1 of 12
Photo credit: Getty Images
2 of 12
Photo credit: Getty Images
Sources accuse Glen’s fourth and final wife,
Kim, of dodging a coroner’s detailed examination of his remains by claiming the
Alzheimer’s-ravaged singer converted to a little-known religious sect — Messianic Judaism — that requires a quickie funeral.
3 of 12
Photo credit: Getty Images
Sources accuse Glen’s fourth and final wife,
Kim, of dodging a coroner’s detailed examination of his remains by claiming the
Alzheimer’s-ravaged singer converted to a little-known religious sect — Messianic Judaism — that requires a quickie funeral.
The 81-year-old "Rhinestone Cowboy" singer was buried just two days after his Aug. 8 passing and the Nashville Medical Examiner’s Office confirm for
The National ENQUIRER that “Glen Campbell’s body did not come here for an autopsy.”
4 of 12
Photo credit: Getty Images
Sources accuse Glen’s fourth and final wife,
Kim, of dodging a coroner’s detailed examination of his remains by claiming the
Alzheimer’s-ravaged singer converted to a little-known religious sect — Messianic Judaism — that requires a quickie funeral.
The 81-year-old "Rhinestone Cowboy" singer was buried just two days after his Aug. 8 passing and the Nashville Medical Examiner’s Office confirm for
The National ENQUIRER that “Glen Campbell’s body did not come here for an autopsy.”
“Kim was the
most tightly controlling of Glen’s four wives,” says
Mark Bego, who wrote "Life with My Father, Glen Campbell" with the star’s daughter
Debby (left). “Towards the end of his life, Kim suddenly convinced Glen they were both going to convert to Messianic Judaism.
5 of 12
Photo credit: Getty Images
Sources accuse Glen’s fourth and final wife,
Kim, of dodging a coroner’s detailed examination of his remains by claiming the
Alzheimer’s-ravaged singer converted to a little-known religious sect — Messianic Judaism — that requires a quickie funeral.
The 81-year-old "Rhinestone Cowboy" singer was buried just two days after his Aug. 8 passing and the Nashville Medical Examiner’s Office confirm for
The National ENQUIRER that “Glen Campbell’s body did not come here for an autopsy.”
“Kim was the
most tightly controlling of Glen’s four wives,” says
Mark Bego, who wrote "Life with My Father, Glen Campbell" with the star’s daughter
Debby (left). “Towards the end of his life, Kim suddenly convinced Glen they were both going to convert to Messianic Judaism.
“It is basically a Jews for Jesus cult and gave Kim a window to have Glen buried 24 to 48 hours after his death. It was also her manipulative way to plan Glen’s funeral so quickly and secretly that his five children from previous marriages could be ignored and kept away from the funeral and burial.
She truly is those older five children’s monster-in-law.”
6 of 12
Photo credit: Getty Images
Sources accuse Glen’s fourth and final wife,
Kim, of dodging a coroner’s detailed examination of his remains by claiming the
Alzheimer’s-ravaged singer converted to a little-known religious sect — Messianic Judaism — that requires a quickie funeral.
The 81-year-old "Rhinestone Cowboy" singer was buried just two days after his Aug. 8 passing and the Nashville Medical Examiner’s Office confirm for
The National ENQUIRER that “Glen Campbell’s body did not come here for an autopsy.”
“Kim was the
most tightly controlling of Glen’s four wives,” says
Mark Bego, who wrote "Life with My Father, Glen Campbell" with the star’s daughter
Debby (left). “Towards the end of his life, Kim suddenly convinced Glen they were both going to convert to Messianic Judaism.
“It is basically a Jews for Jesus cult and gave Kim a window to have Glen buried 24 to 48 hours after his death. It was also her manipulative way to plan Glen’s funeral so quickly and secretly that his five children from previous marriages could be ignored and kept away from the funeral and burial.
She truly is those older five children’s monster-in-law.”
Now, as part of a raging family feud between Kim and Glen’s kids Debby and
Travis (left, with wife
Trudy Andes Campbell), charges have surfaced the widow wanted to prevent the coroner from discovering the
singer’s ravaged condition when she had him record a final album, "Adios," released a month before his death.
