Tatum O'Neal In New York Drug Bust

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SAMUEL MAULL and JENNIFER PELTZ | June 2, 2008 08:59 PM EST | AP

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In a March 20, 2008 file photo actress Tatum O'Neal attends a screening at the IFC Center in New York. New York police say the Oscar-winning actress has been arrested for buying crack cocaine on Manhattan's Lower East Side Sunday June 1, 2008. (AP Photo/Evan Agostini/file)

NEW YORK — Tatum O'Neal swore she was done with drugs. The Oscar-winning former child actress proclaimed she was sober as she promoted her 2004 tell-all memoir, cobbled her acting career back together and even offered advice to misbehaving pop star Britney Spears.

O'Neal's arrest Sunday on charges of buying cocaine in her gritty-chic downtown Manhattan neighborhood suggests her struggle with addiction may not be over.

O'Neal, 44, looked tired and said nothing as she was arraigned Monday in Manhattan Criminal Court on a misdemeanor charge of possession of a controlled substance. The daughter of screen star Ryan O'Neal entered no plea and was released without bail until a July 28 court date.

Prosecutors are recommending drug treatment for the actress, who detailed her dependency on heroin and cocaine in her best-selling memoir, "A Paper Life."

Her lawyer, Robert Marinelli, declined to comment Monday. Her manager and publicist did not immediately return telephone calls after her court appearance, while her agent's office referred calls to her publicist.

The arrest was another low point in a life that has included many. Her childhood, she has said, was a Hollywood horror show. Then came years of drug abuse, public feuding with her father and a searing child custody fight with her ex-husband, tennis star John McEnroe. Her acting career vaporized.

But a determined O'Neal rebuilt it in recent years, telling The New York Times last year that she called and e-mailed her agent daily and accepted every role offered. She appeared in independent films, played guest roles on such shows as "Law and Order: Criminal Intent" and "8 Simple Rules ... for Dating My Teenage Daughter" and took a spin on "Dancing with the Stars."

Her efforts solidified into a recurring role as hard-drinking Maggie Gavin in the FX cable channel's television drama "Rescue Me." The show is now in production for its fifth and sixth seasons.

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Show producer Sony Pictures Television said the actress has shot one episode for the upcoming season and is scheduled to appear in several more, but Sony Pictures declined to comment further.

Police found two bags of cocaine in O'Neal's right front pants pocket when she was arrested about 7:30 p.m. Sunday on the rundown-turned-trendy Lower East Side, according to a court complaint. Officers saw O'Neal accept the drug from a man during a routine drug sweep, police said. Initial reports suggested she had bought crack, but police later said it was powder cocaine.

At age 10, O'Neal won an Academy Award for best supporting actress for 1973's "Paper Moon," becoming the youngest person ever to win an Oscar. Three years later, her $350,000 paycheck for "The Bad News Bears" made her Hollywood's highest-paid child star.

But behind the scenes, O'Neal's life was a drama of neglect, dysfunction and debauchery, according to her memoir.

She described her mother, the late actress Joanna Moore, as a pill-popping mess and claimed her "Love Story" star father slugged her out of jealousy when she won her Oscar; he denounced the book as "malicious lies" and "clouded memories."

In May 2007, prosecutors declined to charge Ryan O'Neal for firing what the actor called a warning shot during a brawl with his son. O'Neal contended he fired the shot in self-defense after his son, Griffin, attacked him with a fireplace poker during an argument at the actor's Malibu home.

In 1983, police were called to their home after a fight in which Ryan O'Neal knocked out two of his son's teeth, the Los Angeles Times reported. No charges were filed.

Griffin O'Neal was convicted of reckless boating in a 1986 accident that killed the son of film director Francis Ford Coppola.

Meanwhile, an adolescent Tatum was drawn into an opium-heightened orgy at age 12, according to her book.

Her 1986 marriage to McEnroe was little healthier, according to both. He wrote in his 2002 autobiography, "You Cannot Be Serious," that the two were high during their first night together. She wrote that the famously temperamental tennis great physically abused her, which he denied, saying he was "very disappointed in Tatum's interpretation of my life and the lives of our children."

The two split in the early 1990s. As her drug problems deepened, O'Neal lost custody of their three children.

She saw echoes of her story in Spears' misfortunes last year, when the singer was ordered temporarily to surrender custody of her two young children after she engaged in a spate of odd antics. O'Neal told "Entertainment Tonight" that Spears needed to seek addiction treatment, as she had.

