LA coroner: Autopsy of heiress Casey Johnson provides few clues; toxicology tests needed

By AP
Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Coroner: Autopsy of Casey Johnson is inconclusive

LOS ANGELES — Authorities say an autopsy of Johnson & Johnson heiress Casey Johnson is inconclusive and toxicology tests have been ordered.

Los Angeles County coroner spokesman Craig Harvey says examiners on Tuesday deferred the cause of death for the daughter of New York Jets owner Woody Johnson.

Casey Johnson was found dead Monday in her Los Angeles home. Harvey says examiners found no evidence of trauma on the 30-year-old’s body and are also considering her medical history and her diabetes.

Harvey says results of toxicology and other tests could take six weeks or more.

Tabloids documented Johnson’s exploits with friends such as Paris Hilton and Tinseltown’s other privileged party girls.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below.

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Casey Johnson, heiress to the Johnson & Johnson fortune and daughter of the owner of the New York Jets, lived a Hollywood lifestyle.

She partied with Paris Hilton and got engaged to bisexual reality TV star Tila Tequila. And like her idol Marilyn Monroe, Johnson died young.

The coroner’s office planned an autopsy Tuesday on the 30-year-old Johnson, who was found dead Monday in the home where she lived behind big wooden gates bearing the name “Grumblenot” in a quiet Los Angeles neighborhood.

Her cause of death was under investigation, but there were no signs of foul play, police spokesman Officer Gregory Baek said.

Johnson was diagnosed with diabetes as a child, but it was unclear if that may have played a role in her death.

Additional tests, including a toxicology screening, could be ordered if the autopsy fails to determine how she died.

“We continue to inquire into prior medical history,” Craig R. Harvey, a spokesman for the coroner’s office, said in an e-mail.

Johnson was the daughter of Jets owner Robert Wood “Woody” Johnson IV. He is also chairman of the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation and co-authored the book, “Managing Your Child’s Diabetes.”

Woody Johnson learned of his daughter’s death just one day after his team clinched a playoff spot for the first time in three seasons.

Jets head coach Rex Ryan opened his press conference Tuesday by offering condolences to the owner.

“It’s obviously a tragedy for Mr. Johnson and his family,” Ryan said.

Casey Johnson had no role in the health care products company that her great-great-grandfather founded in 1886, even though she and her two younger sisters were heirs to the fortune.

The family’s involvement with the corporation ended decades ago.

“We have expressed our condolences to the Johnson family for their tragic loss,” Johnson & Johnson spokesman Jeff Leebaw said.

Like her friend and former high school classmate Paris Hilton, Johnson’s exploits were detailed in tabloid reports of partying and sexual escapades. Johnson became a staple of the New York Post’s Page Six, the gossip column where she was mockingly dubbed the “baby-oil heiress.”

Johnson told Vanity Fair in a 2006 interview that her decision to turn down Hilton’s invitation to be her co-star on “The Simple Life” reality show was “the stupidest mistake of my life.”

In a Twitter posting Tuesday, Hilton said she was devastated by the death of her friend.

“In bed crying, looking at baby pictures of Casey, Nicky and I. I feel so upset. I feel like I’ve lost a sister. My heart is broken. Miss her,” she wrote.

Johnson and Tila Tequila canoodled and announced they were engaged in a Web video last month. Tequila referred to Johnson as “my Wifey” in a Twitter posting after Johnson’s death.

Johnson was recently arrested for investigation of stealing $22,000 in lingerie, mail, jewelry and other items from the Hollywood home of model friend Jasmine Lennard.

She pleaded not guilty last month to burglary and receiving stolen property, and had a preliminary hearing scheduled on Feb. 2, district attorney’s spokeswoman Jane Robison said.

Johnson also was reportedly in a custody fight over her adopted daughter with her mother, Sale Johnson.

Casey Johnson adopted the child as a baby from Kazakhstan in 2007 and named her Ava-Monroe after her idol, Marilyn Monroe.

“I see a lot of similarities between us,” Casey said about Monroe in the Vanity Fair interview. “Her life makes me sad. I don’t think she was very happy.

“They thought she was some dumb blonde, and she wasn’t. She was a smart, smart broad. And I think that sometimes people look at me and think, ‘Oh, Casey Johnson, she’s stupid, she’s blonde, she’s an heiress, blah, blah, blah.’”

Associated Press Writers John Antczak in Los Angeles and Dennis Waszak in Florham Park, N.J., contributed to this story.

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