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  • 30
    Nov
    2012
    9:41am, EST

    'Sons of Anarchy' star who allegedly killed landlady was not on drugs

    Matt Carr / Getty Images file

    Actor Johnny Lewis in 2011.

    By Natalie Finn, Eonline

    A few questions pertaining to Johnny Lewis' death have been answered -- but the real circumstances surrounding his September death remain a mystery.

    The 28-year-old 'Sons of Anarchy' actor died of traumatic injuries sustained in what can only be ruled an accidental fall due to lack of evidence that he jumped or was pushed, according to the official autopsy report released Thursday and obtained by E! News.

    Lewis is suspected of killing his landlady before falling to his death from the roof of his residence -- a plunge that, in the opinion of the lead investigator, occurred when he attempted to flee the scene.

    Former advisor: Lewis was struggling with mental illness

    "He appears to have jumped from an elevated terrace to the driveway while attempting to flee the scene. During the approximately 15-foot drop he apparently lost his balance or struck an object," wrote investigator Jerry McKibben. "This caused him to land so his head impacted the concrete driveway."

    McKibben noted that there was a possibility Lewis was under the influence of drugs or alcohol, but, while he was deemed ineligible for tissue donation due to recent drug use, the autopsy turned up no drugs of any kind in his system.

    "Decedent died of a fall," wrote L.A. County Senior Deputy Medical Examiner James K. Ribe. "We do not have definitive evidence that the decedent intended to kill himself. We also do not at this time have any evidence that he was pushed. Therefore, the manner of his death is accidental."

    Lewis was cremated and buried at sea off the coast of San Diego last month.

    Related content:

    • 'Sons of Anarchy' actor dies in fall, suspect in landlady's death 

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  • 9
    Oct
    2012
    7:09pm, EDT

    'Sons of Anarchy' actor is cremated and buried at sea

    By Natalie Finn, E! Online

    Actor Johnny Lewis has been cremated.

    Johnny Lewis is finally at peace. The "Sons of Anarchy" actor, who died in a plunge from the roof of the building where he had been renting a room and is suspected of killing the landlady just prior to his own death, was cremated and buried at sea last week. 

    According to his death certificate, obtained Tuesday by E! News, Lewis' ashes were dispersed off the coast of San Diego. Further details, such as who accompanied the 28-year-old's remains to their final resting place, were not available. 

    More from E: Everything we know about the late Johnny Lewis 

    But while the Los Angeles Department of Public Health has released the certificate, the medical cause of the troubled actor's death remains deferred, however, pending the result of toxicology tests conducted at autopsy. 

    More from E: View the death certificate 


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    Authorities have also yet to rule on whether Lewis' death was an accident or not, and manner of death remains checked off as "pending investigation." 

    More form E: Johnny Lewis' memorable roles 

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  • 1
    Oct
    2012
    8:12am, EDT

    'Sons of Anarchy' actor Johnny Lewis attacked other neighbors before his death

    Mike Cassese / REUTERS

    Johnny Lewis in 2011.

    By Aaron Couch, The Hollywood Reporter

    Descriptions of fierce attacks are among new details coming out about the late "Sons of Anarchy" actor Johnny Lewis.

    Lewis was found dead in a Los Feliz driveway Wednesday, after allegedly killing his 81-year-old landlady, Catherine Davis. He is also believed to have fought with three people in the backyard of a nearby residence before ultimately falling to his death from the roof of Davis’ house.

    STORY: "Sons of Anarchy" star Johnny Lewis disappearing from Scientology websites

    According to one of Davis' neighbors, Lewis introduced himself as “John” on Wednesday and said he was new to the neighborhood, the LA Times reports. Lewis left, but returned shortly and attacked a painter working in the man’s backyard. The man, who wished to remain anonymous, said he came to the painter’s aid after his wife saw the attack unfold and screamed for help.

    The man, his wife, and the painter all struggled with Lewis, who did not seem to feel pain. The neighbor said hitting Lewis was like “hitting him with a fly swatter.”

    The three eventually made it inside, and held the door shut while Lewis attempted to get in. Lewis eventually departed, and when police arrived, they found him dead in the driveway next door.

    STORY: Johnny Lewis death: Lawyer says "Sons of Anarchy" actor was "delusional"

    The description of the attack echoes an account of a Jan. 3 incident. According to records, Lewis broke into a Northridge town home and attacked two men with an empty bottle after they asked him to leave.

    "My brother-in-law hit him in the head many times," the man said. "He didn't even blink."


    Follow @ TODAY_ent

    Lewis, whose lawyer said was "delusional," is known to have run afoul of the law several other times this year. On Feb. 10, he was arrested for allegedly striking a man outside of a yogurt shop, and on Feb. 18 he was taken into custody after a woman said he attempted to break into her Santa Monica home.

    PHOTOS: Hollywood's notable deaths of 2012

    After being released on bail, Lewis was taken into custody again on May 23 for failing to appear in court, and later ordered to complete 30 days of rehab for mental health and substance abuse issues. After completing treatment at Ridgeview Ranch in Altadena, Calif., he was placed on probation.

    But Lewis was once again in custody at some point after this for unknown reasons, and was released from county jail just five days before his death.

    Lewis appeared in 26 episodes of "Sons of Anarchy" as an aspiring member of the California motorcycle club. His credits also include nine episodes of "The O.C." and roles in the films "The Runaways" and "Lovely Molly."

