Anna Nicole, Howard & a Yacht Called 'The Cracker'
SATURDAY FEBRUARY 10, 2007 04:45 PM EST

By Linda Trischitta

Smith, Stern and Dannielynn

Photo by: REUTERS

Anna Nicole Smith had a sense of humor about her background, and it was reflected in the name of her newly purchased sport yacht.

Ned Bruck, general manager of Reel Deal Yachts in Miami Beach, says that Smith and Howard K. Stern were really looking forward to enjoying their newly purchased Carver motor yacht, which they had christened "The Cracker."

"We were dealing mostly with Howard, but Anna came to see it when they were last in town," Bruck tells PEOPLE. "She liked the fact that there were two separate bedrooms and a forward deck to sunbathe and a salon living area."
 
Complete Anna Nicole Smith Coverage
Bruck says the 40-ft. sport yacht was a cream puff, with only 500 hours on the diesel engines, even though it was 10 years old. Their plans were to redecorate it to their tastes. He wouldn't say how much it cost but "it was not a million-dollar yacht," Bruck adds. "If they decided that they didn't like it, they could sell it fairly easily."

An interior designer was working with Smith to choose bedspreads; new flat-screen TVs and electronics had already been installed while the Cracker was in a Fort Lauderdale marina, being readied for the eight- to 10-hour sail to Nassau on Friday with a Bahamian captain at the helm, but without the couple.

Stern was at the boat Thursday when he got the call that Smith was in dire condition, Bruck tells PEOPLE.

He says he enjoyed meeting the couple, adding that they were looking forward to getting their first boat and enjoying the cruising lifestyle. "I liked him," he says about Stern. "Anybody in that situation is going to get a bad rap. But he was a gentleman. I think he treated Anna with respect and seemed to worship the ground she walked on."

Visit PEOPLE.com for continued coverage of Anna Nicole Smith as the tragic story continues to develop.

Smith's mother, Arthur, arrived Friday in Nassau to check on her granddaughter, said Reginald Ferguson, assistant commissioner for the Royal Bahamas Police Force.

Arthur, who was reportedly staying in a resort in Nassau's famed Cable Beach, told ABC's Good Morning America that she believes her daughter died from a drug overdose.

Ned Bruck, general manager of Reel Deal Yachts in Miami Beach, said Smith and Stern came to south Florida to take delivery of a 40-foot yacht they had named "Cracker." Stern was on the boat when he received a call that something had happened to Smith, Bruck said.

"He said 'I've got to go,'" Bruck said. "There was a horrible look on his face."

Stern later made arrangements to have a captain take the boat to the Bahamas.

As she watches the media storm surrounding her friend’s untimely death, including what Serrano calls false reports and unfair assessments, it’s a horror movie of sorts come true.

And though she knows firsthand how difficult it was for Smith to deal with Daniel’s death, Serrano strongly believes this was not a suicide.

“The first thought going through my head was that she was left alone, she thought of Daniel, she committed suicide,” Serrano said. “Anytime you left her alone, she thought of Daniel too much. Even if you were in front of her, sometimes she would break down and think of Daniel ... she wanted to see Daniel again ... she would cry a lot, so I just assumed that it was a suicide.

“But then I really thought about it, about the boat, that Howard wasn’t in the room, when they said Moe was there — that’s her bodyguard — his wife was there — that’s the nurse — and they started saying how many people were in the room ... Moe’s kids were there, so it probably happened in front of his kids ... they used to like to visit Anna. So then I started thinking that there was no possibility that she would ever commit suicide in front of children, in Florida, with all those people — ... you just don’t do that, you know?”

Plus, Serrano said, Smith was very involved in the building/remodeling of her new home in the Bahamas, yet another sign that she was looking toward the future.

“She was building a dance studio there ... She was having a 10-foot wall built up around her house so that nobody could, like, take pictures of the baby. She wanted privacy,” Serrano said.

Since Smith’s death, Serrano has tried to contact Stern, whom she considers her friend as well, but has yet to speak with him.

“I tried to call him on the numbers I have, and of course, they were her (Smith’s) phone numbers and her phone and I don’t know if he’s gonna check ‘em — I know eventually he (will), but it’s her voice that answers when you call,” said Serrano, who’s also getting calls from various tabloids looking for a story in the midst of a tragedy.

But, for Serrano, the real story about Anna Nicole Smith is one of a sweet person, a cherished friend, someone who treated her hairstylist like family and her devoted fans with a devotion of her own.

“She loved her fans; she loved every single person, every fan,” Serrano said.