7 of 12
Photo credit: Getty Images
Sources accuse Glen’s fourth and final wife,
Kim, of dodging a coroner’s detailed examination of his remains by claiming the
Alzheimer’s-ravaged singer converted to a little-known religious sect — Messianic Judaism — that requires a quickie funeral.
The 81-year-old "Rhinestone Cowboy" singer was buried just two days after his Aug. 8 passing and the Nashville Medical Examiner’s Office confirm for
The National ENQUIRER that “Glen Campbell’s body did not come here for an autopsy.”
“Kim was the
most tightly controlling of Glen’s four wives,” says
Mark Bego, who wrote "Life with My Father, Glen Campbell" with the star’s daughter
Debby (left). “Towards the end of his life, Kim suddenly convinced Glen they were both going to convert to Messianic Judaism.
“It is basically a Jews for Jesus cult and gave Kim a window to have Glen buried 24 to 48 hours after his death. It was also her manipulative way to plan Glen’s funeral so quickly and secretly that his five children from previous marriages could be ignored and kept away from the funeral and burial.
She truly is those older five children’s monster-in-law.”
Now, as part of a raging family feud between Kim and Glen’s kids Debby and
Travis (left, with wife
Trudy Andes Campbell), charges have surfaced the widow wanted to prevent the coroner from discovering the
singer’s ravaged condition when she had him record a final album, "Adios," released a month before his death.
“There were accusations Kim and her children with him [including
Cal (left)
and Ashley (right)] were capitalizing on the music legend in his final days as he was
struggling in the last stages of Alzheimer’s,” says a source.
8 of 12
Photo credit: Getty Images
Sources accuse Glen’s fourth and final wife,
Kim, of dodging a coroner’s detailed examination of his remains by claiming the
Alzheimer’s-ravaged singer converted to a little-known religious sect — Messianic Judaism — that requires a quickie funeral.
The 81-year-old "Rhinestone Cowboy" singer was buried just two days after his Aug. 8 passing and the Nashville Medical Examiner’s Office confirm for
The National ENQUIRER that “Glen Campbell’s body did not come here for an autopsy.”
“Kim was the
most tightly controlling of Glen’s four wives,” says
Mark Bego, who wrote "Life with My Father, Glen Campbell" with the star’s daughter
Debby (left). “Towards the end of his life, Kim suddenly convinced Glen they were both going to convert to Messianic Judaism.
“It is basically a Jews for Jesus cult and gave Kim a window to have Glen buried 24 to 48 hours after his death. It was also her manipulative way to plan Glen’s funeral so quickly and secretly that his five children from previous marriages could be ignored and kept away from the funeral and burial.
She truly is those older five children’s monster-in-law.”
Now, as part of a raging family feud between Kim and Glen’s kids Debby and
Travis (left, with wife
Trudy Andes Campbell), charges have surfaced the widow wanted to prevent the coroner from discovering the
singer’s ravaged condition when she had him record a final album, "Adios," released a month before his death.
“There were accusations Kim and her children with him [including
Cal (left)
and Ashley (right)] were capitalizing on the music legend in his final days as he was
struggling in the last stages of Alzheimer’s,” says a source.
Indeed, the country icon was
yanked out of his care facility to a recording studio, where cue cards had to be used to help him record the last album. Kim admits “Glen was barely able to remember the words he was singing at times.”
9 of 12
Photo credit: Getty Images
Sources accuse Glen’s fourth and final wife,
Kim, of dodging a coroner’s detailed examination of his remains by claiming the
Alzheimer’s-ravaged singer converted to a little-known religious sect — Messianic Judaism — that requires a quickie funeral.
The 81-year-old "Rhinestone Cowboy" singer was buried just two days after his Aug. 8 passing and the Nashville Medical Examiner’s Office confirm for
The National ENQUIRER that “Glen Campbell’s body did not come here for an autopsy.”
“Kim was the
most tightly controlling of Glen’s four wives,” says
Mark Bego, who wrote "Life with My Father, Glen Campbell" with the star’s daughter
Debby (left). “Towards the end of his life, Kim suddenly convinced Glen they were both going to convert to Messianic Judaism.
“It is basically a Jews for Jesus cult and gave Kim a window to have Glen buried 24 to 48 hours after his death. It was also her manipulative way to plan Glen’s funeral so quickly and secretly that his five children from previous marriages could be ignored and kept away from the funeral and burial.
