National Basketball Association
Sheriff: Caller reported Odom was doing cocaine at brothel
National Basketball Association

Sheriff: Caller reported Odom was doing cocaine at brothel

Published Oct. 14, 2015 5:56 p.m. ET

PAHRUMP, Nev. — A Nevada sheriff says a person who called 911 to report that Lamar Odom was found unconscious at a brothel said the former NBA star had been doing cocaine and had taken sexual performance enhancers.

Nye County Sheriff Sharon Wehrly says an employee for Love Ranch told 911 dispatchers that Odom was found unresponsive with blood coming from his nose and mouth.

The caller said Odom had been doing cocaine and had taken up to 10 tabs of a sexual performance enhancer over three days. Odom bought the supplements, called Reload 72-hour Strong, at the brothel.

Odom is on life support at a Las Vegas hospital after being found unconscious Tuesday at the Crystal, Nevada, brothel.

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Nevada authorities have taken a blood sample from Odom to find out if he overdosed on drugs or alcohol, but the results could take several weeks.

Nye County Sheriff's Detective Michael Eisenloffel said at a news conference Wednesday that Las Vegas police will be doing the testing.

Sheriff Sharon Wehrly says a Love Ranch employee called 911 on Tuesday to report Odom was found unresponsive at the legal brothel with blood and a "white substance" coming from his nose and mouth.

The caller reported Odom did cocaine Saturday and had taken up to 10 tabs of a sexual performance enhancer over the past three days.

The former NBA star and reality TV personality is on life support at a Las Vegas hospital after being found unconscious at the Crystal, Nevada, brothel.

Odom started "throwing up all kinds of stuff" after a 911 operator told them to turn him on his side, Love Ranch owner Dennis Hof told The Associated Press in a phone interview Tuesday. Odom had "spent time socializing with some of my girls," but wasn't seen taking any illegal drugs, Hof said.

In a recording of a 911 call, brothel spokesman Richard Hunter said Odom was breathing but in a "deep sleep" when he was found, and had fluid coming from his nose and mouth.

Hunter added that it was Odom's first visit to the brothel. He said the former NBA star and reality TV personality scheduled his stay more than a week ago and on Saturday asked for a ride, arriving at about 4:30 p.m.

"He sounds like he's snoring a little bit. But he is breathing consistently," Hunter said.

According to Hunter, Odom stayed at the "best VIP suite" on an open-ended reservation and was accompanied by two women. He spent an amount beyond five figures, which would have been negotiated privately between him and the prostitutes. The women are contractors who get 50 percent of the negotiated price.

Hunter said Odom reported doing cocaine before his visit and knew the brothel had a strict anti-drug policy. Hunter says the women who work there are trained to "stop the party" if drugs are seen.

Odom spent most of his 14-year NBA career in Los Angeles with the Lakers and Clippers, becoming a fan favorite before he sought even more fame with the Kardashians.

His one-month courtship of Khloe before their huge 2009 wedding was taped for the E! network, and Odom appeared on nearly two dozen episodes of "Keeping Up with the Kardashians" as well as other family spinoffs, including his own "Khloe & Lamar" show in 2011 and 2012.

Khloe Kardashian called him "Lam-Lam" and worried openly about him on the show. Even after they split up in 2013, cameras recorded her calling him and checking on his welfare.

People always seemed to root for Odom, whose prematurely weathered face wore the impact of his personal tragedies in a friendly way. And news of his hospitalization brought an outpouring of dismay and encouragement from his friends and family.

Kobe Bryant joined Kardashian and some of Odom's childhood friends at his bedside after a Tuesday night Lakers game in Las Vegas.

"Lamar Odom is one of the greatest people I've ever known," said Derek Fisher, the New York Knicks coach and Odom's longtime teammate with the Lakers. "I don't view him through the prism of choices that he's made . . . I'm obviously hoping that he can pull through this, and that in some fortunate way this becomes the beginning of a different ending."

Even his estranged father, Joe Odom, was there at the hospital, according to his grandmother, Florence Odom, who told the AP Wednesday that Lamar was "in God's hands."

Authorities were called to the brothel in Crystal, Nevada, about 3:15 p.m. Tuesday. The 6-foot-10 Odom was too tall for an available helicopter, so he was driven by ambulance to Sunrise Hospital & Medical Center in Las Vegas.

Hof told the AP that his staff had picked up Odom from a home in Las Vegas on Saturday, and he seemed "happy, he was sleeping every night."

"He largely kept to himself, and at no time did he engage in any drug use in the presence of anyone in the house. He did drink alcohol from our bar, and was taking some herbal sexual enhancement capsules," Hof's statement said.

Odom emerged as one of the most promising basketball talents of his generation after a difficult childhood in Queens, where his mother died of cancer when he was 12 and his estranged father was addicted to heroin. Drugs and crime were rampant in his South Jamaica neighborhood, and he never forgot where he came from, writing tributes to his mother and grandmother on his sneakers before games.

Tall enough to play center and skilled enough to be a playmaking guard, the rangy kid with a beautiful shot and exceptional ball-handling skills drew comparisons to Magic Johnson when he played on a traveling youth team alongside Ron Artest, his future Lakers teammate.

Despite an abbreviated college career marked by scandal and an arrest in Las Vegas, Odom's talent was so coveted that he was picked fourth in the 1999 NBA draft by the moribund Clippers. Suddenly, he was "living like a 19-year-old rock star," he said.

Soon after, he was suspended for smoking marijuana.

Odom had two children during those years, Destiny and Lamar Jr., with an ex-girlfriend, Liza Morales. The 2006 crib death of another infant son, Jayden, attributed to Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, prompted Odom to consider quitting basketball. He played the next season displaying a T-shirt bearing his son's photo in his locker.

Odom loved wearing purple and gold, and his selfless play won him the NBA's Sixth Man of the Year award in 2011. He won a second straight NBA title in 2010 while playing alongside Artest, now known as Metta World Peace.

But his basketball career faded as his life became a spectacle. He was heartbroken in December 2011 when the Lakers attempted to trade him; he eventually landed in Dallas, where reality TV crews followed.

"The year he got traded people wanted to say, `Oh, it's because of the show.' No one wanted to bring up the accomplishments he had when we were filming," Khloe Kardashian told the AP in a May 2013 interview. "Lamar loves doing the show and he's the one who wanted to do 'Khloe & Lamar' more than I did."

Still, Odom's behavior increasingly worried family and friends. He pleaded no contest to drunk driving after an arrest in August 2013. Kardashian filed for divorce four months later and has been dating Houston Rockets star James Harden. The divorce has not yet received final approval from a judge.

When cameras caught up with Odom on a sidewalk in August, he blamed the media for his downfall.

"Y'all have discredited me, beat me down, took my confidence, took everything away from me. You will not do it again," Odom told TMZ in an interview. "To everybody that I know and that supports me, I'm sorry but it's just it. The dog has to bite back."

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