Serrano and Smith planned to see each other again next month, in the Bahamas for Serrano’s upcoming 35th birthday.

Instead, Serrano has made another plan — she’s getting a new tattoo added to the canvas that is her skin: a portrait of Anna Nicole Smith.

 

 

BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

VAN SUSTEREN: Tas, when did you first meet Mo?

TASMA BRIGHTHAUPT, NURSE WHO FOUND ANNA NICOLE'S BODY: I met Mo about

12 years ago.

VAN SUSTEREN: How long have you guys been married?

BRIGHTHAUPT: About two years now.

VAN SUSTEREN: When was the first time, you know, before Mo or after

Mo, that you ever heard the name Anna Nicole Smith?

BRIGHTHAUPT: Years ago, from her "Playboy" days.

VAN SUSTEREN: So you'd heard of her before.

BRIGHTHAUPT: I'd heard of her long before.

VAN SUSTEREN: When you married Mo, did you know that Mo knew Anna

Nicole?

BRIGHTHAUPT: Yes.

VAN SUSTEREN: How did you understand that they knew each other?

BRIGHTHAUPT: In a working sense. He worked with her as a bodyguard.

VAN SUSTEREN: When did you then first actually meet her?

BRIGHTHAUPT: I met Anna about two years ago, a year-and-a-half ago.

VAN SUSTEREN: Where?

BRIGHTHAUPT: At the Hard Rock.

VAN SUSTEREN: And that's where she ultimately died.

BRIGHTHAUPT: Yes.

VAN SUSTEREN: What was your impression of her?

BRIGHTHAUPT: I thought she was beautiful. She had a wonderful sense

of humor, very smart, intelligent, very friendly. And she was very, very

happy to meet me.

VAN SUSTEREN: How about Howard? Was he there at the time, Howard K. Stern?

BRIGHTHAUPT: Howard was there at the time.

VAN SUSTEREN: What was your first impression of Howard K. Stern?

BRIGHTHAUPT: He was quiet.

VAN SUSTEREN: Friendly?

BRIGHTHAUPT: Yes, very friendly, but quiet.

VAN SUSTEREN: About how much time did you spend with them that first

time?

BRIGHTHAUPT: I'd say about a half an hour.

VAN SUSTEREN: And then afterwards, between the time that you first

met them about two years ago until the time she died, about how many times

did you see her?

BRIGHTHAUPT: Once.

VAN SUSTEREN: And where was that?

BRIGHTHAUPT: At the Hard Rock.

VAN SUSTEREN: Again?

BRIGHTHAUPT: Yes, because every time she would come, that's where she

would stay.

VAN SUSTEREN: All right, let's jump ahead to February of this year.

She died on February 8. Was that the first time you'd seen her, or had you

come up here on the days leading up to it?

BRIGHTHAUPT: No, that was the first time I'd seen her on that trip.

VAN SUSTEREN: And the last time you'd seen her was before she moved

to the Bahamas?

BRIGHTHAUPT: Yes.

VAN SUSTEREN: So you and your husband — you joined him. You drove

up yourself?

BRIGHTHAUPT: Right.

VAN SUSTEREN: Take me through what happened. You park the car, and

who's the first person that you recognize and where?

BRIGHTHAUPT: I parked the car on — my husband told me to meet him at

a restaurant called the Blue Plate. And I met him there, and that's where

we had breakfast.

VAN SUSTEREN: Had he seen Anna Nicole at that point, that day?

BRIGHTHAUPT: I don't know.

VAN SUSTEREN: Did he mention anything about Howard K. Stern at that

point?

BRIGHTHAUPT: Well, while we were eating breakfast, Howard called us.

Actually, Howard called him and asked him to pick up some friends that were

coming in from the airport. And he said that he would go pick them, up and

then — but at that point, our breakfast hadn't come yet. A few minutes

later, he called us again, or he called Mo again and asked him — I guess

asked him if, you know, if we were gone, or you know, what was going on.

So I said to my husband, I said, Howard called you two times, maybe we

should leave. What if he comes down and you're still here, you're not

gone? So he says, Oh, Howard's not going to come down here and leave Anna.

So at that point, I got relaxed and we ate breakfast and we left to go to

the airport.

VAN SUSTEREN: Why did he think that Howard wouldn't leave Anna?

BRIGHTHAUPT: I guess because she wasn't feeling well.

VAN SUSTEREN: So Mo knew that when you sat down to breakfast, that —

at least at some point, that Anna wasn't doing particularly well.

