctors as well. it's a lot easier to phone something in than to sit down with this person who's under more pressures than we can probably ever wrap our brain around and say what's really going on here.

    >> courtney hazlett, thanks for the insight.

    >> thanks, al.

    >>> coming up next, aaron mccormick

By
updated 3/12/2010 9:29:41 PM ET 2010-03-13T02:29:41

The late actor Corey Haim had a fraudulent prescription for a powerful painkiller that authorities said Friday was obtained through a major drug ring.

California Attorney General Jerry Brown's office said records of the prescription in the name of the former teen heartthrob were found during an investigation of the ring that illegally obtained prescription pads and used the stolen identities of doctors to fill them out.

"Corey Haim's death is yet another tragedy linked to the growing problem of prescription drug abuse," Brown said in a written statement. "This problem is increasingly linked to criminal organizations, like the illegal and massive prescription drug ring under investigation."

Los Angeles County coroner's officials, however, said they have not yet determined what killed the 38-year-old Haim on Wednesday.

State law enforcement authorities said they were investigating the drug ring and how Haim, who battled addiction for years, obtained the prescription.

A person familiar with the investigation who spoke on condition of anonymity because the case is ongoing said Haim may have been doctor shopping.

Assistant Chief Coroner Ed Winter said four prescription drug bottles bearing the actor's name were found in the apartment where he collapsed, but all those drugs had been provided by a doctor who had been treating the actor.

The coroner's office has declined to state what medications were discovered, but said no illegal drugs were found.

Slideshow: Corey Haim: 1971-2010 Winter said no determination had been made about Haim's cause of death, and toxicology tests would not be available for at least a month.

He said he had not been contacted by the attorney general's office.

"It surprises me that Jerry Brown would come out and give a cause of death," he said.

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Brown said later in an interview that he didn't know what killed Haim.

The illegal prescription was for the powerful painkiller OxyContin, he said.

"This is a growing and dangerous problem," Brown said.

Christine Gasparac, a spokeswoman for Brown, said the prescription was found through the state's computer database that tracks prescriptions that are filled.

Thousands of fake prescriptions
Investigators believe the ring either sells the pads on the street to addicts or to people who then fill out the forms and obtain the drugs for illegal distribution.

Doctors whose names are on the form usually aren't aware that their identity is being used illegally.

So far, authorities have uncovered up to 5,000 fraudulent prescriptions linked to the fraud ring in Southern California.

Haim's agent, Mark Heaslip, said his client's medications were prescribed by an addiction specialist who was working with the actor. He said he thinks, based on what Haim's mother has told him, the actor may have had an adverse reaction to the medication because he was ill.

"I don't think Corey overdosed, not at all," Heaslip said.

Authorities have said Haim was suffering from flulike symptoms in the days before his death.

Seattle-based Heaslip has served as Haim's agent for 18 months but first met the actor, best known for his roles in the 1980s flicks "The Lost Boys" and "Lucas," in November. He said Haim was poised for a comeback and showed no signs of addiction.

"He's never given me a sign of that," Heaslip said.

Plans are being completed for a public memorial for Haim in Los Angeles. The actor is expected to be buried at a private funeral in his native Canada, Heaslip said.

Brown's office has made prescription drug abuse a priority. It worked with the Los Angeles County district attorney's office to bring drug conspiracy charges against two doctors and the lawyer-boyfriend of Anna Nicole Smith.

Brown also has launched a probe of doctors whose names have come up during the investigation into the death of Michael Jackson.

© 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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