Dolores' music both on her own and with her band, The Cranberries, dominated Amazon's music sales Monday after news broke of her death -- with one of The Cranberries' albums, "Something Else" surging at 913,350% in sales.
Her tunes also occupy the other top 4 slots for trending albums, which are up 147,552% ("Are You Listening?"), 107,520% ('Everybody Else is Doing It'), 93,781% ("To the Faithful Departed") and 77,096% ("Wake Up and Smell the Coffee"), respectively.
Amazon has also reported a leap in sales according to TMZ, with sales surging on the site by 913,350% of their album Something Else.
Fentanyl, a synthetic opioid that is reportedly 50 times as strong as heroin. Authorities found counterfeit fentanyl by the singer’s bed, and the LPD source noted that suicide was suspected but that a toxicology report would need to be conducted before determining the official cause of death.
The police found counterfeit doses of Fentanyl next to the body of the singer who died on January 15 at the age of 46
The Santa Monica Observerreported that a source in the London Police Department confirmed Dolores O’Riordan died of Fentanyl poisoning in a overdose.
Counterfeit Fentanyl was allegedly found by her bed in a London hotel and the singer was declared dead at the scene.
Before unbalancing the authorities await the results of the toxicological examination but it is not excluded that it was a suicide by overdose.
Between 8 and 12 years of age, Dolores was abused by a person who enjoyed the trust of her family. A long-kept secret, which caused depression, anorexia and bad thoughts, of the “suicide” genre.