But the police weren’t interested in his theories, and the media had already pronounced Cobain a tragic case of self-destruction. (Inexplicably, photos of the death scene weren’t developed for 20 years.) Strangely, Love retained Grant to figure out Cobain’s activities during the missing days - even after he began pointing out the myriad gaps and conflicts in her own statements. Many later wondered whether that was even possible (wouldn’t he have instantly passed out from the drug?), but police pronounced it a suicide with questionable haste, allowing various evidence to be destroyed or unexamined. He’d evidently shot himself to death after injecting himself with three times the lethal dosage of heroin. (Veteran character actor Daniel Roebuck plays Grant, while Sarah Scott delivers a full-on rocker-gorgon version of Love.) Eventually Grant went up to Seattle, but the intel Love and various associates gave him produced more inconsistencies - yet no Cobain, who in fact was already lying dead in a sort of attic above the garage that Grant hadn’t been told about. But her own contradictory statements and constantly shifting agenda struck him as so suspicious he immediately began recording all their conversations, heard here both in original form and as dialogue between actors. County Sheriff’s Detective turned private investigator Tom Grant to track his whereabouts. Dave played audio from Soaked In Bleach of Norm Stamper, Seattle's police chief when Cobain was found dead, and he conceded the case should be reopened.When Cobain went AWOL from a Los Angeles rehab center, Love hired former L.A. It should have taken much longer to determine if Cobain's death was a suicide, Statler suggested. "According to what their own reports say, the findings actually should be undetermined," he declared. "It still is my opinion that there was foul play involved, although that's not the conclusion of at this point," Statler admitted, noting the goal of his film is to get the Seattle Police Department to change their findings in the Cobain case from suicide to undetermined. The note found at the scene had nothing to do with suicide though it was labeled as such, Grant added. Grant outlined several important details of the case, including a statement by close friend Dylan Carlson that Cobain was not suicidal, the shotgun found at the scene had been purchased before Cobain had left for rehab, and the Seattle police were predisposed to the idea of suicide from Love's distorted missing persons report as well as the investigation of a corrupt cop. "Within thirty days after I started working for Courtney, I sent her a letter telling her I was suspicious of what was going on," he continued. In addition, Love claimed pressing business was keeping her in Los Angeles, though her own lawyer, Rosemary Carroll, acknowledged Love had nothing going on at the time and could have travelled to Seattle to search for Cobain, Grant explained.
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Most of what Love said about Cobain did not make sense, and she wanted other locations surveilled but not their main house in Seattle, he revealed.
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Grant, who has personally investigated Cobain's death, was hired by Cobain's then-wife Courtney Love to locate him after he had fled rehab on April 1, 1994. Private investigator Tom Grant and Soaked In Bleach director Benjamin Statler joined guest host Dave Schrader ( email) to discuss the suspicious circumstances surrounding the death of Nirvana front-man Kurt Cobain, the bungled investigation of his reported suicide, and the evidence that points to murder.