Trending Topics

1 dead, 4 treated after unexplained odor in Denver home

An investigation is underway after residents called 911 and reported difficulty breathing

By Shelly Bradbury
The Denver Post

DENVER — One person died and four others were taken to a hospital after residents at a Denver home reported an unexplained odor and difficulty breathing early Tuesday morning, according to the Denver Fire Department.

Firefighters responded to a single-family home near the intersection of East 41st Place and Esenada Street in Denver’s Green Valley Ranch neighborhood at 7:26 a.m. Tuesday after residents called 911 and reported difficulty breathing, Denver Fire spokesman JD Chism said.

One adult died. Two children and two other adults were taken to a hospital for treatment, he said. Another two people were evaluated at the scene, Chism said.

The person who died has not been publicly identified.

All of the people affected by the odor were in the same home and appeared to be family members, Chism said.

He could not say what caused the family’s breathing issues or the source of the unknown odor and said an investigation was ongoing in tandem with the Denver Police Department.


Understand the role of pulse oximetry and waveform capnography to assess and treat patients who are hyperventilating

Investigators do not suspect a crime was committed, Chism said.

“At the moment we are working with Denver police with the investigation to determine what the actual cause was,” he said.

Michelle Aguayo, a spokeswoman for Xcel Energy, said Tuesday that the incident was “not a natural gas odor or leak issue.” She directed additional questions to Denver police.

Police spokespeople confirmed the department was conducting a death investigation and that there was no indication a crime was committed. They declined further comment on Tuesday.

©2024 MediaNews Group, Inc.
Visit at denverpost.com.
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Trending
Four paramedics from Kassel, Germany, are spending three weeks with Virginia Beach EMS to learn new ways to save lives
Harford County’s NEXT GEN Responders Student Loan Relief is an incentive in fire, EMS recruitment and retention
Mapleton Police Officer Bob Roelofs performed CPR on Smith until paramedics arrived