The autopsy report determined exactly what kind of drugs the 19-year-old who had a fatal outcome consumed.
July 2, the sad news of the death of Leandro De Niro Rodríguez, grandson of the well-known American actor, Robert De Niro, was known.
The loss shocked all of Hollywood and to this day various people continue to send messages of encouragement to the family of the protagonist of Goodfellas.
At that time, Robert De Niro had expressed on social networks the deep sorrow caused by the tragedy that struck his family: "I am deeply distressed by the death of my beloved grandson."
The first to speak about the cause of the death of Leandro De Niro Rodríguez had been his mother, Drena De Niro, through a statement that said it was an overdose, by mixing certain pills mixed with fentanyl, a deadly combination for the body.
"Someone sold him pills that had fentanyl, they knew what they were doing and they sold them anyway... For those people who alter those damn pills and sell them, my son is gone forever," Robert De Niro's daughter had expressed about the death of his son.
However, a few hours ago the results of the forensic investigation were revealed, which determined that Leandro De Niro Rodríguez died from the ingestion of fentanyl, cocaine, ketamine, bromazepam, alprazolam, and clonazepam. A combination that proved fatal.
This information confirms the first hypothesis that the police handled, based on what had been found in the apartment where the body was. In addition, it is suspected that the fake Xanax pills that the young man had bought were mixed with fentanyl, although this information has not yet been officially confirmed.
Based on this suspicion, the police arrested Sofia Haley Marks, who would have sold her the pills of Robert De Niro's grandson. She is about a 20-year-old girl, who responds to the nickname "Princess Oxycodone" or "Princess Percocet", after the brand name of the original pills.
Leandro De Niro Rodríguez was 19 years old at the time of death. His body was found in his New York apartment with several items for drug use next to him and remains of different drugs.