Son of tourist who died Monday at Dominican resort says he’s being pressured to allow cremating or embalming before body’s return to US
The son
of a New York hospital technician who
died suddenly in her room at an all-inclusive resort in Punta Cana says
Dominican authorities are resisting doing toxicology tests and pressuring him
to have her body cremated or embalmed before its return to the U.S.
Will Cox, 25, told Fox News on Friday that his mother, Leyla,
who died Monday evening at the Excellence resort, was on a solo trip to
celebrate her 53rd birthday and was in good health.
A Dominican police report, which Cox showed to Fox News, listed
the cause of death as a heart attack.
Cox, who said he has been in daily contact with the U.S. Embassy
in Santo Domingo, maintained that Dominican officials have stonewalled as he
has tried to learn more about the circumstances of his mother’s death, and as
he has pressed to have toxicology tests performed.
Cox said he did not speak directly to Dominican authorities, but
rather communicated with embassy officials relaying information from the
authorities.
“They put me against a wall,” Cox said, referring to Dominican
authorities, in a telephone interview from his home in Tennessee. “The
Dominicans said that I had to sign papers giving them permission to take her to
a funeral home, and if I didn’t do that in four hours, they were going to
consider her a ‘Jane Doe.’ They said I had to give them permission to cremate
her or embalm her, or I would never get my mother back.”
“If they classified my mother as a Jane Doe, they told me I
would be forfeiting the body,” Cox said. “I will never receive a death
certificate. I will never receive my mother’s remains. … They did conduct an
autopsy, but they will not tell me what it says.”
The news of her death comes as the popular Caribbean vacation
destination grapples with a rash of deaths of U.S. tourists in their hotel
rooms at various luxury resorts. Families of the tourists said they were
generally in good health.
Of the seven deaths that have become publicly known so far,
Dominican authorities said that five were caused by a heart attack. In the case
of the other two — an engaged Maryland couple who were found dead in their room
on May 30 — a final report on the cause of death is pending. In nearly all of
them, Dominican authorities said there were signs of pulmonary edema — a
condition in which the lungs fill with fluid. The tourists ranged in age from
41 to 67.
The Dominican Ministry of Tourism has denounced what it sees as
an overreaction to what it characterizes as coincidental.
Many of the tourists became critically and suddenly ill after
consuming a beverage from the room minibar. The FBI told Fox News last week
that is assisting Dominican investigators in looking into whether the tourists
died of something other than natural causes. The New York Post, citing the
Dominican Ministry of Public Health, reported that investigators are conducting
tests on pools, air-conditioning units, food areas and alcohol at two Bahia
Principe resorts where three visitors died.
The newspaper said that the Dominican National Police in 2017
dismantled five labs used for the manufacture of alcohol not safe for human
consumption.
Cox said he does not know if his mother, who had trouble getting
cell and Internet service from the resort, had a drink from the minibar or
elsewhere in the resort. He said his efforts to get answers to those questions
from the hotel and Dominican authorities have been futile.
Read
more : New York woman found dead in the Dominican Republic a day
after her 53rd birthday, son says
The U.S. State Department on Friday said of Cox’s death: “We
offer our sincerest condolences to the family on their loss. We are closely
monitoring local authorities’ investigation into the cause of death.”
“We stand ready to provide all appropriate consular assistance,”
the statement to Fox News said. “We refer you to the Dominican authorities
regarding any ongoing investigation. Out of respect for family members and
loved ones we cannot comment further.”
Cox said he shares the concerns that the relatives of six other
U.S. tourists have expressed about the credibility of Dominican authorities’
conclusions about the cause of death.
What’s more, Cox said, U.S. Embassy officials — who, the
25-year-old said, have been supportive and have called him every day — told
them that the Dominican authorities maintain that they cannot perform a
toxicological test because their machines are broken.
“The U.S. Embassy communicated that to me and said that they
don’t know when the machines will be fixed,” said Cox. “I just feel like the
Dominicans are covering their own tracks by getting rid of the evidence and
evidence is my own mother. I never thought another country would do this to
me.”
Efforts by Fox News to get a response from the U.S. Embassy in
Santo Domingo and from the Dominican government were unsuccessful.
Leyla Cox’s body is at the Blandino Funeral Home in Santo
Domingo, her son said.
He was able to get an extension from the Dominican authorities
until Monday to decide whether to give in and permit them to cremate or embalm
her. That extension, Cox said, was granted after his congressional
representatives and the U.S. Embassy negotiated with the Dominican government.
Cox said he has not been able to mourn his mother as he fights a
David-vs.-Goliath battle with the Dominican government.
“I would love to see my Mom again,” he said. “But next time I
see her, she may be ashes. It’s just not right. I want to see her body. I’m a
U.S. citizen, I have a right to see my mother’s body. I have a right to know
what happened. I want to perform an autopsy here, and get a toxicological test
here, so I can get answers.”
In desperation, he said, he asked if with his mother’s ashes, he
could get a tube of her blood to have it tested in the United States, but was
refused.
“It’s been very hard for me emotionally,” he said. “What the
Dominican Republic is making me do is help them cover up their own mistakes. I
believe if my mother had not been in the Dominican Republic, or even if she had
been anywhere else in the world, she would still be alive today.”
On Friday, NBC reported another mysterious death, that of Jerry
Curran, 78, of Ohio who checked into the Dreams resort in Punta Cana on Jan.
22, and died on Jan. 25.
The U.S. State Department confirmed Curran’s death in the Dominican
Republican to Fox News on Friday.
NBC quoted his daughter, Kellie Brown, as saying “He went to the
Dominican Republic healthy and he just never came back.”
NBC said that Brown was told a preliminary report listed one
cause of death as pulmonary edema.
Brown said that it “seems to be common in everyone else who’s
passed that we’re learning about.”
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