Another American tourist dies during Dominican Republic vacation

Authored by cbsnews.com and submitted by sackofspores
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Six American tourists have mysteriously died in recent months at resorts in the Dominican Republic. The FBI is helping local authorities investigate these deaths.

Robert Wallace traveled the world with his wife and friends say he worked hard and played even harder. But his niece said he fell ill almost immediately after drinking a scotch from the minibar at the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino and was dead just three days later in April.

David Harrison of Maryland died at the same resort last year. He and his wife had taken their 12-year-old son to the Dominican Republic to celebrate their wedding anniversary. The Hard Rock Hotel & Casino said it's confident that all operational protocols were followed.

Miranda Schaup-Werner and Yvette Monique Sport died at the Bahia Principe resort. Their death certificates list the cause of death for both as heart attacks. But Felecia Nieves, Sport's sister, questions that.

"We were promised within three months that we would receive a toxicology report. To this day, which is almost a year now, we've got nothing," Nieves said.

Dominican Republic deaths: Mystery deepens after new autopsy results

Edward Holmes and Cynthia Day were celebrating their engagement before they both died in their room at the Bahia Principe sister resort. The FBI is assisting Dominican authorities on the ground with all six deaths.

The resorts said they are cooperating with authorities. Right now, there are no medical connections linking the deaths. The resorts said they are feeling the economic impact from the negative publicity. Nearly seven million tourists visit the Dominican Republic and most are from the U.S.

harrybarracuda on June 11st, 2019 at 07:17 UTC »

Reminds me of this case (one more guest died who wasn't staying at the hotel but used its facilities):

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/chiang-mai-hotel-mystery_n_927973

The locals went to great lengths to cover it up (the hotel owner had political connections), but the most likely culprit was the use of chlorpyrifos, a pesticide banned for indoor use.

Added: The lack of a toxicology report is telling.

fungobat on June 11st, 2019 at 01:48 UTC »

How to kill the tourism industry in the DR in 3 easy steps!

HikinOut8 on June 11st, 2019 at 01:27 UTC »

Well this went from bizarre coincidence to WTF pretty quickly.