She truly is those older five children’s monster-in-law.”
Now, as part of a raging family feud between Kim and Glen’s kids Debby and
Travis (left, with wife
Trudy Andes Campbell), charges have surfaced the widow wanted to prevent the coroner from discovering the
singer’s ravaged condition when she had him record a final album, "Adios," released a month before his death.
“There were accusations Kim and her children with him [including
Cal (left)
and Ashley (right)] were capitalizing on the music legend in his final days as he was
struggling in the last stages of Alzheimer’s,” says a source.
Indeed, the country icon was
yanked out of his care facility to a recording studio, where cue cards had to be used to help him record the last album. Kim admits “Glen was barely able to remember the words he was singing at times.”
She says Glen’s longtime banjo player Carl Jackson (left, with Jimmy Webb and Glen), “held up sheets of paper with large-print lyrics and fed them to him one line at a time.” Kim says a rapid decline in his ability to play the guitar and remember songs created “a feeling of urgency to get him into the studio one last time to capture what magic was left. It was now or never.”
10 of 12
Photo credit: Getty Images
Sources accuse Glen’s fourth and final wife,
Kim, of dodging a coroner’s detailed examination of his remains by claiming the
Alzheimer’s-ravaged singer converted to a little-known religious sect — Messianic Judaism — that requires a quickie funeral.
The 81-year-old "Rhinestone Cowboy" singer was buried just two days after his Aug. 8 passing and the Nashville Medical Examiner’s Office confirm for
The National ENQUIRER that “Glen Campbell’s body did not come here for an autopsy.”
“Kim was the
most tightly controlling of Glen’s four wives,” says
Mark Bego, who wrote "Life with My Father, Glen Campbell" with the star’s daughter
Debby (left). “Towards the end of his life, Kim suddenly convinced Glen they were both going to convert to Messianic Judaism.
“It is basically a Jews for Jesus cult and gave Kim a window to have Glen buried 24 to 48 hours after his death. It was also her manipulative way to plan Glen’s funeral so quickly and secretly that his five children from previous marriages could be ignored and kept away from the funeral and burial.
She truly is those older five children’s monster-in-law.”
Now, as part of a raging family feud between Kim and Glen’s kids Debby and
Travis (left, with wife
Trudy Andes Campbell), charges have surfaced the widow wanted to prevent the coroner from discovering the
singer’s ravaged condition when she had him record a final album, "Adios," released a month before his death.
“There were accusations Kim and her children with him [including
Cal (left)
and Ashley (right)] were capitalizing on the music legend in his final days as he was
struggling in the last stages of Alzheimer’s,” says a source.
Indeed, the country icon was
yanked out of his care facility to a recording studio, where cue cards had to be used to help him record the last album. Kim admits “Glen was barely able to remember the words he was singing at times.”
She says Glen’s longtime banjo player Carl Jackson (left, with Jimmy Webb and Glen), “held up sheets of paper with large-print lyrics and fed them to him one line at a time.” Kim says a rapid decline in his ability to play the guitar and remember songs created “a feeling of urgency to get him into the studio one last time to capture what magic was left. It was now or never.”
But the source claims: “More like it was a feeling of urgency on Kim’s part to get her poor husband to pump out one more record before he was completely unable to!”
11 of 12
Photo credit: Getty Images
Sources accuse Glen’s fourth and final wife,
Kim, of dodging a coroner’s detailed examination of his remains by claiming the
Alzheimer’s-ravaged singer converted to a little-known religious sect — Messianic Judaism — that requires a quickie funeral.
The 81-year-old "Rhinestone Cowboy" singer was buried just two days after his Aug. 8 passing and the Nashville Medical Examiner’s Office confirm for
The National ENQUIRER that “Glen Campbell’s body did not come here for an autopsy.”
“Kim was the
most tightly controlling of Glen’s four wives,” says
Mark Bego, who wrote "Life with My Father, Glen Campbell" with the star’s daughter
Debby (left). “Towards the end of his life, Kim suddenly convinced Glen they were both going to convert to Messianic Judaism.
“It is basically a Jews for Jesus cult and gave Kim a window to have Glen buried 24 to 48 hours after his death. It was also her manipulative way to plan Glen’s funeral so quickly and secretly that his five children from previous marriages could be ignored and kept away from the funeral and burial.
