Autopsy was performed on Prince on Friday
A four-hour autopsy was performed on Prince on Friday, but authorities said they are no closer to determining how the iconic musician died.
“It was a meticulous exam,” said Martha Weaver, spokeswoman for the Midwest Medical Examiners Office.
Carver County Sheriff Jim Olson, whose officers responded to a 911 call at Prince’s Paisley Park estate Thursday morning, said the artist’s body showed no signs of trauma.
“There was no sign of violence,” Olson said at a Friday afternoon news conference.
Nor do investigators have “reason to believe it was suicide,” he said. “The rest of it is under investigation.”
“He had been dropped off there at Paisley Park,” Olson said.
Staff members at the estate found the singer unconscious in an elevator on the property at about 9:43 a.m. Thursday. Olson said first responders tried to perform CPR on Prince, but could not revive him. Authorities pronounced him deceased 24 minutes later, but it is not yet known how long he might have been dead.
Even though the physical autopsy is finished, officials say it could take several days to weeks before Prince’s manner of death is confirmed and made public.
The longest delay will be for the results of toxicology testing.
“It will take days and weeks to complete those particular investigations,” Weaver said.
The sheriff declined to address speculation that Prince’s death was caused by a reported abuse of prescription pain pills.
“I’m not able to confirm that at this time at all,” Olson said. “There have been so many rumors out that I’ve read about. I don’t know if I can dispel all the rumors that are out there.”
Investigators said their probe would include conversations with the popular performer’s doctors and an examination of his medical and family history.
Prince was on tour in the U.S. this month and played a show in Atlanta the night of the April 14. The superstar was briefly hospitalized while on his way home after his plane made an emergency landing in Illinois because he was reportedly suffering from the flu.
“Between us and the medical examiner, we will be looking at all of that,” the sheriff said of the recent hospital visit. “This case is 29 hours old and continues to evolve for us.”
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