A Los Angeles County Coroners' van exits the Beverly Hilton
Hotel with the body of Whitney Houston who died in a hotel
room yesterday in Beverly Hills. REUTERS/Jonathan Alcorn
Coroners completed their autopsy on the body of singer
Whitney Houston and confirmed that she was found in the bathtub
of her Beverly Hills hotel room, but said the cause of death
would not be determined until more lab tests were completed.
Ed Winter, assistant chief coroner for Los Angeles County,
revealed little about the autopsy at a news conference, but
said medical examiners found no visible signs of trauma or
foul play.
He declined to comment on various media reports that Houston,
48, had drowned in her hotel bathtub, possibly after
succumbing to drugs or alcohol. He added, "I'm not going to
comment on any of the meds or prescriptions that were
obtained."
"I'd just comment that she was found in the bathtub. ... I
believe somebody removed her from the bathtub and the
paramedics did CPR (cardiopulmonary resuscitation) on her."
He said toxicology tests, which would take six to eight weeks
to conduct, would be necessary to determine what factor, if
any, drugs or alcohol might have played in Houston's death.
He also said a "security hold" had been placed on the case,
as has been done in previous high-profile investigations, to
keep further details from being divulged.
The coroner's briefing came as the Grammy Awards opened a few
miles away at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, where
rapper-actor LL Cool J payed tribute to the late pop star
just after the start of the star-studded music show.
"We've had a death in our family and so at least for me ...
the only thing that feels right is to begin with a prayer for
a woman we loved, for our fallen sister, Whitney Houston," he
said.
His brief prayer was followed by a clip of Houston singing
her hit, "I Will Always Love You," as the crowd responded
with a standing ovation.
Houston, who enjoyed tremendous professional success but
struggled with drug abuse for years, died on Saturday
afternoon (local time) in a fourth-floor room at the Beverly
Hilton Hotel. She was at the hotel to attend an annual
pre-Grammy gala held that evening by her mentor, record mogul
Clive Davis.
The Grammy salute Sunday capped an emotional day for those
closest to the pop diva and those who admired her as an
entertainer. From the New Jersey church where Houston's
singing career first took flight to the hotel where her life
abruptly ended, family and fans expressed their grief on
Sunday with prayer, tears and raw anguish.
Houston's only child, daughter Bobbi Kristina Brown, 18, was
taken by paramedics from the hotel to nearby Cedars-Sinai
Medical Center on Sunday suffering from anxiety, Beverly
Hills police and fire officials said.
A fire department spokeswoman declined to disclose any
information about the daughter's medical condition but said
she was "awake and talking" at the time she was transported.
Brown, who was reported by celebrity news website TMZ.com as
being enraged at authorities for not being allowed into the
hotel room where her mother's body was found, was treated at
the hospital for stress and released, a source close to the
family told Reuters. A hospital spokeswoman declined comment.
CNN reported that Houston's ex-husband, R&B singer Bobby
Brown, canceled a long-scheduled performance in Nashville,
Tennessee, with his former band, New Edition, to fly back to
Los Angeles and attend to the couple's daughter.
At the New Hope Baptist Church in Newark, New Jersey,
Houston's hometown, fans and admirers gathered to celebrate
her life during three Sunday services, portions of which were
devoted to the singer and her family.
Cards and flowers were tied to the railings of the church,
where congregants hugged and cried at the entrance. Among
those paying their respects was the Reverend Jesse Jackson,
the civil rights activist.
"The suddenness of it all leaves us traumatized," said
Jackson, who watched Houston grow up and sing at New Hope. It
was in that red brick church on a quiet backstreet near
downtown Newark where Houston's career began as a soloist in
a gospel choir in the 1970s.
While the cause of Houston's death remained undetermined,
media reports on Sunday focused on her public behavior in the
hours before her death.
The Los Angeles Times said Houston, disheveled, sweaty and
smelling of alcohol, was behaving erratically when she
stopped by the Hilton two days earlier, accompanied by her
daughter, for rehearsals. She was seen flailing her hands
frenetically, skipping around the ballroom and wandering
aimlessless through the lobby, the newspaper said.
Members of Houston's family expressed their grief in a brief
statement saying they were "devastated" by her loss.
"This is an unimaginable tragedy and we will miss her
terribly," it said. "We appreciate the outpouring of love and
support from her fans and friends."
In a separate statement issued through People magazine,
former husband Bobby Brown, with whom she had shared a long
struggle with substance abuse, said, "I am deeply saddened at
the passing of my ex-wife, Whitney Houston."
Brown was described by an unnamed relative as "beside
himself" with grief, according to the magazine.
On the West Coast, the First AME Church of Los Angeles, the
city's oldest African-American congregation, held a special
moment of silence in Houston's memory.
"Many of us were rooting and pulling for her because she has
been a blessing to this generation with talent, with a
special anointed voice," Pastor John Hunter told
parishioners. "We will miss her. This world will miss her."
Houston's songs were already dominating Internet music sales
early on Sunday. Her album "Whitney Houston - The Greatest
Hits" was the top seller in the music category on Amazon.com,
and her signature hit, "I Will Always Love You," was the No.
1 download at iTunes.
Over the course of a 30-year career in which she established
herself as one of the most-admired and influential singers of
her time, Houston won six Grammys, 30 Billboard awards and 22
American Music Awards.
The soundtrack for the hit movie in which she starred, "The
Bodyguard," was among the best-selling film soundtracks ever.
By the early 1990s, Houston's success on stage was
accompanied by an increasingly troubled personal life. In
1992 she married singer Bobby Brown and their tumultuous 14
years together were marred by drug abuse and domestic
violence.
The last 10 years of Houston's life were dominated by drug
use, rumours of relapses and trips to rehab.
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