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TMZ has obtained photos of the contents of Anna Nicole's refrigerator. The mini-fridge, which Anna kept inside her bedroom in the Bahamas, held Methadone and Slimfast. Yikes.
Several bottles of TRIMSPA sat right next to the fridge. The fridge also contained Miracle 2000 (marketed as a nutritional supplement for "today's active lifestyle"), French's Worcestershire Sauce, yogurt and spray butter. It also appears there are vials used for injectable medicine.And at this point, I'm wondering what level of toxicity the really old lettuce and pasta sauce in my refrigerator have and am realizing that I should probably clean it out, lest those items inadvertently incriminate me later, but I digress...
Also, over the weekend, Howard K. Stern took up residence back at the mansion in the Bahamas, where Anna Nicole Smith had been residing during her time there. If this mansion sounds at all familiar to you, it's because it's been the subject of a legal battle between Anna Nicole and her ex-boyfriend, G. Ben Thompson. Smith claimed the house was a gift to her, but Thompson maintains that it was simply a loaner. Thompson had changed the locks while Anna was away, and upon his return, Stern changed them again.
Additionally, the Associated Press reports that Anna's daughter, Dannielynn was at the home, and that Anna's mother, Vergie Arthur, was also seen going into the house. According to Stern's rep, Ron Rale:
"Right now, Howard is very happy to be reunited with Dannielynn but extremely angry that somebody had the gall to break into Anna's residence."Thank God it's not possible to "change the locks" on a baby. What do I mean by that? I have no idea.
































Margaretta says:
TMZ! What a scoop! Anna's fridge. Stop the presses! Phone the neighbors, wake the kids! I'm soooo not impressed with them
Cheryl says:
And we know this is ANS fridge because ... a tabloid said so? Oh please. It could be anyone's fridge. Someone "broke" into her home, if it is her fridge, could someone have "planted" that in there? I hope no one takes any of this seriously.
J. A. says:
The vials are nothing sinister. Looks like vitamin B-12 injections. Often given for certain kinds of anemias.