Her own addictions, she has repeatedly said, are behind her.

"For years I could hardly look people in the eye," she wrote in her memoir. "Now that I've burned away the painful debris of my life, I feel courageous and open."

___

Associated Press Writers Jennifer Peltz and Colleen Long contributed to this report.

NEW YORK — Tatum O'Neal swore she was done with drugs. The Oscar-winning former child actress proclaimed she was sober as she promoted her 2004 tell-all memoir, cobbled her acting career back to...
NEW YORK — Tatum O'Neal swore she was done with drugs. The Oscar-winning former child actress proclaimed she was sober as she promoted her 2004 tell-all memoir, cobbled her acting career back to...
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- aznurse I'm a Fan of aznurse 56 fans permalink

well Tatum, you're still alive, so its time to start over.
I wish you good luck.
(ps You're great in Rescue Me)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:04 AM on 06/02/2008

Police could have stopped her before or while she was making the purchase. But, no - we needed another victim to publicize the illegality of drugs.

The US has by far the most people in jail and about half are on drug offences.

Decriminalize the more benign drugs (relative to cigarettes) and crime and prison populations will fall in half. And we won't have to see sad stories of people's lives being destroyed. Everyone will win - except those pushing for a police state,

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:55 AM on 06/02/2008
- Fair I'm a Fan of Fair 2 fans permalink

Very NYC, this is how it works here.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:27 AM on 06/02/2008
- dadw5boys I'm a Fan of dadw5boys 282 fans permalink
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"" I GOT FREINDS IN LOW PLACES"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:43 AM on 06/02/2008
- Paladine I'm a Fan of Paladine 5 fans permalink
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This feels like picking the bones of the wounded...­addicts relapse, surprise, surprise! AND addicts can get clean again...

It is a sickness, an illness.

All the best wishes, Tatum...Go­d bless, "just for today"...;­)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:29 AM on 06/02/2008

Couldn't have said it better.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:37 AM on 06/02/2008
- ramper I'm a Fan of ramper 15 fans permalink
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It is a self-induced sickness/illness. Rehab? Fine! But take some responsibility and just stay away from it when you are clean.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:09 AM on 06/02/2008
- pcplz I'm a Fan of pcplz 7 fans permalink
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Pompous aren't you. Never been there and have no idea of what it is like. It is not what you think, 'self induced'. You aren't ever well from it. It is always there. Down times and sad times it gets bigger and harder to deny.

Bless you, Tatum. Fight hard.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:24 AM on 06/02/2008
- bikerdude I'm a Fan of bikerdude 70 fans permalink
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Addiction is a mental disease. It is also physical in that once you start, a craving sets in and the "more" part takes over. The mental part is the cycle of relapse and recovery where delusional thinking permits an addict to convince themselves that they can drink/use like people without this disease. The 12 step programs provide a way out by using a step by step method of introducing spirituality (not religion) into one's life as a substitute for their drug of choice. Untreated, an addict will use again...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:49 PM on 06/02/2008
- livesimply I'm a Fan of livesimply 27 fans permalink
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Good for you. You never had the problem so that gives you the right to judge others.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:41 PM on 06/02/2008
- rektruax I'm a Fan of rektruax 18 fans permalink
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The whole issue is such a double edged sword. I understand the perspective of most, but accountability and responsibility always seem to fall by the wayside. I try to keep an open mind, but not so open my brains fall out. You'd be hard pressed to find an addict of drugs or alcohol who's never "tried" or "experimented" with them. Both those terms are (in my mind) a way to sugar-coat the word "use". From what I've gathered, drugs make you feel good. Alcohol just makes you behave like an idiot. But you're probably gonna want more. I drank alcohol twice in my teens, but thought it tasted disgusting, and have never "tried" drugs. I know the caffeine/tobacco argument..­. It's childish and stupid. No one's ever lost the house or killed a carload of victims under the influence of Folgers or Newport's. Then there's the prescription drugs. If you argued that, you'd be absolutely right, but we're talking about illicit street drugs now.

Telling kids that it's OK to "experiment" is dead wrong... Period. On the other hand, locking up users makes little or no sense either. In our inner cities, where opportunities are few, locking up sellers doesn't seem fair. In fact, paying money to partake in illegal activity seems double stupid to me. If you're dealing, at least you're making money.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:29 AM on 06/02/2008
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