Exclusive | Costa Rica resort denies ex-Yankee Brett Gardners son died of carbon monoxide: Levels in the hotel room were non-existent

The resort where the teen son of Yankees outfielder Brett Gardner was found dead has reportedly blocked off his room, but the beach getaway has denied cops’ suggestion that carbon monoxide killed the teen.“The levels in the hotel room were non-existent and non-lethal.There was an error in this initial reporting,” the Arenas Del Mar Beachfront & Rainforest Resort told The Post.The statement refutes a Monday announcement by Costa Rican authorities that there were “high levels of carbon monoxide contamination” in the room where 14-year-old Miller Gardner was found dead.The resort claimed the high levels of carbon monoxide were detected in a “mechanical room that guests do not occupy,” not the guest room itself.Staffers closed the room “out of an abundance of caution” as they “await for conclusive results to confirm the cause of this unfortunate death,” Arenas Del Mar added.Meanwhile, the high-end getaway, whose rooms can go for more than $1,300 a night, has slashed its prices.Reservations that had cost $1,330 per night are down to $998, and even its cheapest rooms are down from $790 to $593, according to the Arenas Del Mar booking page.This is a developing story.
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