Agony for George Michael's family as his body has STILL not been released for funeral a month since his death as the coroner awaits toxicology results 

  • Star died aged 53 on Christmas Day amid rumours it could've been drug-related
  • Inquest is yet to have been opened with police still awaiting toxicology results
  • Officers are not treating Michael's death, at his Oxfordshire home, as suspicious 

George Michael's body has still not been released for a funeral a month after his death as the coroner awaits toxicology results

George Michael's body has still not been released for a funeral a month after his death as the coroner awaits toxicology results. 

Senior coroner for Oxfordshire Darren Salter has yet to open an inquest into the pop star's death on Christmas Day, at his rural home in Goring-on-Thames, Oxfordshire.

Thames Valley Police has said it is still awaiting the results of toxicology tests on his body organs to ascertain if drug ingestion had played a factor in the singer's death.

Speculation has mounted that the 53-year-old, who had battled addictions to crack cocaine and heroin during his career in the spotlight, may have turned to drugs in his final days.

Detectives said the death was still being treated as 'non-suspicious' although interviews have been carried out in the weeks since.

There have been claims circulating that boyfriend Fadi Fawaz had been spoken to by detectives twice, after a series of contradictory accounts were posted on his Twitter account.

A funeral cannot take place until Michael's body has been released by the coroner, following the opening of the inquest.

It is not known whether it will take place at the parish church beside his riverside house in Goring-on-Thames, or in London, where he also had a home in Highgate.

Fans are seen bringing flowers to George Michael's home in north London following his death on Christmas Day aged just 53

Flowers are left outside George Michael's house in Highgate, north London after the singer was found dead on Christmas Day

Tourists and fans continued to snap selfies outside their idol's home, and a wall beside the house was lined with scented candles and tributes.

Fading bouquets lined the grassy verge beside his house, moved from outside the home where they had blockaded the entrance in the initial days after the death. 

Metallic balloons and laminated messages and photos from around the world were still accumulating as devotees paid tribute to the singer, who rose to fame with Wham! before launching a solo career.

 

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