News | Entertainment
27 Apr 2024 11:42
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > Entertainment

    Chris Cornell's family have reached a settlement with a doctor who they accused of prescribing "dangerous" and "mind-altering" drugs to the rocker

    The Soundgarden rocker took his own life in 2017 and his relatives - wife Vicky and their children Toni, now 16, and 15-year-old Christopher - took legal action the following year against Dr. Robert Koblin, an internist and cardiologist, for allegedly over-prescribing the 'You Know My Name' hitmaker various medications without actually examining him, including an anti-anxiety treatment that was found in Chris' system after his death


    And now the legal case has been resolved, though the terms will remain confidential.

    Lawyers acting for the Cornell family confirmed in documents filed in a Los Angeles Court last month and obtained by E! News this week: "After years of litigation and settlement negotiations, plaintiffs and (Koblin and Robertson Cardiovascular Center LLC ) have reached a confidential settlement agreement to resolve all claims asserted by each plaintiff.

    "Unfortunately, as with many celebrity cases, this action has also attracted the attention of troubled individuals who have harassed plaintiffs, including by threatening the life and safety of plaintiffs Toni Cornell and Christopher Nicholas Cornell."

    The original lawsuit explained the family were suing the doctor for "negligently and repeatedly prescribing dangerous, mind-alerting controlled substances to Chris Cornell which impaired Mr. Cornell's cognition, clouded his judgment, and caused him to engage in dangerous impulsive behaviors that he was unable to control, costing him his life."

    However, the doctor and his legal team insisted the prescriptions were apprioriate.

    His lawyer said in a statement in 2018: "Dr. Koblin is a competent and conscientious doctor who enjoyed an excellent physician/patient relationship with Mr. Cornell and other members of his family.

    "The experts I have consulted with believe Dr. Koblin's treatment was within the standard of care in this community and were not a substantial factor in causing Mr. Cornell to commit suicide."

    The lawsuit had focused mainly on the prescribing of Lorazepam, which is also known by the brand name Ativan, and although it is given to treat anxiety, a warning from the FDA states it can result in "a possibility for suicide" for patients with depression and as such "should not be used in such patients without adequate antidepressant therapy."

    The lawsuit stated: "During the last 20 months of his life until his death, Dr. Koblin directly and/or through his authorized agents or employees negligently prescribed more than 940 doses of Lorazepam to Chris Cornell.

    "During that same period, he also prescribed various doses of Oxycodone. Yet, at no time during this period did Dr. Koblin conduct a medical examination of Mr. Cornell, perform any laboratory studies, obtain an interim history or do any type of clinical assessment of Mr. Cornell. He did not even physically see or speak to Mr. Cornell during this period.

    "In someone with a risk of substance abuse and/or addictive disorder like Mr. Cornell, Lorazepam was known to 'increase the risk of suicide by severely impairing judgment and rational thinking and by lessening impulse control. Moreover, excessive ongoing, unmonitored use can lead to medical intoxication...and substantially enhance the risk of impulsive suicide.

    "Despite this, Dr. Koblin failed to warn or counsel Mr. Cornell about the risk of suicidal ideation or any other known serious side effects of protracted Lorazepam use."

    Although several prescription drugs, including Lorazepam, were found in the Audioslave singer's system when he died, they were ruled not to have "contributed to the cause of death", which was ruled to solely be suicide by hanging.

    © 2024 Bang Showbiz, NZCity

     Other Entertainment News
     25 Apr: Céline Dion has no idea when she will be able to get back to touring
     25 Apr: The original 'Blair Witch Project' cast are furiously demanding more cash from the ongoing horror franchise
     25 Apr: Tom Brady faces being mocked over his divorce from Gisele Bündchen and her new relationship as he's signed up to be brutally roasted in a Netflix special
     25 Apr: Tiffany Haddish secretly taunts her trolls from a fake X account
     25 Apr: Justin Bieber has said he will see rapper Chris King "in paradise" after the singer was shot dead
     25 Apr: Halle Bailey is so deep in the grip of "severe" postpartum depression she feels like she's drowning and suffers dissociation from her body
     25 Apr: Céline Dion feared it was her "fault" she had been afflicted with Stiff Person Syndrome when she was first diagnosed with the rare condition
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    The Chiefs are resigned to being without fullback Shaun Stevenson for at least a couple of weeks after he suffered a hamstring injury in the win over the Waratahs in Sydney More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    A popular yoghurt pouch with kiwi kids is being recalled over fears the products may contain black plastic More...



     Today's News

    Rugby:
    The Chiefs are resigned to being without fullback Shaun Stevenson for at least a couple of weeks after he suffered a hamstring injury in the win over the Waratahs in Sydney 11:37

    Health & Safety:
    King Charles to resume public-facing duties, but cancer treatment to continue 11:27

    Soccer:
    Leicester City have secured automatic promotion back into the English Premier League 11:17

    Motoring:
    Audi F1 have their first driver as Nico Hülkenberg joins Sauber 11:17

    Golf:
    Danny Lee's one shot off the lead in a share of second after the opening round at the LIV golf event in Adelaide 11:07

    Rugby:
    Former England rugby captain Owen Farrell will play for a World XV team coached by former All Blacks coach Ian Foster in June 10:27

    Soccer:
    Dutchman Arne Slot is set to become Liverpool's next manager 10:07

    Technology:
    Why it's getting harder to tell AI-generated images from the real deal online 10:07

    Rugby League:
    The Punjab Kings have chased down a world record target in their Indian Premier League encounter against the Kolkata Knight Riders 9:27

    Accident and Emergency:
    At least 10 people have died and 11 are injured after a major fire at a guesthouse in Brazil's southern city of Porto Alegre 8:17


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2024 New Zealand City Ltd