The FBI has decided to make public the 10 pages of its file devoted to Kurt Cobain.

The federal office has put online, via its website, all the documents related to the investigations around the death of the singer of Nirvana, in 1994. If the FBI has not formally investigated the death of the star, considered as a suicide by the authorities, he received a number of letters from people who believed he had in fact been murdered.

“I am writing to you in the hope of obtaining your assistance in lobbying for a review of Mr. Cobain's death.

Millions of fans around the world would like the inconsistencies surrounding this death to be cleared up once and for all.

It is sad to think that an injustice of this nature can be authorized in the United States ”, one can read in a letter included in the file.

The truth is elsewhere

In one of the latest notes sent by the FBI, we can also read the responses of the federal office to some of these people, which make it possible to understand why it never really took up the case.

“Most homicide investigations are the responsibility of local or state authorities.

For the FBI to be able to open an investigation into a complaint it receives, specific facts must be present to indicate that a violation of federal law falling within our investigative jurisdiction has taken place, ”explains for example A. Robert Walsh, legal adviser to the FBI.

Kurt Cobain's death has fueled all fantasies or theories for years, with many fans refusing to accept that he could have taken his own life when he was at the top of his game.

A private investigator named Tom Grant proves them right, as we can read in the latest FBI memo.

The former Los Angeles County Sheriff's Deputy says qualifying the death as suicide is "hasty judgment."

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25 years ago, Nirvana frontman Kurt Cobain committed suicide

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