BRIGHTHAUPT: Yes, I think so.

VAN SUSTEREN: He had been up — he had been at the hotel how many

days in advance of you?

BRIGHTHAUPT: I think one day.

VAN SUSTEREN: Did he call you on the phone and tell you how Anna was

or talk about her being sick?

BRIGHTHAUPT: Yes, he did.

VAN SUSTEREN: The day before?

BRIGHTHAUPT: The day before.

VAN SUSTEREN: Tell me what he said in the conversation, how he

described things.

BRIGHTHAUPT: Well, he just called and he asked me if I thought it was

a good idea for him to let them put Anna in ice because Anna's temperature

was 105. And I said, Well, no. I said, In the hospital, we don't do that

anymore. We give a tepid bath and we give a sponge bath in the bed. You

can put her in tepid water, but you don't put ice in the water.

So he says — and I heard him, you know, screaming and saying, My wife

said not to put ice in the water. And I heard her in the background, like,

Please, please, take me out, take me out, and, I'm cold, or something to

that — something to that — you know, she said. And my husband said, My

wife says not to put ice in the water. And then he said, Tas, I have to

go, and let me try to convince them, you know, not to put ice in the water

and to get her out of water, so...

VAN SUSTEREN: When he said "them," who did you understand to be

there?

BRIGHTHAUPT: Howard was there, and I think Khristine Erosevich, who

was her psychiatrist, I think she was also there with them.

VAN SUSTEREN: Do you know if Khristine was acting as a psychiatrist,

spending time with her, or more as a friend over the preceding months?

BRIGHTHAUPT: You know, Greta, I have no idea.

VAN SUSTEREN: Your impression of her was what?

BRIGHTHAUPT: She was kind of friendly. She didn't have very much to

say. She just said, It's great to finally meet you, I've heard a lot about

you. And that was pretty much it.

VAN SUSTEREN: Did you discuss Anna's condition at all?

BRIGHTHAUPT: No.

VAN SUSTEREN: Did you think that she was attending to Anna — I mean,

she's a psychiatrist, but she's a medical doctor, a medical degree. Did

you think that she was attending to her sickness?

BRIGHTHAUPT: I don't know. But from what I understand, Anna asked

her to not leave. And she left anyway.

VAN SUSTEREN: Who told you that Anna asked her not to leave?

BRIGHTHAUPT: My husband, Mo.

VAN SUSTEREN: Why did she leave?

BRIGHTHAUPT: I have no idea. I have no idea. They said something

about some business she had to take care of in California.

VAN SUSTEREN: Did it bother you that she left?

BRIGHTHAUPT: It bothered me that she left because that was pretty

much the only medical professional that was with her all the time.

VAN SUSTEREN: Was there ever any discussion about taking her to the

hospital on the day before she died?

BRIGHTHAUPT: Well, I told my husband to make sure that they take her

to the hospital because if you — even if you give someone a tepid bath,

you give them Tylenol, no matter what you give them, they need antibiotics.

They should be on some type of IV antibiotics.

VAN SUSTEREN: Why wasn't she taken to the hospital?

BRIGHTHAUPT: She refused. She would not let them take her. She did

not want to go.

VAN SUSTEREN: Where was Howard that day before — when you're having

a conversation with your husband about the ice in the bath, do you know

where Howard was?

BRIGHTHAUPT: I understood that he was there.

VAN SUSTEREN: All right. So that's the day before she dies. You

then come the fixture day to see your husband. And you're having

breakfast. And is this restaurant in the hotel?

BRIGHTHAUPT: Yes, it is.

VAN SUSTEREN: Howard makes the second phone call to you about going

to the airport. Did you go to the airport?

BRIGHTHAUPT: We went to the airport soon after the second phone call.

Back from hotel

VAN SUSTEREN: What time did you get back to the hotel after picking

up the friends at the airport?

BRIGHTHAUPT: Just before 12:00.

VAN SUSTEREN: And where did they go?

BRIGHTHAUPT: Mo — well, when we got back from the airport and we

walked up to the elevator, Howard was coming off the elevator. And we all

went back upstairs. He said he was coming down to use his phone, but he

just got right back on the elevator with us and never used the phone. We

all went back upstairs. He went through Anna's door of the suite, and the

rest of us went through my husband's door of the suite.

VAN SUSTEREN: And?

BRIGHTHAUPT: Now, I stayed in the room. Me and the guy that was

going to captain the boat, we stayed in Mo's room. And Mo went in the —

like, the little, I guess, living room area of the suite with King Eric and

his wife. And I don't know, maybe they wanted to say hello to Anna or

whatever. I don't remember. I don't actually know what went on when they

all went on that side because I stayed on the other side.

