Courtney Love Trades Blows With Kurt Cobain's Mom, Admits To OxyContin OD
Courtney Love's fight for custody of her 11-year-old daughter, Frances Bean,
turned ugly this week, as the troubled rock star engaged in a scuffle on
Tuesday with late husband Kurt Cobain's mother outside a Los Angeles
courtroom. The skirmish came as Love continues her fight to regain custody of Frances
Bean, who was taken by child services a week after the singer's overdose on
the prescription painkiller OxyContin earlier this month.
Though Love had initially claimed to have been on the prescription
anti-anxiety drug Xanax, she admits in the current issue of People magazine, on
newsstands Friday (October 24), that she took an overdose of the painkiller Oxycontin
several hours after her arrest for being under the influence of a controlled
substance (see [article id="1479632"]"Courtney Love Faces Up To A Year In Jail For Drug Charge"[/article]).
Hoping to knock herself out, Love took more than 20 milligrams of the
drug, a synthetic form of morphine commonly referred to as "hillbilly
heroin" (see [article id="1473543"]"All About OxyContin, The Pills Known As 'Killers' "[/article]).
She told the magazine that Frances made her some green tea and the pair
waited for an ambulance to transport the former Hole leader to the hospital
following the overdose. "That's the only time my daughter has ever,
ever, ever pitched in on one of my little crises," Love told the magazine.
"I made it fun. I said it was going to be gross and I was going to have to
make myself throw up but it was going to be okay."
A source close to Love, however, said that because Frances was present during
the OD, Department of Children and Family Services became involved, as is
procedure (see [article id="1479849"]"Courtney Love Fighting For Custody Of Daughter Frances
Bean"[/article]).
Due to confidentiality laws, a spokesperson for the Los Angeles County
Department of Children and Family Services could not confirm any information about
Love's case, but spokesperson Neil Zanville said, "Hypothetically, if someone
is hospitalized or arrested under the influence of drugs and we feel that poses
an abusive threat to the safety of a child, we will respond and assess the
situation. We will remove that child and place him or her, usually with a
relative."
Love reportedly did not cooperate, denying DCFS officials entry into her
house on several occasions. So, on October 10, officials went to Frances'
school and took her into protective custody, placing her with her grandmother, Cobain's mother, Wendy O'Connor. They also charged Love with abandonment, according to the DCFS report procured by People.
Shortly after Frances was taken away, the source said, Love became
distraught, and started leaving frantic phone messages for friends in which she sounded
self-destructive, even suicidal. People reports that it was one call
in particular -- in which Love said that she wanted to throw herself off the
Empire State Building -- that warranted concern.
"Yes, I was changing my will that week," Love previously told the New York Daily News. "I [also] left a message that was like, 'I want to die, I want to jump off the Empire State Building.' "
A source close to Love told MTV News that there was more than one message,
including one in which Love talked about wanting to hang herself. Love told the Daily News that she had been joking, but her friends took her
seriously enough to alert authorities. Love was temporarily hospitalized against her
will for evaluation, though she left the hospital after only 24 hours, two days
shy of the intended 72-hour period. "When someone has a legacy of suicide
in their life," the source said, "you don't take comments like that
lightly."
After Tuesday's court appearance, during which Love was ordered to move out
of her home so that Frances could live there with her nanny and be supervised
by Love's stepfather and an aunt, the singer engaged in a tense argument with
O'Connor, and according to what her stepfather Frank Rodriguez told People, "there were slaps."
As the custody battle continues, Love will be granted regular visits with her
daughter. She is scheduled to be arraigned on the drug charges October 31.
Her lawyer said he is considering a court-offered option that would spare Love
jail time in exchange for enrollment in treatment and counseling programs.
Citing confidentiality laws, a spokesperson for DCFS was unable to
comment on the court proceedings. A spokesperson for Love had no comment.