New York Yankees

Costa Rican officials reverse course on cause of death for Brett Gardner's son

No updated potential cause of death was immediately provided by Costa Rican authorities

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Miller Gardner, son of New York Yankees star Brett Gardner, has passed away. The New York Yankees announce the news on X on Sunday, revealing the son of Brett and Jessica Garnder had passed away at the age of 14.

The death of the youngest son of former New York Yankees outfielder Brett Gardner, who died after getting sick during a family vacation, wasn't a result of food intoxication asphyxiation as previously thought, Costa Rican officials said in an update Tuesday.

Miller Gardner died in his sleep Friday morning, according to a statement from Gardner and his wife, Jessica. He was 14.

A day after making the original pronouncement, that Gardner asphyxiated after falling ill from eating something, Costa Rican authorities say further forensic investigation ruled asphyxia out as a possible cause of death.

"It was preliminarily ruled out that the cause of death was due to asphyxia, due to the fact that at the time of the inspection of the body, no anomaly was observed at macro-level in the respiratory tract," Juan Pablo Alvarado Garcia, with Costa Rica's Judicial Investigation Agency, said Tuesday.

Investigators who analyzed the body at the hotel said vomit was found in the teen's mouth and nose, which led them to believe preliminarily he had choked on his own vomit, according to Alvarado Garcia. However, a forensic pathologist later inspected the body and found no obstructions in the boy's airways, eliminating asphyxiation as a potential cause.

Alvarado Garcia said the family went to eat on March 20 at a restaurant outside the hotel where they were staying, and they all felt sick when they got back. The hotel medical team treated all four members of the family and provided medicine, and the rest of the family is believed to be healthy as of Tuesday.

Different samples have been sent for further testing — though results (toxicology, histology, neuropathology) could take two to three months due to backlog and an increase in registered homicides. Tests were also sent to the University of Costa Rica to determine if there could have been any sort of allergic reaction to the medication or the food. Other underlying causes and conditions that could have been triggered have not been ruled out, as well.

Law enforcement is not investigating the death as a possible carbon monoxide poisoning, as Alvarado Garcia said it is not a common occurrence in the country.

The Gardners have said they “have so many questions and so few answers at this point.”

“Miller was a beloved son and brother and we cannot yet comprehend our life without his infectious smile," Jessica and Brett Gardner said in the release. “He loved football, baseball, golf, hunting, fishing, his family and his friends. He lived life to the fullest every single day.”

The Yankees said the organization was “filled with grief.”

“Words feel insignificant and insufficient in trying to describe such an unimaginable loss,” the team said in its statement. "It wasn’t just Brett who literally grew up in this organization for more than 17 years — so did his wife, Jessica, and their two boys, Hunter and Miller.”

Brett Gardner, 41, was drafted by the Yankees in 2005 and spent his entire big league career with the organization. The speedy outfielder batted .256 with 139 homers, 578 RBIs, 274 steals and 73 triples in 14 seasons from 2008-2021.

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