Mitt Romney’s Sister-in-Law Left Suicide Note In Book of Mormon, Had Xanax In System
Mitt Romney’s Sister-In-Law
Suicide Note In Book of Mormon, Xanax In System
Published
Mitt Romney‘s sister-in-law, Carrie, tragically left a handwritten suicide note tucked inside a Book of Mormon and had Xanax in her system when she passed away, as revealed by the L.A. County Medical Examiner.
The report states that detectives found a Book of Mormon on the front passenger seat of Carrie’s car, with a handwritten suicide note in the final pages. Additionally, medications were discovered inside the vehicle.
The medical examiner’s report indicates that Carrie had 6.3 ng/mL of Xanax in her system at the time of her death. Witnesses saw her pacing on the top level of a parking structure, looking at security cameras and the edge of the parapet. Surveillance footage captured her final moments.
The medical examiner’s findings state that the injury occurred when Carrie fell backward from a seated position on the rooftop parapet.
Carrie tragically died from blunt traumatic injuries after falling from the rooftop of a parking structure in Valencia, California, back in October.
Carrie’s husband, Scott Romney, who is Mitt’s brother, had reported her missing to the Sheriff’s Department. He informed authorities about her previous incident of driving her car off a cliff two years prior and her ongoing struggle with anxiety.
At the time of her tragic passing, Carrie was in the midst of a divorce with Scott, who had filed in June citing “irreconcilable differences.” The couple had tied the knot in 2016, and Carrie was Scott’s third wife.



