Posted on 11/09/2022 6:08:44 AM PST by Red Badger
The October 30 deaths of three Americans in a Mexican Airbnb resulted from carbon monoxide poisoning, according to a Coroner’s report.
Mexican police explained that security guards for the La Rosita apartment complex where they died reported a strong smell of gas, according to a Bloomber report. The neighborhood of La Rosita is near the wealthy, skyscraper-strewn section of Santa Fe.
Advertisements WAVY-TV further reported:
Two Virginia Beach families are hoping for answers after their loved ones were found dead last week inside a Mexico City Airbnb.
The families of Jordan Marshall and Kandace Florence have been in contact with the U.S. embassy, working to get their bodies home and find out exactly what happened to them.
Marshall and Florence both graduated from Kellam High School in 2011 and remained friends. They were vacationing in Mexico City, with Marshall’s friend from New Orleans, Courtez Hall. They were there for “Dia de los muertos” or Day of the Dead.
Kandace Florence’s boyfriend was on the phone with her on the night of October 30 when she started getting sick. She told him something wasn’t right. The two eventually got disconnected and he couldn’t get her back on the line. He then called the Airbnb host to do a welfare check, and authorities found Florence, Marshall and Hall dead.
“To lose your child is one thing, but in a whole other country and having to maneuver language barriers and travel and trying to get his body home, it’s been a lot,” said Marshall’s mom, Jennifer Marshall.
Marshall says they spent hours in a Mexico City police station waiting for a translator to show up. The U.S. embassy was also closed when they got there and they couldn’t even get into the Airbnb to get his things, Marshall said.
“His wallet, his laptop, he took all those things with him and we just want them back.”
Florence’s sister-in-law, Amy, and oldest brother, Chad, say they had a similar experience.
“We thought that going to the embassy first would aid us in that regard, but they didn’t have translators that could accompany us to the various places like the forensics office or police station,” Green said.
Florence and Marshall’s families say they hope no one else ever has to go through this.
“We should’ve never had to gone through that type of leg work to realize that our baby passed away in a foreign country,” said Kelvin Florence, Kandace’s father. “Nobody even took the effort to notify us, a letter, a phone call, nothing.”
“Now it’s just a waiting game and hoping that they reach out to us,” Green said.
“I was worried that they would get lost in the shuffle and so I prayed,” Freida Florence said. “I said we need intervention that everyone that they meet that there would be somebody along their path that would guide them to Kandace and bringing her back home.”
They’re seeing the challenge as an opportunity, like Kandace says in one of her candle affirmations, to fight so others won’t have to go through what they’ve experienced.
“The last thing you think is that trip, that vacation is going to end in death, and so we are really struggling with how to help the next family, the next circumstance run smoother,” Florence’s mother said.
Airbnb told Marshall’s mom that their belongings had been passed on to the authorities while the incident is under investigation.
Marshall and Florence’s bodies are expected to be flown to the U.S. in the next few days.
Both were 28 years old. Kandace’s 29th birthday would have been on Thursday, November 10.
Marshall’s funeral is Friday, and the cause of death for all three is still under investigation.
In a foreign country, the officials of that country expect YOU the visitors, to know the language? Or, to provide for translators yourself?
But have to say. that the US consulate in this situation did not provide language and other assistance in the deaths of US citizens to the family and help interact with local officials is shocking.
Why would you get disconnected when she passes out?
Something stinks and it ain't the gas.
“We thought that going to the embassy first would aid us in that regard, but they didn’t have translators that could accompany us to the various places like the forensics office or police station,” Green said.
Positions in embassies often are given out to campaign contributor family members, kids coming out of college and unpaid staffers that need a paying jobs. So knowing something about the country where they are going or the language is not important.
*** Mexican police explained that security guards for the La Rosita apartment complex where they died reported a strong smell of gas***
They said carbon monoxide poisoning in the first part of the article.
Carbon monoxide is odorless.
Something stinks to high Heaven here.
Did I miss something?
Headline: “Cause of Death of 3 Americans Found Dead in Mexico City Airbnb Revealed”
Last line of story: “the cause of death for all three is still under investigation.”
The Mexican authorities say CO poisoning.
The American families and officials aren’t convinced.............
Yep, that’s because you can’t smell CO, and the authorities said there was a strong smell of gas. That would either have been natural gas or a kerosene type of gas.
Mexican building codes at work.
Maybe she stopped responding to him because she passed out and then died and he assumed they were disconnected and hung up himself.
So... They didn’t have their window open? That sucks.
The consulate in Japan was worthless as well.
“Carbon monoxide is odorless.”
Correct, but carbon monoxide is the result of incomplete burning of methane which has little smell itself. Methane burns to CO2 and H20. When people smell gas what they are actually smelling is mercaptopurine which is added to the gas as a safety measure. That is the smell of rotten eggs. If their bodies were tinged red it would be carbon monoxide.
Probably it was carbon monoxide poisoning or maybe fentanyl.
Carbon monoxide is odorless.
So is Natural Gas. U.S. utilities need to add a noxious odor to it so that people can detect gas leaks.
Improperly burned natural gas often gives off an acrid odor containing Carbon monoxide called aldehydes. Depending upon the type of equipment, it might not be apparent that this is anything but burning dust to users.
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