Police have raided Liam Payne's hotel following the star's sudden balcony death.
Photos have emerged of police entering the building as they look for more information surrounding Liam's death. Liam passed away on Wednesday October 16 after he fell from the balcony in his third story hotel room on Argentina.
The police can be seen wearing light blue jackets as they were photographed speaking to hotel staff. Liam's death has shocked the world and police are said to be requesting further information from the hotel in the Argentinian capital, with sources claiming the venue "must provide" more security footage to investigators. It's also said more information regarding who was working on the day has been requested.
According to US Weekly, police are seeking to identify which Casa Sur workers had been working on the day of star's death as well as in the days leading up to the tragedy. As part of the police raid, a source told the publication, that they were seeking documents within the hotel's registration books as well as taking information from its computers.
Liam's bodyguard Paul Higgins was seen with the police at the establishment reviewing security footage. He was also seen interviewing several hotel employees to try to find out who reportedly supplied the late One Direction singer Liam with alleged narcotics as widely reported on mainstream media.
According to Argentine media reports, the singer had traces of cocaine in his body, forensic experts have discovered. Infobae said materials extracted from the singer's body in an autopsy following his death last Wednesday had "determined the presence of the Class-A drug."
The 31-year-old had reportedly taken a mixture of drugs known as 'pink cocaine' before his tragic death last week. Materials extracted from the star's body in an autopsy following his death on Wednesday had reportedly found the presence of the drug, which contains a lethal mixture of MDMA, ketamine, methamphetamine, cocaine, benzodiazepine and crack.
The designer drug, which dates back to the 1970s and resurfaced in its modern form in Colombia around 2010, quickly grew in popularity in Latin America, and has now spread to Europe. Pink cocaine has been linked to a growing number of drug-related deaths in recent years.
The drug is typically found in powder or pill form and is known for its pink colour which is artificially added to make it more appealing. One of the main concerns about pink cocaine, sometimes known as 'tusi', stems from the erratic mix of substances, which are equally dangerous. Liam died after suffering multiple traumas leading to an "internal and external haemorrhage".
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