An accidental overdose of a battery of prescription drugs led to it rapper Enchanting’s sudden death in June at the age of 26.
According to the Dallas County Medical Examiner’s Office, a one-time protégé of Gucci Mane — whose real name was Channing Nicole Larry — died of an overdose involving a combination of the opioid painkiller oxycodone and benzodiazepinesa class of depressants that includes medications such as Valium, Xanax, and Klonopin.
The autopsy report, obtained Friday by TMZ, confirmed that she died at Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas.
On June 11, Texas rapper Lil CJ Kasino broke the news on social media that Enchanting’s family had taken her off life support after she passed out the day before.
According to gossip outlet The Shade Room, Enchanting had suffered severe withdrawals in the days leading up to her hospitalization and eventually fell into critical condition after an alleged overdose.
“She came to my house for the last four days to be cleaned,” a representative from her management team told the outlet. “She did her best and I did everything I could to help her.”
Born in Germany, where her father was stationed in the US Army “No desire” the artist grew up in Atlanta and spent his teenage years in Fort Worth, Texas.
After pursuing a rap career after high school, she signed to Gucci Mane’s 1017 Records in 2020. She went on to release two full-length albums for the label and had three songs featured on the soundtrack to HBO’s “Rap Sh!t Season 2.” “
Enchanting also appeared on Big Scarr’s 2023 posthumous album The Secret Weapon, which was released shortly after he reportedly overdosed on prescription pills the previous year at the age of 22.
In a twist of fate, Enchanting addressed the risks of drug use a year before her own death – opening up about how her close friend took “a fake pill” and died of a heart attack the next day.
“You have to be realistic. I understand that people do whatever they do, if they feel like they’re going through pain or they’re just going through something, they want to feel better,” she said in a 2023 interview on Podcast “Cigar Talk”. “But it’s a big risk. Like you can take a pill and literally die like instantly… it’s really not worth it at the end of the day.”