She truly is those older five children’s monster-in-law.”
Now, as part of a raging family feud between Kim and Glen’s kids Debby and
Travis (left, with wife
Trudy Andes Campbell), charges have surfaced the widow wanted to prevent the coroner from discovering the
singer’s ravaged condition when she had him record a final album, "Adios," released a month before his death.
“There were accusations Kim and her children with him [including
Cal (left)
and Ashley (right)] were capitalizing on the music legend in his final days as he was
struggling in the last stages of Alzheimer’s,” says a source.
Indeed, the country icon was
yanked out of his care facility to a recording studio, where cue cards had to be used to help him record the last album. Kim admits “Glen was barely able to remember the words he was singing at times.”
She says Glen’s longtime banjo player Carl Jackson (left, with Jimmy Webb and Glen), “held up sheets of paper with large-print lyrics and fed them to him one line at a time.” Kim says a rapid decline in his ability to play the guitar and remember songs created “a feeling of urgency to get him into the studio one last time to capture what magic was left. It was now or never.”
But the source claims: “More like it was a feeling of urgency on Kim’s part to get her poor husband to pump out one more record before he was completely unable to!”
Kim has also gone to war with
Glen’s ex-lover Tanya Tucker, 58, accusing her of cashing in by releasing a song about her doomed affair with the singer called "Forever Loving You." Kim slams Tanya’s tune as “callous and disrespectful,” saying it paints a “distorted fairy tale” of their
scandal-scarred romance.
12 of 12
Photo credit: Getty Images
Sources accuse Glen’s fourth and final wife,
Kim, of dodging a coroner’s detailed examination of his remains by claiming the
Alzheimer’s-ravaged singer converted to a little-known religious sect — Messianic Judaism — that requires a quickie funeral.
The 81-year-old "Rhinestone Cowboy" singer was buried just two days after his Aug. 8 passing and the Nashville Medical Examiner’s Office confirm for
The National ENQUIRER that “Glen Campbell’s body did not come here for an autopsy.”
“Kim was the
most tightly controlling of Glen’s four wives,” says
Mark Bego, who wrote "Life with My Father, Glen Campbell" with the star’s daughter
Debby (left). “Towards the end of his life, Kim suddenly convinced Glen they were both going to convert to Messianic Judaism.
“It is basically a Jews for Jesus cult and gave Kim a window to have Glen buried 24 to 48 hours after his death. It was also her manipulative way to plan Glen’s funeral so quickly and secretly that his five children from previous marriages could be ignored and kept away from the funeral and burial.
She truly is those older five children’s monster-in-law.”
Now, as part of a raging family feud between Kim and Glen’s kids Debby and
Travis (left, with wife
Trudy Andes Campbell), charges have surfaced the widow wanted to prevent the coroner from discovering the
singer’s ravaged condition when she had him record a final album, "Adios," released a month before his death.
“There were accusations Kim and her children with him [including
Cal (left)
and Ashley (right)] were capitalizing on the music legend in his final days as he was
struggling in the last stages of Alzheimer’s,” says a source.
Indeed, the country icon was
yanked out of his care facility to a recording studio, where cue cards had to be used to help him record the last album. Kim admits “Glen was barely able to remember the words he was singing at times.”
She says Glen’s longtime banjo player Carl Jackson (left, with Jimmy Webb and Glen), “held up sheets of paper with large-print lyrics and fed them to him one line at a time.” Kim says a rapid decline in his ability to play the guitar and remember songs created “a feeling of urgency to get him into the studio one last time to capture what magic was left. It was now or never.”
But the source claims: “More like it was a feeling of urgency on Kim’s part to get her poor husband to pump out one more record before he was completely unable to!”
Kim has also gone to war with
Glen’s ex-lover Tanya Tucker, 58, accusing her of cashing in by releasing a song about her doomed affair with the singer called "Forever Loving You." Kim slams Tanya’s tune as “callous and disrespectful,” saying it paints a “distorted fairy tale” of their
scandal-scarred romance.
But Tanya, who never married, says, “I loved him,” and thanks Kim “for taking care of him. I have no bad blood. She may, but I don’t.”