Celine Dion doesn’t need a coroner’s report to know the official cause of Whitney Houston’s death.
Speaking to “Good Morning America” via phone Monday, the Canadian singer undoubtedly pinned Houston’s untimely death on drug abuse.
"Whitney has been an amazing inspiration for me,” Dion, 43, told host Robin Roberts. "It's just really unfortunate that drugs, bad people, bad influences took over her dreams, her motherhood."
Dion, 43, acknowledged the control drugs can have on a person, particular celebrities and entertainers in the music industry.
“When you think about Elvis Presley and Marilyn Monroe and Michael Jackson and Amy Winehouse, to get into drugs like that, for whatever reason,” she said. “Is it because of the stress and bad influence? What happens when you have everything? What happens when you have love, support, the family, motherhood? You have responsibilities of a mother and then something happens and it destroys everything.”
Because of that fear, Dion admits Houston’s tragic death is a cautionary tale.
“I am so scared. I’m scared of show business. I’m scared of drugs. I’m scared of hanging out,” said the singer, who is the mother of three sons.
“That’s why I don’t do parties and I don’t hang out. That’s why I’m not part of show business. We have to be afraid.”
WHITNEY HOUSTON: HER LIFE IN PHOTOS
Houston was found dead Saturday in her fourth-floor suite at the Beverly Hilton getting ready for the famous Clive Davis pre-Grammys party downstairs.
A fatal cocktail of prescription drugs and booze killed the 48-year-old singer before she became submerged in a bathtub, the singer’s relatives reportedly were told.
The Los Angeles County Coroner’s Office does not believe the “I Will Always Love You” star drowned, contrary to earlier reports suggesting she slumped beneath the water in a drug-induced stupor, TMZ.com reported Monday.
Coroner’s officials told Houston’s family the onetime queen of pop did not have enough water in her lungs to suggest she drowned and was likely dead already.
An autopsy was performed Sunday, but the results of a toxicology test are likely to take several weeks. There was no evidence of foul play.


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