The
estranged husband of Jim Carrey’s late girlfriend filed a lawsuit
against the actor on Monday, accusing him of wrongfully providing the
drugs that led to her death.
Cathriona
White, 30, was found dead in her home on Sept. 28, 2015 following a
drug overdose. A toxicology report found four prescription drugs in her
system: a mix of painkillers, beta blockers and a sleep aid. Her death
was officially ruled a suicide by the Los Angeles County Coroner’s
office in July of this year.
It
was revealed shortly after her death that despite White and Carrey
dating on and off for three years, she was actually married to another
man, Mark Burton, at the time of her death. According to records in
Clark County, Nevada, White and Burton married on Jan. 14, 2013 at the
Heavenly Bliss Wedding Chapel in Las Vegas.
“This
is a case about Jim Carrey using his immense wealth and celebrity
status to illegally obtain and distribute highly addictive and, in this
case deadly, controlled substances,” the lawsuit alleges.
The
lawsuit goes on to claim that Carrey obtained drugs illegally under the
false name of “Arthur King” and provided them to White.
“Mr.
Carrey did so despite the fact that he knew full well that Ms. White
was ill equipped to ingest and manage highly additive prescription drugs
outside the care of a licensed physician; was prone to depression; and
had previously attempted to take her own life,” the lawsuit alleges.
According
to the autopsy report obtained by ET, three of the prescriptions found
at White’s residence were prescribed under the name “Arthur King.” The
coroner also reported finding a text on White’s phone from Carrey the
night before she died, asking if she knew where certain painkillers
prescribed to him went.
The lawsuit alleges Carrey was attempting to “cover-up his conduct and complicity in her death” by sending the text message.
The
suit claims that Carrey was “pretending as though he had misplaced the
drugs and insinuating White may have taken them from Carrey without his
knowledge, when in reality Carrey knew full well that he had voluntarily
and illegally provided” them to White just days prior.
The
court documents also allege that Carrey had an “obsession with
controlling and manipulating White” and “had the ability to monitor
surveillance cameras on a home White often stayed at.”
The
lawsuit claims that Carrey’s assistant remotely checked the
surveillance cameras and had determined White had not left the residence
in over a day at the time surrounding her death, yet neither Carrey nor
his assistant alerted authorities, according to the lawsuit.
The
documents pose the question: “If Carrey legitimately believed White had
taken the drugs from him and she had subsequently gone missing for days
with no contact, then why would Carrey not immediately request law
enforcement to check on her well-being after she did not return his
text?”
In
addition to seeking recovery for economic and emotional damages,
Burton’s attorney, Michael Avenatti, tells ET they are also looking for
criminal action to be taken.
“We
will be calling for the Los Angeles District Attorney’s Office to
investigate Mr. Carrey’s role in connection with the death of Cathriona
White,” Avenatti says.
At this time, Carrey’s rep had no statement to provide in response to the lawsuit.
“She
was a truly kind and delicate Irish flower, too sensitive for this
soil, to whom loving and being loved was all that sparkled,” Carrey told
ET in a statement shortly after White’s death. “My heart goes out to
her family and friends and to everyone who loved and cared about her.”
Credit- E-online
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