And about five minutes later, my husband came and got me. He said,

OK, I'm ready to go, because he had to go and help his brother move, and

Howard was going to pick up the boat. So he told me to come on. He got

his computer and told me to come and sit in the room with Anna at the — in

the chair at the foot of her bed, just sit there with her until they come

back.

VAN SUSTEREN: Why?

BRIGHTHAUPT: Because they didn't want to leave her alone.

VAN SUSTEREN: So did you do that?

BRIGHTHAUPT: I did that. And while I was on my way to the room,

Howard stopped me. He said, Are you going to stay with Anna? So I said,

Sure. He says, You don't mind? I said, No. He says, Would you help her

to the bathroom if she needed help? I said, Of course, I would.

And he left, and my husband set me in the room and set the computer up

on the table, and everybody left but me and the wife of King Eric. She

stayed out in the living room area. And that was the set-up.

VAN SUSTEREN: So when you went into the room, did you have a

conversation with Anna when you entered her room?

BRIGHTHAUPT: No conversation at any time. I was told that Anna was

asleep.

VAN SUSTEREN: Did you take a look at her when you walked in?

BRIGHTHAUPT: I could barely see her. The way she was covered up, her

— I could see a portion of her head. And the way she was laying, it just

looked like someone that was asleep.

VAN SUSTEREN: At some point, though, there — at some point, you went

over to her.

BRIGHTHAUPT: No. Well, at some point, when I was told — when the

other person came in the room because I was on my phone speaking to my

husband — Mo, he called to see how everything was. And I was speaking to

him. And I had an earpiece on, and she thought I was talking to Anna. And

she just came into the room, and she said, Oh, hi, Anna's awake. I said,

No, she's not awake. And she walked up to the bed and just peeked. She

said, Well, let me just take a look at her. And she came in and she

looked, and she didn't like what she saw. And she told me to come up to

the bed and take a look.

VAN SUSTEREN: And?

BRIGHTHAUPT: I was a little adamant about going because I figured she

was sleeping. I didn't want to wake her, and I didn't want much stirring

around, you know, to wake her up. So she says, No, you've got to come over

here. She says, I don't like the way Anna looks. I got up and I went

halfway, and I peeked over. And I said, Look, Anna's sleeping. She says,

No, come a little closer. And I got a little closer, and I didn't like

what I saw.

VAN SUSTEREN: How did she — I mean, when you say you didn't like —

I mean, you thought she was dead at that point?

BRIGHTHAUPT: No, not at that point. When I got closer and I asked

her to, you know, flick some lights on — we went, like, a little berserk

looking for lights to flick on. And I didn't — if she was sleeping, I

didn't want to, like, startle her with lights. So when we flicked on, I

think it was a closet light that was closest to the bed, then I could see

her, then I knew that something was wrong.

I pulled the covers back a little better, and then I kind of shook her

a little bit and tried to wake her up, and she didn't wake. And I moved

her head a little bit, and it kind of flopped back, and I knew that

something was wrong. When we got more lights on, then I noticed her skin

was looking kind of pale and she had, like, purple blotches on her skin.

And that's when I knew, and that's when I hit my earpiece and I called my

husband and I said, I can't arouse Anna. She's not — you know, she's not

waking up. She's not responding to me. You need to call 911 and get back

here.

And that's when I went to the CPR, you know, thing where I opened up

the airway, and (INAUDIBLE) listened (ph) and feel, and I couldn't hear

anything. I — there was no air exchange at all. So I started the CPR. I

gave her the two breaths. They didn't go in. I repositioned her head,

gave her another two breaths. They went in. And I felt for a pulse, no

pulse. So I did CPR.

VAN SUSTEREN: Do you think Howard or anyone else knew that before

they left the room, that she was dead?

BRIGHTHAUPT: I can't say.

VAN SUSTEREN: You pause as though something's bothering you.

BRIGHTHAUPT: A lot of things are bothering me. I have a lot of

suspicions.

VAN SUSTEREN: Like what? And based on what?

BRIGHTHAUPT: Well, because I was told that Howard would never leave

Anna, you know, if she was feeling sick or whatever, the situation was

going on with her, he would never leave her. And when we went to the

airport and we came back, he was coming off the elevator with his phone.

And my husband says, Where are you going. What's going on? And he

says, Oh, I came to use my phone. And he just turned right around and went

back upstairs with us. He never used the phone. That's one suspicion.

