For decades, the d ath of Eric Wright, known to the world as Eazy E, has been accepted as a tragic but simple medical story.
A groundbreaking artist, a pioneer of West Coast rap, gone at the age of thirty one after a sudden illness that stunned fans and reshaped hip hop history.
Yet behind the official narrative, behind press releases and public mourning, there existed another story.
A story buried under silence, legal control, and fear.
Now, many years later, the woman who stood closest to Eric Wright during his most vulnerable moments has chosen to speak.
At fifty five, Tracy Jernigan is no longer willing to remain invisible.

She shared six years of her life with Eric Wright and raised their daughter with him.
While the world saw a ruthless mogul and cultural icon, Tracy lived beside the man behind the persona.
Her account reveals a final chapter far darker and more complicated than the public was ever told.
Eric Wright’s final days began not with alarm, but with something ordinary.
A cough.
At first, it seemed insignificant.
He had been energetic, active, and engaged in his business.
There were no long periods of decline, no warning signs that suggested a terminal condition.
But within days, everything changed.
He was admitted to Cedars Sinai Medical Center, and soon after, the diagnosis arrived.
He tested positive for HIV, and the illness progressed with terrifying speed.
According to Tracy, the news came through a phone call that still echoes in her memory.
The man delivering the message was unable to speak clearly through tears.
A doctor took over and asked her to sit down before explaining the results.
Within ten days of learning he was sick, Eric Wright was gone.
The speed of the decline raised questions that were never answered.
Fans around the world were shocked.
Many struggled to understand how someone so young and seemingly healthy could deteriorate so quickly.
Behind closed doors, Tracy was struggling with more than grief.
She was confronting confusion, fear, and a growing sense that something did not add up.
Eric himself was confused.
He reportedly did not understand how he had contracted the illness.
Tracy, their daughter, and others close to him later tested negative.
The timeline did not align with what medical experts would normally expect.
There was no long period of symptoms, no gradual weakening.
Everything happened with alarming suddenness.
As Eric’s condition worsened, Tracy attempted to stay close, believing her role was to protect him and support him.
She describes moments where he seemed aware of her presence even when he was not supposed to move.
Shortly after, she learned he had been placed into an induced coma.
From that point forward, her access to him changed dramatically.
Security appeared.
Legal representatives began controlling who could enter and who could not.
Conversations happened behind closed doors.

Tracy, who had been part of Eric’s daily life and family for years, found herself increasingly shut out.
Decisions were made without her knowledge.
Information was restricted.
The atmosphere shifted from care to control.
Eric Wright pᴀssed away in March 1995.
The world mourned a legend.
Tributes poured in.
Headlines celebrated his impact on music.
But almost immediately, Tracy noticed something disturbing.
Financial support disappeared.
Royalties stopped.
There were no explanations, no transparency, no communication.
Then came another shock.
While Eric was hospitalized and extremely weak, he reportedly married another woman in a private ceremony.
Tracy learned of this only afterward.
The legal consequences of that marriage were enormous, affecting control of ᴀssets, decision making, and Eric’s legacy.
To Tracy, it felt impossible to reconcile the timing and circumstances with Eric’s true intentions.
Within days of his pᴀssing, large sums of money vanished.
Documents disappeared.
Archives were removed.
Items connected to Ruthless Records and Eric’s personal life were suddenly missing.
Tracy describes the experience as watching history being erased in real time.
For her, the most painful part was not only the loss of Eric, but the realization that he had become powerless at the very moment he needed protection most.
A man who built an empire, negotiated deals, and changed an industry found himself isolated, controlled, and unable to speak for himself.
As time pᴀssed, Tracy could not silence the questions forming in her mind.
The rapid progression of the illness.
The secrecy surrounding his care.
The sudden legal changes.
The missing records.
None of it felt accidental.
She began to suspect that Eric’s d ath may not have been purely medical.
These suspicions were not formed overnight.
They developed over years of observation, reflection, and investigation.
Tracy remembered how Eric’s cough sounded different from anything she had heard before.
She noticed how certain individuals seemed unsurprised by his decline.
She observed how people positioned themselves around his ᴀssets and influence even before he pᴀssed.
The music industry, especially at its highest levels, is often defined by power struggles.
Alliances shift quickly.
Loyalty can vanish when money and control are at stake.
Tracy witnessed how people who once celebrated Eric suddenly focused on his empire rather than his survival.
Some comments made publicly by industry figures only deepened her concern.
Jokes about injecting illness, even if framed as humor, felt chilling when placed alongside Eric’s timeline.
To Tracy, these were not abstract ideas.
They were possibilities that demanded scrutiny.
Eventually, she made a decision.
She would no longer remain silent.
Together with her daughter, Tracy began ᴀssembling evidence, testimonies, and medical records.
This effort became a documentary project aimed not at sensationalism, but at clarity.
They spoke with doctors who had treated Eric.
They examined what records remained.
They questioned inconsistencies.
They searched for an autopsy report that should have existed, only to find it missing.
Audio logs from hospital conversations were gone.
Witnesses who attempted to speak were dismissed or discredited.
Each missing piece reinforced the feeling that Eric’s story had been carefully managed.
Not preserved, but controlled.
The documentary series immediately sparked controversy.
Critics dismissed it as conspiracy driven or emotionally biased.
Others recognized it as a rare challenge to a long accepted narrative.
Tracy did not present herself as an authority seeking fame.
She presented herself as a mother and partner seeking truth.
What emerged was a portrait of Eric Wright that few had seen.
Not just the icon, but the man.
A father devoted to his children.
A partner capable of tenderness.
A person carrying immense pressure while trying to survive an industry that demanded strength at all costs.
The contradictions defined him.
Publicly, he embodied confidence and defiance.
Privately, he worried about loyalty, safety, and trust.
These contradictions made him both powerful and vulnerable.
Even today, many questions remain unanswered.
Was Eric coerced during his final days.
Did others benefit from his weakened state.
Were critical details intentionally hidden.
The full truth may never be known.
What is clear is that Tracy’s voice has altered the conversation.
Her account does not ask the public to accept every suspicion as fact.
It asks them to look deeper.
To recognize that legends are human beings.
That power does not equal protection.
And that silence often serves those who benefit most.
Eric Wright was more than Eazy E.
He was a father, a partner, a builder of culture, and a man caught between ambition and mortality.
His legacy is not only found in music, but in the unanswered questions surrounding his final days.
Thanks to Tracy, that legacy will not remain neatly packaged or conveniently forgotten.
Her story ensures that behind the myth, the man is finally seen.