    Related content:

    • 'Smiles': New street drug tied to 'Sons of Anarchy" death
    • 'Sons of Anarchy' actor dies in fall, is suspect in landlady's death

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  • 28
    Sep
    2012
    5:39pm, EDT

    'Smiles': New street drug tied to 'Sons of Anarchy' death

    Matt Carr / Getty Images file

    Actor Johnny Lewis, 28, who starred in the series "Sons of Anarchy."

    By Brian Alexander, NBC News Contributor

    Johnny Lewis, an actor in the popular “Sons of Anarchy” motorcycle-gang cable drama, died early Wednesday in Los Angeles, suspected of killing his 81-year-old former landlord, Catherine Davis, and possibly himself.   

    Police think the 28-year-old rising star, who played Kip 'Half-sack' Epps on the FX show, may have been under the influence of a drug few have heard of, a substance known informally as “Smiles.” 

    It’s part of a new wave of synthetic drugs finding their way onto America’s streets and into its clubs. With the chemical name 2,5-dimethoxy-4-iodophenethylamine, it is known by drug agents and chemists as 2C-I, part of a closely-related family of “2C” drugs.

    While Smiles may seem obscure, it’s already done damage, and not just in drug-hip Hollywood.

    When 18-year-old Adam Budge of East Grand Forks, Minn., gave a derivative of the Smiles drug to his buddy, 17-year-old Elijah Stai, of nearby Park Rapids this year, Stai wound up dead. The drug was supposed to be a cheap, harmless high. But within an hour of mixing the powder into some chocolate and eating it, Stai was convulsing, hallucinating, and eventually stopped breathing. Now Budge faces charges that could put him in prison for many years.

    But what is Smiles?

    Like all the 2C drugs, it’s a psychoactive, hallucinogenic chemical that alter the brain’s balance of dopamine and serotonin. Smiles is particularly powerful, binding to serotonin receptors in the brain at 20 times the rate of another drug used in schizophrenia research, according to an experiment performed by Purdue University chemists.

    The effects of 2C-I, like those of LSD, can last up to eight hours. But because the effects can take time to appear, users may think they haven’t taken enough to get the desired high, and so take more, risking overdose.

    The drug can be taken as small tablets, on pieces of blotter paper like LSD, or in powder form, often mixed with something else, like chocolate.

    In June, as part of a Substances Control Act overhaul, Congress made 2C-I a schedule I drug -- highly restricted, like methamphetamine. But, explained Drug Enforcement Administration spokesperson Rusty Payne, trying to get government arms around these new drugs is “like playing whack-a-mole. There are just so many emerging chemicals.”

    Labs, often located in Europe or Asia, can use legal, common chemicals to produce huge batches of the drugs. Once one formulation is discovered, and banned, all the chemists have to do is slightly alter the structure of the molecules to create another, potentially legal, substitute until that one is banned.

    There is no known geographic hot spot for the 2C drugs, unlike, say, methamphetamine, which became known as a rural, small-town problem. The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration believes that most, if not all, the 2C drugs are being imported to the country, not made domestically.  

    Often, Payne said, teens rationalize the use of the drugs because they think, or are told, that it’s legal and if it’s legal, it’s safe. Another problem is that users often think they’re taking something else. 

    “We are getting so many calls because people are dying abusing chemicals that nobody ever heard of,” Payne said. “They’re told it’s harmless. If you can just go buy it somewhere, or on the internet, then it must be safe, but nothing could be further from the truth.”

    Users aren’t the only ones who are often in the dark. According to Payne, even the DEA’s own agents are behind the curve when it comes to designer synthetics.

    “It’s tough for our agents to stay up to date,” he explained. “Chemicals that used to take years to synthesize now take months. And many chemicals are diverted” from legal uses to illicit ones.

    Chemical and pharmacologic research appears in journals, is posted online, and becomes easily available to all. That is often a good thing, but it also allows rogue chemists to use the science to create new analogs of drugs like 2C-I.

    The drug “Spice,” for example, which made headlines over the past two years as a marijuana substitute, began as a research project by a Clemson chemist named John W. Huffman. He was doing the research under the auspices of the National Institute for Drug Abuse.

    “This synthetic stuff is the new frontier of drugs,” Payne said.

    Brian Alexander (www.BrianRAlexander.com) is co-author, with Larry Young Ph.D., of "The Chemistry Between Us: Love, Sex and the Science of Attraction," (www.TheChemistryBetweenUs.com), now on sale.

    Related stories: 

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    • 'Sons of Anarchy' actor dies in fall, is suspect in landlady's death

    361 comments

    Yeah, yeah - blame it on the Sons! Like so many other articles, we wouldn't be having this conversation if they just legalized marijuana - than a lot of these people probably wouldn't have to resort to these disgusting synthetic drugs where consumption alone can cause your death or the death of ano …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: bath-salts, johnny-lewis, smiles-street-drug

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Brian Alexander

is an author and frequent contributor to NBC News. His most recent book, written with Larry Young, PhD, is "The Chemistry Between Us: Love, Sex, and the Science of Attraction." He’s also author of “America Unzipped: In Search of Sex and Satisfaction,” and “Rapture: How Biotech Became the New Religion.”

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