My other suspicion is that why didn't he wake Anna before he left? I

mean, you can sit here and say to me, How do you know that he didn't wake

Anna? I know that he didn't wake Anna because when I went in the room,

there was no movement. There was no — nothing.

VAN SUSTEREN: How about drugs? Did you find any in the room?

BRIGHTHAUPT: I found — I found a box of Tamiflu and I found a bottle

of antibiotics. I don't remember the name.

VAN SUSTEREN: Both consistent with a flu and an infection. That's

normal.

BRIGHTHAUPT: Yes, that's normal.

VAN SUSTEREN: Any other drugs?

BRIGHTHAUPT: No. Nothing else.

VAN SUSTEREN: Any — was there a package of drugs that — or a

package mailed to your house at one point for Howard?

BRIGHTHAUPT: Yes.

VAN SUSTEREN: When was that?

BRIGHTHAUPT: Not too long before Anna's death.

VAN SUSTEREN: Like days or weeks?

BRIGHTHAUPT: Days.

VAN SUSTEREN: Do you know what was in that box?

BRIGHTHAUPT: No.

VAN SUSTEREN: Was it peculiar?

BRIGHTHAUPT: Quite.

VAN SUSTEREN: In what way?

BRIGHTHAUPT: Why was it mailed to my house? Why wasn't it mailed to

the Hard Rock?

VAN SUSTEREN: Why do you think?

BRIGHTHAUPT: Personally? Set up.

VAN SUSTEREN: Meaning?

BRIGHTHAUPT: I just — you know, I personally feel like we were being

set up. That's the way I feel.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

VAN SUSTEREN: Were Tas and Big Mo being set up? And what horrifying

thing did Tas see on Anna Nicole Smith's bed in that Hard Rock hotel room?

It's disturbing, but it may be an important ignored piece of information.

We have much more of our interview with Tas in a moment.

And then it's your turn to investigate. Did Tas say or see something

that has spiked a question in your mind? Here's your chance. Forensic

pathologist Dr. Michael Baden, and former LAPD homicide detective Mark Fuhrman are here to answer your e-mail questions tonight. E-mail us right

now, Ontherecord@foxnews.com.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

VAN SUSTEREN: What happened inside that Hard Rock hotel room the

morning Anna Nicole died? Tas knows. She was there.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

VAN SUSTEREN: Tas, explain to me, the drugs that were found in her

body at her autopsy — did you see any of those drugs in her hotel room?

BRIGHTHAUPT: No.

VAN SUSTEREN: You didn't see any empty bottles?

BRIGHTHAUPT: No. But then again, you know, Greta, I wasn't looking,

so they could have been around. They could have been in the bathroom, you

know? But no.

VAN SUSTEREN: And it strikes you as odd, based on the description

that you had of Anna and what you saw that she could have gotten up and

taken them herself.

BRIGHTHAUPT: She could have gotten up and taken them herself, but I

doubt it.

VAN SUSTEREN: Why?

BRIGHTHAUPT: Because I was told that she had to be walked to the

restroom. So how could she have gotten up and dug up medications? And

where did she put them? Where were they? They could have been somewhere

in the room, like I said, and I just didn't see them, you know, but -

VAN SUSTEREN: Do you — did you talk to Dr. Perper?

BRIGHTHAUPT: I spoke with Dr. Perper.

VAN SUSTEREN: How long did you speak to him?

BRIGHTHAUPT: About an hour-and-a-half, close to two hours.

VAN SUSTEREN: What kind of questions did he ask you?

BRIGHTHAUPT: Well, he wanted to know if I was the private duty nurse,

had I given her any medications, how long have I been there. He asked me

to describe how I found her, who else was in the room, those types of

questions.

VAN SUSTEREN: Anything that you thought that he should have asked

you?

BRIGHTHAUPT: No. He asked pretty much what he — what I would think

a medical examiner would ask someone in the medical profession.

VAN SUSTEREN: Did you see Howard when he came back to the room?

BRIGHTHAUPT: When he came back to the room from...

VAN SUSTEREN: After the medics had been summoned, after they'd been

called, did you see Howard when he came back to the room?

BRIGHTHAUPT: Yes, I did.

VAN SUSTEREN: Tell me what's going on in the room. You're doing CPR.

Your husband returns. He called 911. The medics arrive. Did they try to

revive her in the room, as well?

BRIGHTHAUPT: Yes, they did.

VAN SUSTEREN: Was she pronounced dead in the room or not?

