Crime & Safety

More Illnesses Reported At Resort Where PA Woman Died

After a Pennsylvania woman died in the Dominican Republic, more tourists are coming forward with concerning stories of similar experiences.

After news that three people, including a Pennsylvania woman, died at a Dominican Republic resort last month, more tourists are emerging with concerning stories of similar experiences. The developments have reportedly prompted officials from the United States to join the investigation.

Over the weekend, the families of two people who died at another Dominican Republic resort — one as recently as April — came forward. As a result, Fox News confirmed, the FBI has joined the investigation into the mysterious deaths.

The State Department has not issued any travel advisories for the Dominican Republic connected to the deaths as of Monday morning. A travel advisory for the country was issued in April due to crime.

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The investigation began after three Americans died at a Bahia Principe resort within days in May.

Miranda Schaup-Werner, 41, of Allentown, Pennsylvania died May 25, just hours after arriving at the Grand Bahia Príncipe Hotel. She was found unresponsive in her hotel room and died before making it to the hospital, the hotel said in a statement.

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She was on a trip to celebrate her anniversary with her husband but collapsed suddenly after having a drink and was later pronounced dead, CBS News reported.

Five days later, an engaged Maryland couple was found deceased in their hotel room at the same resort. The couple was identified as Edward Nathaniel Holmes, 63, and Cynthia Ann Day, 49, of Maryland.

All three died of respiratory failure and pulmonary edema, the Dominican Republic National Police told ABC News.

The hotel, in its statement, said Schaup-Werner died of a heart attack. The hotel would not comment on the cause of death of Day and Holmes pending toxicology results.

As news of those deaths made headlines, family members of people who died suddenly while vacationing on the island are coming forward seeking answers, including that of another Philadelphia-area resident who died in 2018 at the same resort under similar circumstances.

Additionally, at least three people who visited the Grand Bahia Principe resort and became ill have gone public with their stories.

Here's a look at some of the reports, which continue to come in:

  • The family of Glenside resident Yvette Monique Sport said she died in 2018 at a Bahia Principe Resort on the Dominican Republic after having a drink from the minibar. Sport's sister Felecia Nieves, in an interview with FOX29, said they were told Sport died from a heart attack. Her obituary simply states she died suddenly on June 23, 2018 while in the Dominican Republic.
  • Robert Bell Wallace, 67, of California, died in April after drinking from the minibar at the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino resort in Punta Cana, Fox News reported. A cause of death has not yet been provided to the family, the report said.
  • David Harrison, a Maryland resident, died last year at the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino resort, the New York Post reported. Dominican authorities also ruled his death was due to pulmonary edema and a heart attack, the report said.
  • A Denver, Colorado couple said they became "dangerously ill" during their stay at a Bahia Principe resort in the Dominican Republic. They told told ABC it smelled like paint had been spilled all over the room. A doctor who examined them upon their return said they had likely been sickened due to poisoning by pesticides, the report said.
  • A New York woman said she was sickened after drinking a bottle of soda from the minibar at the Grand Bahia Principe resort in October 2018. Awilda Montes told the New York Post the soda from the minibar fridge tasted like bleach and made her violently ill.

The hotel, in a statement about the deaths in May, said there is no evidence "of any correlation between these two unfortunate incidents." Bahia Principe staff followed the appropriate medical and security protocols in both cases, the hotel said.

The hotel did not return a request for comment from Patch.

However, in its most recent statement, the resort said it has a "firm commitment to collaborate completely with the authorities and hope for a prompt resolution."

The company also alleges misinformation about the incidents has been published by the media.

"Bahia Principe Hotels & Resorts has suffered great damage to its image and reputation. Serious insults and threats have been levied on some of our more than 15,000 employees and their families, who are the backbone of our company and before whom we cannot stand idle on the sidelines."

The resort is advertised as a "sweet and cozy" getaway with access to world-class golf courses. In its statement, the resort says it holds "some of the most prestigious certifications in the tourism industry" and accommodates 700,000 guests annually.

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