Carbon monoxide poisoning was the reason for dying of the teenage son of former New York Yankees outfielder Brett Gardner, authorities in Costa Rica confirmed Wednesday evening.
Randall Zúñiga, director of the Judicial Investigation Company, mentioned they examined the 14-year-old Miller Gardner for carboxyhemoglobin, a compound generated when carbon monoxide binds to hemoglobin within the blood.
When carboxyhemoglobin saturation exceeds 50%, it’s thought-about deadly. In Gardner’s case, the check confirmed a saturation of 64%.
“It’s important to note that adjacent to this room is a dedicated machine room, where it’s believed there may be some type of contamination toward these rooms,” Zúñiga mentioned.
The top of the Costa Rican judicial police added that, in the course of the post-mortem, a “layer” was detected on the younger man’s organs, which types when there’s a excessive presence of the toxic gasoline.
Miller Gardner died on March 21 whereas staying together with his household at a resort on the Manuel Antonio seaside in Costa Rica’s Central Pacific.
Asphyxiation was initially thought to have induced his dying. After an post-mortem was carried out by the Forensic Pathology Part, that idea was dominated out.
One other line of investigation was into whether or not the household had suffered meals poisoning. Members of the family had reported feeling in poor health after eating at a close-by restaurant on the evening of March 20 and acquired therapy from the resort physician.
Brett Gardner, 41, was drafted by the Yankees in 2005 and spent his complete main league profession with the group. The speedy outfielder batted .256 with 139 homers, 578 RBIs, 274 steals and 73 triples in 14 seasons from 2008-2021.