BRIGHTHAUPT: No. No, there was no doctor. We couldn't pronounce her

dead.

VAN SUSTEREN: OK. So what — so tell me what happened. The medics

are working on her and — bring me through the timeline.

 

Moe returns in ten minutes

BRIGHTHAUPT: Well, from the time that I found her and I started CPR

and I called my husband, it took him, I don't know, I guess less than 10

minutes to get back because where he went was not that far from the Hard

Rock. So he came back and wanted to know what happened, and why was she

still on the bed? Because CPR is not effective on the bed.

Anna was dead weight. I could not get Anna off the bed and put her on

the floor because if she was just unconscious to the point that she was

still OK, by the time I got her on the floor, I would have probably knocked

her out because she was heavy. I could not move her. And that's what I

tried to explain to my husband, and he was quite upset about that.

But anyway, he picked her up and put her on the floor, and you know,

we did interchangeable CPR at that point, and we did CPR until the medics

arrived.

VAN SUSTEREN: And then what happened? The medics arrive, and how

soon after did Howard arrive?

BRIGHTHAUPT: I don't know, about maybe 10 minutes or so because they

had already intubated her and I guess give her whatever they had to give

her to reverse the effects of whatever she had taken. So we — and they

hooked her up to the life pack, and they pretty much had her ready to go by

the time he got there.

VAN SUSTEREN: And then what happened. He arrived and...

BRIGHTHAUPT: He arrived. They wouldn't let him in the room. He was

outside. By the time I got outside after they were wheeling her out, I

went out of the room, and he was, like, on the floor, inconsolable.

VAN SUSTEREN: When you went into that room, was the room — anything

unusual about the room? Was it in reasonably good order or...

BRIGHTHAUPT: The room was a mess. The room was an absolute mess.

The way Anna was covered up, now that I think about it, or after a couple

weeks of thinking about the way that the room looked, I got suspicious.

When I first (INAUDIBLE) I figured, Oh, maybe that's just the way she

sleeps, you know, all covered up and her head halfway covered up. And I

mean, sometimes that's the normal way people sleep.

But now that I think about it, you know, the way she just laid there

and just laid there covered up the whole — pretty much the whole time.

There was a baby bottle on top of her. There was a pillow on the floor.

VAN SUSTEREN: Why was there a baby bottle — I mean, Dannielynn

wasn't even there.

BRIGHTHAUPT: No, Dannielynn was not there.

VAN SUSTEREN: Why was the baby bottle there?

BRIGHTHAUPT: I have no idea. You know, sometimes people travel with

memorabilia. She didn't bring her baby with her, so maybe that's one of

the reasons. But it was on top of her.

VAN SUSTEREN: On top of — she had a blanket pulled up on her, pulled

up — top — close up on the top of her head.

BRIGHTHAUPT: Yes.

VAN SUSTEREN: And then the bottle was on top of it, like, balancing?

BRIGHTHAUPT: Yes. The bottle was, like, on her — closer to her

thigh area.

VAN SUSTEREN: And it didn't fall?

BRIGHTHAUPT: Not that I can remember.

VAN SUSTEREN: Which means she wasn't moving. Anything else, you

know, stand out in your mind?

BRIGHTHAUPT: It's just that when my husband pulled all the covers off

of her and picked her up to put her on the floor, she was completely naked.

She had no clothes on, and there was a bunch of feces in the bed.

VAN SUSTEREN: You're a nurse. Would that be consistent with someone

who had already died? Did it appear that, you know, she'd been in the

feces for a period of time? I mean, what was — what did you — what did

you think?

BRIGHTHAUPT: Well, usually, when a person dies, their what you call

sphincter muscles would relax and they would have their last bowel

movement. It would relieve the — that area of what's in it.

VAN SUSTEREN: Did you observe — I don't think it's too graphic, but

did it appear that this was a recent event, within half an hour, or this

had happened, you know, a couple hours before?

BRIGHTHAUPT: I didn't really read into it that much, but it could

have happened a while because it looked like it was dried up.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

Feb. 8

10 a.m. Stern wakes up and finds Smith also awake, complaining only of fatigue. Stern helps her to the bathroom, then puts her back in bed. Stern says he didn't see Smith take any medication. Stern leaves to complete the purchase of a yacht.

1 p.m. Smith is found unresponsive and blue by Tasma Brighthaupt, wife of Smith bodyguard Maurice "Big Moe" Brighthaupt, who is helping his brother move furniture. Tasma Brighthaupt, a registered nurse, begins CPR and calls her husband.

