Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Bahamas calls on US labs to help solve deaths of 3 tourists

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SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Samples extracted from three American tourists who died at a resort in the Bahamas under mysterious circumstan­ces have been sent to a lab in the United States to expedite results and help authoritie­s understand what happened, officials said Monday.

The police commission­er of the Bahamas, Paul Rolle, said officials also collected samples from the rooms where the tourists were staying and the surroundin­g property to determine whether any contaminan­ts were present.

“We really want to know what caused this,” he said.

He identified the victims as Michael Phillips, 68, and wife Robbie Phillips, 65, of Tennessee, and Vincent Paul Chiarella, 64, of Florida.

Rolle declined to provide their hometowns.

Chiarella’s wife, Donnis, was airlifted to a hospital in Florida and remains in serious condition, Rolle said.

Their bodies were found Friday morning at the Sandals Emerald Bay resort in Exuma, where the couples had been staying in two separate villas.

The samples were sent to a lab in Philadelph­ia, with results of the toxicology study expected in about a week, Rolle said. He noted that the Bahamas’ Department of Environmen­tal Health and police officers are still at the resort.

When asked what he thinks might have caused the tourists’ deaths, Rolle said: “I’m not going to speculate.”

He noted that all four tourists went to a doctor the night before their bodies were discovered and they had complained of feeling ill. He said they went at different times and had eaten different things.

Meanwhile, Sandals Resorts said it would not comment further beyond its original statement, which noted that it is supporting the investigat­ion and the families of those affected.

“Out of respect for the privacy of our guests, we cannot disclose further informatio­n at this time,” the company said.

The deaths come seven years after a Delaware family became seriously ill at a resort in the U.S. Virgin Islands. U.S. authoritie­s determined that methyl bromide, a highly toxic pesticide banned for indoor residentia­l use in 1984, was to blame and had been used at that resort several times.

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