A family friend claims Mariah Carey allegedly neglected to contact her sister Alison before her death.
Sources close to the matter indicate Mariah Carey did not contact her estranged sister Alison before she died last Saturday, even when she was in hospice.
Tuesday Mariah Carey, 55, revealed that her sister Alison, 63, and mother Patricia, 87, passed away on that same day.
Before Alison passed away, she had been under hospice care for several weeks; Mariah Carey supposedly did not try to get in touch with her.
A friend of Alison’s Dave Baker told The US Sun that Alison had been experiencing serious internal organ problems.
To Alison, a phone call or, better still, a video call from Mariah would have meant so much. But it never happened, Baker said. “The disrespect made Alison’s suffering even more terrible.” She brought it up often. She asked whether Mariah or any of her cousins would attend her burial.
Baker said Alison was a complicated person with great sensitivity mixed with toughness.
Alison had a strong façade but was really a compassionate, warm, very intellectual person. I have known her for nine years, as her friend, and now her caregiver. I will sorely miss her, he said. “Alison’s farewell letter May you now discover serenity, your tormented spirit permanently liberated from earthly suffering.
Before her death, Mariah Carey reportedly spent the week with her mother, Patricia, highlighting the complex and tense family dynamics according to TMZ.
The sisters had been apart for years, Mariah trying to help Alison—who battled addiction—both emotionally and financially.
Alleging that her sister had drugged her with V#####, given her cocaine, burned her third-degree, and tried to sell her off to a pimp, the singer revealed her difficult relationship with Alison in her 2020 biography, “The Meaning of Mariah Carey,”. Alison refuted these assertions upon book publication.
While the world laments the terrible losses within the Carey family, unresolved issues surround the strained relationships and the decisions taken by the people left behind.