Brett Gardner, carbon monoxide and Miller
Digest more
Top News
Overview
Impacts
CBS News |
Gardner "may have died from inhaling these highly dangerous gases," Zúñiga said in a video statement in Spanish.
Charlotte Observer |
Authorities initially believed food poisoning may have contributed to Miller’s death in Costa Rica, but high levels of carbon monoxide were later found in his hotel room.
KHOU 11 |
Elevated levels of carbon monoxide were detected in 14-year-old Miller Gardner's hotel room, Costa Rican officials said Monday.
Read more on News Digest
Miller Gardner, the youngest son of former New York Yankees outfielder Brett Gardner, died at the age of 14 while on vacation with his family.
Authorities investigating the tragic death of Brett Gardner's teenage son Miller have suggested that he could have been killed by carbon monoxide
The investigation into the death of New York Yankees baseball star Brett Gardner's 14-year old son is continuing.
After Miller Gardner’s suspected cause of death was updated to carbon monoxide poisoning, the Costa Rica resort where the Gardner family had been staying issued a statement.
The Costa Rica resort where former Yankees star Brett Gardner and his family were vacationing has denied that there was carbon monoxide in the room his teenage son stayed in after local authorities suspected it led to his death.
Explore more
The death of former New York Yankees star Brett Gardner’s 14-year-old son, Miller, left as many confounding questions as it provided answers.
Miller suddenly died on March 21 while on vacation in Costa Rica following a mysterious bout of illness that affected multiple members of the Gardner family.
A forensic pathologist told Us Weekly how food poisoning could've been mistakenly cited as Miller Gardner’s cause of death