It is no secret that Aaron Carter fought with the abuse of substances and mental health problems in the years prior to his tragic death in 2022. Now, a new documentary, entitled “The Carters”, exposes intimate and never shared details. Famous family.
In the two -part documentary that will be released on April 15 in Paramount+, Aaron’s twin sister, Angel Carter Conrad, as well as close friends and family, led the experiences that led to Aaron’s disappearance, including a terrifying moment in which “an Aaron disbursed an Aaron to his brove to his brove to his brove to his brove to his brove.
“I realized that I was already drugs again,” Angel said in the documentary. “It was a real manic, everywhere and all the same bad habits were happening again.”
Angel recalled a telephone conversation he had with Aaron, in which he told him to be diagnosed with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.
Duration of that conversation, said Angel, Aaron said he often had thoughts or “killed babies” and Nick’s wife, Lauren Kitt Carter.
“I was just processing and walking everything,” Angel said. “I was so stunned by the conversation and, therefore, the tasks of return and was processing everything that was happening.”
Angel made the conscious decision not to tell his brother Backstreet Boys for fear that Nick will take measures and, in turn, ruin Aaron’s career.
“I didn’t want to hurt [Aaron]”Angel confessed.
However, week later, Aaron began to acquire multiple weapons, including shotguns, AK-47 and more, and show them on social networks.
“I was so clearly in a very, very dark place and threatened Angel, Nick, me,” said Angel’s husband, Corey Conrad, in the documentary. “Obviously he is not in their right mind.”
Angel admitted that he was “so scared” of what his brother would do, so Shey told Nick.
In September 2019, Angel and Nick presented a rest training order against their brother.
“After careful consideration, my sister Angel and I regretted having forced a resting order order against our brother Aaron today,” Nick announced in X (previously Twitter) at that time.
“In the light of the increasingly alarming behavior of Aaron and his recent confession that he houses thoughts and intentions to kill my pregnant wife and my unborn son, we had no choice but to take all possible measures.” “
“We love our brother and we really hope you receive the clean treatment you need before any damage reaches it or any other person,” the statement concluded.
The family felt that “there was no other option.”
“He didn’t have control of himself at that time,” Corey said.
Despite his efforts, Rest’s training orders caused Aaron to become “even more violent,” Corey revealed.
“Hello, they led to [Las] Vegas with a gun in his car, broadcasting live where we knew he was leading to the Nick community, “he recalled.
Aaron’s assistant at that time had the location of the deceased star through Find My Phone and was giving him live family updates about where Aaron was.
“Instead of going to Kentucky [where he was scheduled to perform]He goes towards [Las] Vegas, “Aaron’s great time manager and friend of the Carter family, Lori Knight, said.” We received a ping that is leaving the exit in which Nick’s house is and then the next ping we have in a restaurant on the other side of the street from the entrance to the closed community of Nick. “
“We literally had this moment, where I like it,” My God, he will kill Nick or Lauren, he will kill someone. Then, he is going to commit suicide, “Knight added.
“They had helicopters, they had Swat. We didn’t know what I was going to do, what I was going to try,” Corey added.
“It was such a terrifying moment to listen to their voices, Lauren and Nick,” Knight recalled. “You could hear the terror they felt in those moments. There was a complete chaos in the house.”
“[Aaron] He sat in the parking lot for 45 minutes and then we left, and we tracked Kentucky, “he said.
Angel said that the last time he saw his twin brother was in the courtroom when the weapons were legally distance tasks.
“I was really angry. Hello, he shouted me,” you’re dead for me. “It was horrible.
“What we wanted was for Aaron to get help, recover,” Corey added. “We were trying to save him in any way we could.”
“Aaron’s mental illness manifested in very dark things,” Lori said. “Hello, they did very monstrous things in the last years of their life. He hurt many people. The people who hurt people who really loved him and worried about him.”
Angel, who reconnected with his brother shortly before he died, said the family was in “mode of crisis”, the week of his death.
“He said,” he said: “You always made the scapegoat.” I was frustrated that I blamed me and that he owned what he was doing. ”
That was his last conversation.
Aaron died on November 5, 2022. He drowned in his bathtub, according to the Los Angeles County examiner. The “effects of the difloreoetano (aerosol propeller found in the spray cans) and the alprazolam (commonly known as Xanax)” were listed as contributing factors in their death.
The form of death declared an “accident”, according to the coroner.
“I will never forget to be in London and receive the text message,” said an emotional Nick in the documentary. “It’s still incredible to this day. I don’t have the opportunity to cry.”
With the documentary, the family expects to spread awareness about mental illnesses, especially among children.
Angel and Nick have not only been crying the loss of Aaron, but also their other two brothers, as well as their father.
Leslie Carter died of drug overdose in 2012, Bobbie Jean died of a fentanyl overdose in 2023 and her father, Robert Gene Carter, died in 2017.
“We have to do something. This cannot be swept back,” Angel said in the documentary. “How do we stop this? We stop by talking about that. I think there is a life lesson within this. Take something so tragic and make it positive, which is exactly what Aaron would be because.”
“Aaron loved people,” he added. “He loved being there for people and introducing people. I want people to remember that part of it.”
Despite the tragedy, Angel, who is an activist of the Mental Health Foundation for non -profit children (previously in our sleeves), an initiative or the Nationwide Children’s hospital, to raise awareness about the importance of children’s health.
“I never do it because not feeling the pain and sadness I feel for my brothers, because at this point, this is how I connect with them,” he said. “I don’t want to cry for them, they are not forgotten. They are remembered. They deserve it.”
The two -part documentary, entitled “The Carters”, opens on April 15 at Paramount+.