1:41 p.m. Emergency personnel were called after Maurice Brighthaupt arrived back at the hotel.

1:46 p.m. Paramedics arrive.

2:43 p.m. The ambulance carrying Smith arrives at a hospital.

2:49 p.m. Smith is pronounced dead.

 


More on CNN TV: Join Larry King for special coverage of Anna Nicole Smith's sudden death. Watch Friday night, 9 ET.
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(CNN) -- Anna Nicole Smith died Thursday at a South Florida hospital after being discovered unconscious in her hotel room.

The reality TV star, Playboy Playmate and former Guess model was 39.

She checked into the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Hollywood, Florida, on Monday with her lawyer and boyfriend, Howard K. Stern.

Smith's private nurse called hotel workers at 1:38 p.m. and security officials went to the room, Seminole Police Chief Charlie Tiger said. (Watch Chief Tiger describe the rescue effort )

Before rescue workers arrived, Smith's bodyguard performed CPR on her, he said.

She was taken to Memorial Regional Hospital in Hollywood at 2:10 p.m. where she died, Tiger said. (Watch how Smith's death leaves daughter's fate undecided )

An autopsy is scheduled for Friday, according to the Broward County Medical Examiner's Office. (Watch what might have led to Smith's death )

Late Thursday, police told CNN the hotel room where Smith was found had been cleared. Police carried bags of evidence out of the building.

Smith's attorney, Ron Rale, told reporters she had been suffering from flulike symptoms for the last couple of days.

"We are saddened and heartbroken by my sister's death. No matter what our differences have been over the years, Anna was still our blood and she will be missed terribly," Smith's sister, Donna Hogan, said in a statement Thursday.

"She was a woman who was determined to get out of her small town in Texas and make a name for herself." (Smith rose to fame after dropping out of school)

Hogan went on to say that the death of Smith's son, Daniel, last year "left her deeply saddened, a sadness she hid from everyone."

Dannielynn Hope, who Smith gave birth to a few days before Daniel, 20, died, "is now without a mother," Hogan wrote.

A life of celebrity and tribulations
Smith was known as much for her sometimes-turbulent life off-camera as she was for her tabloid celebrity. The former topless dancer in Houston made her first appearance in Playboy in 1992, was named Playmate of the Year in 1993, and appeared in Guess jeans ads and movies.

In 2002, Smith launched a reality television program, "The Anna Nicole Show," on the E! Entertainment network. At one point, it was the network's highest-rated program.

She shocked people by marrying 89-year-old Texas oil magnate Howard Marshall II, who had an estate valued at $1.6 billion. He died the next year, and Smith waged a 12-year feud with Marshall's son, E. Pierce Marshall, over the inheritance.

Earlier this week, Smith was included in a class-action lawsuit against a company, TrimSpa, for which she had worked as a spokesperson. (Watch Larry King say Smith's weight issues led to her depression )

TrimSpa makes a product it claims leads to substantial weight loss. The lawsuit alleges the marketing of the product, TrimSpa X32, was false or misleading. (Full story)

Smith also was embroiled in a dispute over the paternity of Dannielynn Hope. (Full story)

Larry Birkhead, an entertainment reporter and photographer who has claimed to be Dannielynn's father, will be filing an emergency order to obtain DNA samples to determine paternity, his attorney, Debra Opri, told CNN's "Larry King Live."

Smith and Stern have both said that Stern is Dannielynn's father. Stern has said the couple planned to marry, but it was unclear whether they had. Rale said he would be in court to oppose the DNA order.

A hearing is set for 8:30 a.m.

"On the instructions of the experts, we had to move in for a DNA order tomorrow morning, and we're going in for that," Opri said. "We need the order ... Larry has to do what the doctors say, and I have to do what the doctors say."

On news of Smith's death, Opri said Birkhead was "inconsolable ... he has lost the mother of his child and he has lost a woman he loved very much."
 

Brighthaupt

5. Thursday, February 8, 2007

Maurice woke up around 9 am. Around 9:30 am he went to Anna’s room and thought he saw her

moving but was not certain. He told Howard he was going to have breakfast with his wife, Tasma.

Mr. Stern awoke between 9-10 am and helped Anna to the bathroom. He then watched television in

another room until King Eric called to inform him of his arrival at the airport. Mr. Stern then called

Maurice to instruct him to pick up the guests (King Eric, his common-law wife, and another man).

Upon the arrival of King Eric and his party at the hotel at around 12 pm, Mr. Stern called out to Anna

who was still in bed to arouse her. One of the guests then urged him not to wake her so he did not

call her again.

