The FBI has released decades-old files on late pop singer Whitney Houston, detailing letters from obsessed fans and an alleged extortion attempt investigated by the bureau.

The 128 pages from Houston’s files posted on the FBI’s website showed one fan’s attention-seeking letters but did not divulge any new insights into the troubled singer’s personal life.

Houston, known both for her soaring ballads and well-chronicled history of drug abuse, was found dead last year in a Beverly Hills hotel bathtub. She was 48.

The FBI cases were opened at the height of the singer’s career between 1988 and 1999. Among the singer’s FBI files, released through a Freedom of Information Act request, were love letters sent by a Vermont man, who wrote that he “might hurt someone with some crazy idea”.

The file shows the FBI interviewed the man but the bureau concluded no law was broken because the man said he would have only hurt Houston’s reputation by proclaiming his love publicly.

An alleged $250,000 (€191,491) extortion attempt was brought to the FBI’s attention shortly after Houston’s marriage to R&B singer Bobby Brown in 1992 and threatened to make public private information unless the singer paid.

Houston told the FBI in an interview that she considered the person a friend.

Houston in 1999 also received letters and recorded cassette tapes from the Netherlands which she deemed threatening, according to the files.

The sender made outrageous claims in an FBI interview that he was “President of Europe”, purchased Brazil for $66 billion (€50.5 billion) and helped Nelson Mandela win the election in South Africa.

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