According to reports, country music superstar Naomi Judd committed suicide.

According to reports, country music superstar Naomi Judd committed suicide.


Naomi Judd had a long battle with health issues, including lupus, hepatitis C and clinical depression. Naomi's death was announced in an official statement from the family's spokesperson. The statement read "It is with great sadness that we announce that Naomi Judd died peacefully at her home on Friday night, November 21 surrounded by her family." Naomia Judd died from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).



 Naomi Judd, a singer and author, died on December 11th at the age of 63. Naomi was born in 1946 in Ashland, Kentucky to John and Bobbie Judd. Her father served as a Baptist minister and her mother was a mathematics professor. Naomi grew up living with her parents in Kentucky until she graduated from high school when she moved to Tennessee with her husband. Her marriage only lasted three years due to abuse that led to divorce. She returned home to Kentucky where she started working as an administrative assistant for the state legislature while finishing college at night school. In 1973, she became pregnant but suffered complications which led her to miscarrying later that year at the age of 22 after six months of pregnancy; this event caused Naomi's depression which then led into drug use until 1979 when she realized it was not helping make things better for herself or other people around her so she stopped using drugs altogether. In 1981, Judd became pregnant again but suffered another miscarriage which made it difficult for her even more because there were no health problems during this time period which could have been attributed towards this loss; instead, she began blaming herself for not being able to carry a baby successfully full-term past six months throughout both pregnancies because doctors said "the uterus is

What Causes the death of Naomi Judd



She is a singer and an American author. Judd has written seven books, four of which are best sellers. One of her books, "Love Can Build a Bridge," was co-authored by her daughter Wynonna. Naomi Judd's father was Michael Charles Ciminella, who died when she was three years old; he sold used cars and played the fiddle at dances on weekends. Her mother remarried to William Mignon Smith Jr., who helped raise Naomi and her two sisters, Chrystal Ann (1948) and half-sister Ashley Nicole (1950), as well as his own three children from a previous marriage: Sonja Suzanne (1947), Billy Gene (1949) and Kenny Earl (1951). When Naomi turned 16-years-old she left home to pursue a singing career but returned when she became pregnant with Wynonna Judd's half sister Ashley Nicole Ciminella in November 1971

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