The drug dealer who supplied Peaches Geldof, daughter of legendary musician Bob Geldof, with the heroin that killed her last year may never be known after British police ended its investigation into her death saying they had "exhausted all lines of inquiry".
The 25-year-old journalist, model, television presenter and mother-of-two died from an overdose at her home in Wrotham, Kent, on April 7, 2014.
Geldof had been a heroin addict and took the substitute drug methadone for two years before her death.
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Detective Superintendent Paul Fotheringham, who led the probe trying to find out who supplied her with the Class A drug, said: "Our investigation has exhausted all lines of enquiry and has now concluded".
Fotheringham said the case would be reviewed if further information or witnesses came forward.
"I would like to take this opportunity to pay tribute to Peaches' family who have supported our inquiries during what has been a difficult time," he said.
A police search of her home at the time of her death found 6.9 grams of heroin but there was no indication she had planned to take her own life, an inquest last year heard.
Her husband, Tom Cohen, told the hearing she started using the drug again in February 2014.
The musician, who had been away for the weekend with the eldest of their two sons, said he became concerned when she failed to answer her phone and found his wife slumped on the bed upon his return.
Coroner Roger Hatch said Geldof's death had been "drugs related" and expressed his deep sympathy to her family.
Her mother, Paula Yates, died of a heroin overdose at the age of 41 when Peaches was 11 years old.
In a television interview last year, Geldof's father, Sir Bob Geldof, the lead singer with the Boomtown Rats and noted anti-poverty campaigner, said he "blames himself" for her death, saying: "You're the father who is responsible and clearly failed.