Two decades after Kurt Cobain's death on April 5, 1994, Seattle police released haunting never-before-seen photos from the scene of his suicide.
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Kurt Cobain's former home in Seattle had a small greenhouse above the garage. That greenhouse is where his body was found. Seattle Police Department
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Cobain had escaped from the Exodus Recovery Center in California mere days before his body was discovered. The patient wristband was still on his wrist when he died.Seattle Police Department
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Cobain kept his drugs and paraphernalia in an old Tom Moore's cigar box. The box was found near his dead body.Seattle Police Department
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Cobain's cigarettes, sunglasses, wallet, and towels were also found near the body. Many believe that Cobain placed the towels there so clean-up would be a little easier after his death.Seattle Police Department
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A bed of soil in the greenhouse, with Cobain's alleged suicide letter atop.Seattle Police Department
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The letter was addressed to "Boddah," Cobain's childhood imaginary friend.Seattle Police Department
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Cobain's suicide note is steeped in controversy, as many believe the handwriting and thematic content in the first and second halves of the note don't match up. Seattle Police Department
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Not everyone was convinced Cobain killed himself.Seattle Police Department
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Cobain's former lawyer and a private investigator were both suspicious of the suicide letter.Seattle Police Department
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Detective Michael Ciesynski holds the six-pound Remington 20-gauge shotgun Cobain allegedly used to kill himself. Seattle Police Department
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Some have argued that a person with a high concentration of heroin in their system would've never been able to kill themselves with a six-pound Remington 20-gauge and its long barrel. Seattle Police Department
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Cobain was wearing his Converse One Stars when he died. The box of shotgun shells was found at the scene.Seattle Police Department
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Cobain's wallet was left on the floor and opened to his driver's license. Heavier Than Heaven author Charles R. Cross believes he did this intentionally to help those who found him to identify his body.Seattle Police Department
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The suicide note was written in red ink and left pierced into a flower bed with the pen used to write it. Seattle Police Department
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The note contains several deeply sad sentiments regarding Cobain's inability to appreciate his accomplishments.Seattle Police Department
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The last line of Kurt Cobain's suicide note reads: "I don’t have the passion anymore, and so remember, it’s better to burn out than to fade away."Seattle Police Department
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None of the publicly released photos show Kurt Cobain's full body. Many are curious why this is the case.Seattle Police Department
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Cobain's sunglasses, never to be worn again.Seattle Police Department
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The Tom Moore cigar box that contained Kurt Cobain's personal stash of drugs and paraphernalia.Seattle Police Department
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Cobain supposedly propped this stool against the doors of the greenhouse from inside.Seattle Police Department
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The entrance to the greenhouse patio.Seattle Police Department
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As soon as word got out on the radio, press and fans headed to Cobain's house to see if it was true. Tragically, it was.Seattle Police Department
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The entrance to the greenhouse, blocked off to deter the press from publishing photos during the open investigation.Seattle Police Department
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Several detectives investigated the property after Cobain's body was discovered.Seattle Police Department
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Though the police eventually blocked out the entrance, one photo was taken (of Cobain on the floor) before they did.Seattle Police Department
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Cobain grew up near the lush landscapes of Seattle that surrounded his former home.Seattle Police Department
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Unfortunately, nobody found Cobain barricaded in the greenhouse until it was too late.Seattle Police Department
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Kurt Cobain's former house is an unofficial memorial spot to this day. Seattle Police Department
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The fog of Seattle, gloomily covering Cobain's former home with solemnity.Seattle Police Department
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29 Heartbreaking Photos From The Scene Of Kurt Cobain’s Suicide
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In the early 1990s, Nirvana frontman Kurt Cobain took American pop culture by storm. His face appeared on T-shirts and magazine covers while his music rose to the top of the Billboard charts.
But this story came to a tragic end when Kurt Cobain's dead body was discovered in his Seattle home on April 8, 1994. Dead from an apparent suicide by a gunshot to the head, the grunge icon was gone at the age of just 27.
Twenty years later, photos from the scene of Kurt Cobain's death were released, allowing the world to confront this tragedy like never before. And though more photos of Kurt Cobain's suicide are out there, including fully-explicit photos of Cobain's body, many have yet to be released.
Nevertheless, the haunting glimpse that the public has been given into the scene of Kurt Cobain's death is as heartbreaking now as it was at the moment of his untimely demise.
Frank Micelotta/Getty ImagesKurt Cobain at the taping of MTV Unplugged, in New York. Nov. 18, 1993.
Inside The Tragedy Of Kurt Cobain's Suicide
Kurt Cobain had only spent a couple of days in a California rehab center due to his heroin addiction in early 1994 before he scaled the facility's six-foot brick wall and made his way home to Seattle.
