Whitney Houston’s Medical Records Will Clear Doubts About Death
The Los Angeles County coroner's office has directed Whitney Houston’s doctors and other medical advisers to submit her medical and pharmacy records as per standard operating procedures in such investigations, an official said on Wednesday.
Ed Winter, the Assistant Chief Coroner, said that it is the standard procedure for all death investigation to shed light on the cause of the people’s death and that there is nothing amiss with how the investigation is going on regarding Whitney Houston’s death.
Investigating officers found several bottles of prescription medicines in the hotel room in Beverly Hills Hotel where Whitney Houston was found dead. They declined to disclose, however, as to what brand of medications were found.
Detectives said that the autopsy results found no indications of foul play. There was no water found in her lungs; thus, apparently Whitney died before she submerged underwater. However, it could take weeks before the coroner's office would finally establish the main cause of the actress’s death.
Whitney Houston was found dead in her hotel room in Beverly Hills Hotel just hours before she was scheduled to give a performance at a pre-Grammy Awards party thrown by producer Clive Davis. Her family has planned for a private church service on Saturday in her hometown of Newark, New Jersey.
Houston, had been a sensation since the release of her first album in 1985, and was one of the world's best-selling artists from the mid-1980s to the late 1990s. But as she had the constant struggle with drugs, her captivating majestic voice became hoarse, and she couldn't hit the high notes once she easily mastered.
Her fame as an actress and as a performer once again hit the papers and interest in her music has skyrocketed since her death, pushing her songs back on to charts and into heavy rotation on the radio.