
The death of Miller Gardner, 14, is being investigated as a case of carbon dioxide poisoning, Randal Zunia told a news conference.
OIJ spokesman confirmed in a short letter to ESPN that investigators believe the death was coincidence, not an ugly game.
“More than this investigation was closely coordinated with the FBI in the United States,” Zunia told a news conference.
Zunia also said the trials were conducted on Friday, March 28 — A week after Miller Gardner was found in his hotel room in a famous resort area — when “carbon dioxide was found. “This indicates that the death may be “dangerous gas absorption,” he said. He said these are the initial discoveries, and the results of the forensic poisoning are still present.
The room, which was tested, was next to a “style room”, which investigators believe is the source of pollution.
“The levels of up to 600 parts have been discovered per million, while the level is zero in this special case,” Zunia said.
OIJ spokesman Juan Pablo Alvarado Garcia said no further information was about who was in the room or how the first carbon monoxide had an impact on others from the next rooms. OIJ had told ESPN last week that drowning – was once investigated for a possibility of death. Oug said the Miller Gardner air route was not prevented, but there were traces of vomiting.
Carbon’s first dioxide was the latest turning point in investigating the death of the former stadium’s youngest son, whose family says it caused a lot of questions but responded little. On Sunday, Brett Gardner and his wife Jesseca announced their son’s death in a statement issued by Yankiz. The statement said Miller was ill, along with several other family members, while they were on vacation.
On Monday, the US Embassy in Costa Rica and the State Department confirmed an ESPN of a US citizen in Costa Rica on Friday, but gave no further details about the cause of death.
“We have no other statement at this time because of respect for the characteristics of families and loved ones at this difficult time,” a State Department spokesman told ESPN.
In a telephone conversation with ESPN on Tuesday, Alvarado Garcia told ESPN that the 14-year-old was with his family members who told investigators that they had eaten food in a restaurant and the food was ill. It is not clear which family member was with him and where the restaurant was. A study was requested at the Costa Rica Institute for Nutrition and Health (Inciensa). After about a week, Oig said the fire department and the Ministry of Health had been alerted to the pollution.
Miller Gardner played high school football in South Carolina and was wearing the number 11, which his father wore in the 14 MLB seasons, all with Yankse. Brett Gardner, president of the famous team, was a member of the New York Championship team in 2009 and retired in