Naomi Judd died from a single gunshot to the head and left a suicide note near her body after suffering with depression, autopsy reveals
- The autopsy revealed that the singer died of a self-inflicted single bullet wound to the head when she died in April 2022
- Judd also left a suicide note near her body, the autopsy revealed
- Two weeks before her shocking death, Naomi stood on stage with her daughter Wynonna in a surprise reunion at the Country Music Awards in April 2022
Naomi Judd died from a single gunshot to the head and left a suicide note near her body, an autopsy report has revealed.
The country superstar died of a self-inflicted bullet wound in April 2022 at the age of 76, the medical examiner’s office in Nashville confirmed on Friday.
According to the report Judd battled with ‘significant’ anxiety, depression and bipolar disorder.
The contents of the suicide note Judd wrote before her death has not been released. A toxicology report concluded that the singer had several different drugs in her system at the time of death.
Two weeks before her shocking death, Naomi stood on stage with her daughter Wynonna in a surprise reunion at the Country Music Awards in April 2022.
The country superstar died of a self-inflicted bullet wound in April 2022 at the age of 76, the medical examiner’s office in Nashville confirmed on Friday
This was one of Naomi Judd’s final appearances in public before her death on April 30, 2022. She is pictured waving at crowds at the CMT Music Awards on April 11, 2022
They sang a powerful song of reconciliation, written by Naomi – ‘Love Can Build A Bridge’ in what was her last public appearance before her suicide.
The autopsy report stated: ‘She had an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound and was transported to Williamson Medical Center where she was pronounced dead shortly after arrival.
‘Per family, the decedent has had prior suicidal ideations and recent life stressors.
‘A weapon and a note with suicidal connotations were found near the decedent at the scene.’
According to the report, the gunshot ‘perforated through the right side of the scalp and entered the skull through an entrance-type gunshot wound.’
The Judds were the most successful country singers of the 80s, winning five Grammys, nine CMAs, and selling 20million records.
In the immediate aftermath of their mother’s death Ashley and Wynonna supported each other in their loss, attending her induction into the Country Music Hall of Fame, May 1, the day after their mother’s suicide.
According to the report, the gunshot that killed Judd ‘perforated through the right side of the scalp and entered the skull through an entrance-type gunshot wound’
Naomi and Wynonna pictured in their heyday
On May 29, one month after her mother’s death, Wynonna wrote an emotional Instagram post in which she spoke of her unbearable grief and her fear that she would never be able to ‘surrender to the truth’ of the way her mother left this life
Naomi had a tumultuous upbringing – and in part she attributed her depression to the sexual abuse she suffered at the hands of an uncle when she was just three.
When she was 22, Naomi was raped and beaten by an ex-boyfriend, a trauma that saw her flee Los Angeles for rural Kentucky, where she lived with her children on welfare while training to become a nurse.
They lived in a home with no electricity, phone, television or indoor plumbing.
Naomi moved to Nashville when she qualified and ultimately became head nurse in an intensive care unit.
It was there that she learned a patient’s father was in the music industry. She made a tape of herself singing with Wynonna, gave it to him and ‘The Judds’ career in music was launched.
On May 29, one month after her mother’s death, Wynonna wrote an emotional Instagram post in which she spoke of her unbearable grief and her fear that she would never be able to ‘surrender to the truth’ of the way her mother left this life.
She wrote about ‘personal healing,’ her sense of being ‘helpless’ and the few things she knew in the face of such despair and drama.
She said she would continue to fight for her faith, herself and her family, to continue to ‘show up & sing.’
And she vowed to ‘break the cycle’ of addiction and dysfunction that has stalked the Judd women and, with Grace’s incarceration, threatens to tumble into yet another generation.
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