By the time his wife Courtney Love could cancel his credit cards, Cobain was already back in Washington. Some reported seeing him walking around, hanging out in a park, and spending the night at his old home in Carnation. Meanwhile, his mother, Wendy O'Connor, issued a missing person's report.
THERESE FRARE/AFP/GettyImagesA police officer stands guard outside of the greenhouse where Cobain's body was found.
Investigators, friends, and relatives all combed the town and even searched his Seattle home three times. But nobody thought to look in his greenhouse.
On April 8, 1994, an electrician did — and stumbled upon the grisly scene of Kurt Cobain's death.
Kurt Cobain was dead on the floor with a shotgun across his chest, fresh injections in both of his arms, and a cigar box full of drugs beside him. According to a medical examiner's report, he had been lying there at the scene of his death for two and a half days. In the end, Kurt Cobain's body was identifiable only by his fingerprints.
A high concentration of heroin was found in Cobain's bloodstream, along with traces of Valium. A suicide note was also left behind at the scene of Cobain's death.
In 2014, nearly 20 years after Kurt Cobain's death, the Seattle Police Department released never-before-seen photos of the grisly crime scene.
Publicized Photos Of Kurt Cobain's Death And The Crime Scene
Kurt Cobain's suicide photos were taken by responding officers from the Seattle Police Department inside the greenhouse at Cobain's home, shortly after he was discovered on April 8, 1994.
None of the photos show Kurt Cobain's body of face in full. The Seattle Police Department announced that it developed the photos in 2014 as part of the procedure in re-examining his cause of death, which has been ruled a suicide since 1994.
In 2016, additional photos from the scene of Kurt Cobain's death were released that showed the shotgun he allegedly used to kill himself. These photographs eerily transport viewers to this dark day.
Seattle Police DepartmentHe was still wearing a patient wristband from the rehab facility he had escaped from a few days earlier when he died.
Unreleased Photos Of Kurt Cobain's Death Scene And His Body
There are other photos from the scene of Kurt Cobain's death that have yet to be released — including images of Cobain's full body.
For some journalists like Richard Lee, these images are of public interest and vital to assess whether or not the singer actually committed suicide or was murdered. Lee was described in court documents as "a conspiracy theorist who believes that Mr. Cobain was murdered." However, he's far from the only person who thinks that.
He's researched the apparent suicide for years and even hosted a show called Now See It Person to Person: Kurt Cobain Was Murdered.
Lee sued the city of Seattle and its police department in 2014 to reinvestigate the case, citing Washington State's Public Records Act, but the courts decided the mysterious photos from the scene of Kurt Cobain's death weren't enough to warrant a new investigation.
Seattle Police DepartmentKurt Cobain had his cigar box stash of heroin, sunglasses, and other personal belongings with him when he died.
A lower court said releasing these photos would violate both Courtney Love and Frances Bean Cobain's privacy. Love was worried about the potential release as early as 1995 when, according to the police, she called and asked if the photos could be destroyed to prevent any mistaken release.
Love claimed:
"I have never seen these graphic and disturbing images, nor do I ever want to. Certainly, public disclosure would reopen all my old wounds and cause me and my family permanent — indeed, endless and needless — pain and suffering, and would be a gross violation of our privacy interests...[the photos would] "wind up on the internet, where they would be permanently circulated. By virtue of the fact that Kurt is my late husband, they will also likely end up in search results about myself. I would unavoidably come across them, and I would never be able to erase those haunting images from my mind. I cannot even imagine the enormity of the trauma and mental scarring this would cause me, not to mention many others."
Frances Bean Cobain filed a similar declaration, citing mental and emotional distress as the primary reason not to release these photos of Kurt Cobain's death:
"I once saw mock photos depicting my father's body. That experience irreparably scarred me. I cannot imagine how terrible it would be knowing that the photographs Mr. Lee seeks were public and that I or any of my loved ones, including my father's mother and sisters, might inadvertently see them. Release and publication of the photographs would shock me and exacerbate the post-traumatic stress that I have suffered since childhood. I have had to cope with many personal issues because of my father's death. Coping with even the possibility that those photographs could be made public is very difficult. Further sensationalizing it through the release of these pictures would cause us indescribable pain."
Fortunately, Frances Bean Cobain seems to have built a quiet, healthy life for herself in recent years. As for Courtney Love, it seems she can rest easy knowing that the courts are on her side. They see that she's certainly suffered enough.
And to save his family from further anguish, it's likely that more photos from the scene of Kurt Cobain's death may never be released. But the images that have surfaced certainly convey the tragedy of the grunge icon's untimely demise.
After seeing these heartwrenching photos of Kurt Cobain's suicide, learn about the tragic story of Evelyn McHale and "the most beautiful suicide." Then, take a look at history's most famous suicides.