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The family of Naomi Judd filed a notice of motion to dismiss the case over the singer’s death records.

On Monday, Naomi Judd’s family voluntarily decided to drop the lawsuit it had first brought to keep the late country singer’s death records secret.

The Judd family petitioned Williamson County Chancery Court in August to have the death investigation findings sealed.

According to the appeal, the documents included audio and video interviews done with family soon after Judd’s death. According to the appeal, disclosing such information would cause “severe pain and irreparable injury” to the family.

“The dissemination of these information would cause the whole family sorrow for years to come,” the court ordered.

ASHLEY and WYNONNA, the daughters of Naomi Judd, are reportedly listed as beneficiaries of a trust.

Wynonna and Ashley Strickland, the daughters of Larry Strickland and Judd, filed a petition for injunctive relief in Williamson County, Tennessee, in August. A temporary court order to keep the documents secret was given to them.

In April, Judd passed away at her Tennessee home. He was 76 years old.

Ashley, Naomi’s daughter, previously disclosed that her mother committed suicide, albeit the family claimed that she passed away due to “the sickness of mental illness.”

Naomi Judd passed away, according to a statement posted on social media by Wynonna Judd and her sister Ashley.

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The message said, “Today we sisters faced a tragedy.” “Mental illness claimed the life of our lovely mother. We are broken. We are enduring profound loss, but we are aware that she was also beloved by her audience. We are in uncharted waters.

The family is now prepared to have the case dropped, according to the notification submitted on Monday.

That’s partly because the journalists who asked for the police records didn’t ask for body cam video from inside the house or pictures of the dead. Additionally, the notification said that a state politician will be presenting a measure that would make death inquiry data confidential in cases when the decedent died naturally.

The voluntary dismissal requires judicial approval.

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