 

Shortly after 12 pm, Maurice, Mr. Stern, King Eric, and the other male visitor left the room at the

Hard Rock Hotel. Maurice left to take care of personal business and Mr. Stern, King Eric, and the

other male guest left at the same time to pick up the boat. Maurice asked Tasma, his wife who is a

registered nurse, to stay with Anna. She worked on the computer in Anna’s room while Anna

remained in bed under the covers. King Eric’s common-law wife remained in an adjoining room.

1:00 Found not breathing

At about 1 pm Tasma Brighthaupt was on the phone with her husband, Maurice Brighthaupt. The

boat captain’s wife, who had been in the guest room, came into Anna Nicole’s room because she

thought Tasma was talking to Anna Nicole. When the captain’s wife realized Tasma was not talking

to Anna Nicole, she went around Miss Smith’s bed and took a look at her. She then told Tasma to

come take a look at Anna because she didn’t like the way Anna Nicole looks. Tasma hang up with

Maurice and came around the bed. She saw Anna’s face slumped downward on her chest, her mouth

open and without breathing sounds. Tasma Brighthaupt initiated CPR after calling her husband

Maurice. She alternated mouth to mouth breathing with chest compressions, checking for a pulse

until Maurice arrived.

1:38 pm Maurice returns to the Hard Rock Hotel and he took over resuscitation.

1:40 pm Seminole Emergency Medical Service was called.

1:43 pm First patrol unit arrived to room 607.

1:46 pm Seminole paramedics arrived. CPR was continued.

2:43 pm Anna Nicole Smith arrived at Hollywood Memorial Hospital.

2:49 pm Anna Nicole Smith is pronounced dead and the Medical Examiner’s Office is notified.

4:15 pm Associate Medical Examiner, Dr. Gertrude Juste responds to scene of death pronouncement

at the Hollywood Memorial Hospital.

4:59 pm Anna Nicole Smith’s body arrived at the Medical Examiner’s Office and is logged in.

 

 

 

 

 

Chronology of Anna Nicole Smith death
The Associated PressPublished: March 26, 2007


A timeline of events in the days leading up to the death of Anna Nicole Smith, provided by the Broward County Medical Examiner.

Feb. 5

_10 a.m. In the Bahamas, Smith has a morning dance lesson to prepare for both a music video and an event for the diet supplement TrimSpa. That afternoon, she flies to Miami and then to Fort Lauderdale with her companion, Howard K. Stern, and "psychiatrist/friend" Dr. Khristine Erosovich.

_4:30 p.m. Smith complains of pain in her left buttock from a recent injection of human growth hormone, vitamin B12 or immunoglobulin. She then complains of chills and feeling cold on the limo ride to the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel and Casino.

_7:30 p.m. Smith goes to bed. She has a temperature of 105 degrees (40.5 Celsius), but refuses to go to the hospital. She is prescribed antibiotics and Tamiflu and given an ice bath, which drops her temperature to 97 degrees (36 Celsius). She takes two tablespoons of chloral hydrate and goes to sleep.


Feb. 6

_Smith spends much of day watching television and drinking chamomile tea, water and Pedialyte, a rehydration drink. Later that day she feels ill, is sweating and has a pungent odor but feels better after a bath. Smith takes more chloral hydrate, sleeps some, then awakens and is given four drugs in addition to another dose of chloral hydrate.

Feb. 7

_12 p.m. Smith eats an egg-white omelette with spinach and watches TV in bed.

_Afternoon. Smith is found naked sitting in a dry bathtub in her room.

_Evening. Smith eats two crab cakes and shrimp for dinner. She watches TV again until the early morning hours, then takes another dose of chloral hydrate.

Feb. 8

_ 10 a.m. Stern wakes up and finds Smith also awake, complaining only of tiredness. Stern helps her to the bathroom and then puts her back in bed. Stern says he did not see Smith take any medications. Stern leaves to finish up the purchase of a yacht.

_1 p.m. Smith is found unresponsive and "blue" by Tasma Brighthaupt, wife of Smith bodyguard Maurice "Big Moe" Brighthaupt, who is out helping his brother move furniture. Tasma Brighthaupt, a registered nurse, begins CPR efforts and immediately calls her husband.

_1:41 p.m. Emergency personnel were called after Maurice Brighthaupt arrived back at the hotel.

_1:46 p.m. Paramedics arrive.

_2:43 p.m. The ambulance carrying Smith arrives at a hospital emergency room.

_2:49 p.m. Smith is pronounced dead.