USA TODAY International Edition

Haskins toxicology report released

- Tom Schad

Pittsburgh Steelers quarterbac­k Dwayne Haskins was intoxicate­d when a dump truck hit and killed him on a Florida interstate, according to a toxicology report released Monday by the Broward County Medical Examiner’s Office.

The medical examiner’s office determined Haskins had a blood- alcohol concentrat­ion of at least 0.20% at the time of his autopsy, more than double the legal limit in Florida of 0.08%. An accompanyi­ng investigat­ion report states he went to a club and “drank heavily” the night before his death.

Haskins’ death has been ruled an accident, according to the autopsy report released Monday, with the cause of death listed as “multiple blunt force injuries.” He was 24.

A first- round pick out of Ohio State, Haskins was killed in the early morning hours of April 9 after attempting to cross lanes of oncoming traffic on Interstate 595, according to authoritie­s. His wife, Kalabrya Haskins, said in a previously released 911 call that he had pulled over on the side of the road and walked to find a gas station.

According to the investigat­ion report released by the medical examiner’s office Monday, the driver of the dump truck, who is not identified, said he was driving in the darkness when “all the sudden a male appeared standing in his travel lane.” Haskins was also “partially contacted” by a second vehicle as it attempted to swerve around him, according to authoritie­s.

The investigat­ion report states that Haskins had spent the day prior to the accident in Florida training with several of his Steelers teammates, then joined them for dinner. He later went to a club with his “friend/ cousin,” according to the report.

“They drank heavily and at some point, they got into a fight, separating,” the report states.

The Florida Highway Patrol determined that Haskins was traveling with a female passenger on April 9 before exiting on foot to find a gas station, according to the medical examiner’s investigat­ion report. The woman was in the car when officers found it.

Haskins’ toxicology report also notes ketamine was detected in his urine at the time of death, though no drugs were detected in his blood. Ketamine can be used as a sedative or treatment for depression but is also known as a “club drug” that can produce “dissociati­ve sensations and hallucinat­ions,” according to the DEA.

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