Lawmakers seek probe in heatstroke death of football player
NEPTUNE, N.J. (AP) — New Jersey’s U.S. House delegation called Tuesday for an independent investigation into the heatstroke death of a Kansas community college football player from their state.
The state’s 12 representatives wrote to Garden City Community College President Ryan Ruda requesting the probe of 19-year-old Braeden Bradforth’s death.
Bradforth, who was a defensive lineman from Neptune High School, died in August about an hour and a half after practice. An autopsy report from December blamed his death on exertional heatstroke.
School administrators said last year they were conducting an internal review of the circumstances of his death.
Messages seeking comment have been left with the college.
New Jersey’s representatives — 11 Democrats and one Republican — say the probe should at least review health and safety practices at the school.
“Most regrettably, the Bradforth family’s tragedy is not the first of its kind. Exertional heat stroke is one of the top three causes of sudden death in athletes, yet it is preventable,” the lawmakers wrote.
Bradforth was found unconscious by an athletic trainer outside his dorm room Aug. 1. He died that night at a hospital.
Bradforth is the second Garden City football player to die in two years. Sean Callahan, 19, a sophomore offensive lineman, died at a home in Kismet, Kansas, in May 2017 of what a sheriff’s office called natural causes.