A construction worker in Texas, initially accused of being on drugs before he died, actually died of heatstroke while working in the sun in June 2022, according to a lawsuit filed last month.

Gabriel Infante, 24, was installing fiber optic cables in San Antonio for his employer B Comm Constructors LLC on June 23, 2022, when he started showing signs of heat stress. He eventually succumbed to heatstroke hours later at a hospital, the lawsuit states.

Gabriel Infante.
Gabriel Infante. via Hilliard Law

His mother, Velma Infante, filed the lawsuit against B Comm Constructors LLC on the one-year anniversary of the incident, claiming the construction company neglected to protect her son from “the known hazards associated with extreme heat conditions” while on the job.

Velma is seeking $1,000,000 in damages.

“Workers are not and should not be expendable commodities to be used and abused in this extreme Texas heat with no reasonable protections from the very real dangers of severe injury or death,” said attorney Bob Hilliard, who is representing Velma in the case. “No project and no deadline should take precedence over assuring that every worker goes home safely to his family at the end of a day’s work.”

Infante was working at a site near 10451 Fork Creek with his colleague and childhood friend, Joshua Espinoza, when he began showing signs of heat stress, including “confusion, dizziness, altered mental status, and loss of consciousness,” the lawsuit states. Infante fell to the ground twice, hitting his head on concrete.

Temperatures on June 23, 2022, reached a high of 102 degrees in San Antonio, according to Accuweather.com.

A foreman on site initially believed Infante was under the influence of drugs and instructed Espinoza to call the police. Espinoza called emergency medical services, who advised Infante was showing signs of heatstroke. The foreman still demanded that EMS perform a drug test, according to the lawsuit.

Infante was taken to the emergency room at a local hospital, where his temperature was recorded at 109.8 degrees Fahrenheit in transit.

According to the CDC, “heat stroke is the most serious heat-related illness” and happens when the body’s temperature rapidly increases and it’s unable to cool itself down. During heatstroke, the body temperature can reach 106 degrees Fahrenheit or higher leading to permanent disability or death if a person doesn’t receive emergency aid.

Infante died on June 24, 2022, at 2:25 a.m. His autopsy revealed that he died of heatstroke, the lawsuit alleges.

The lawsuit accuses B Comm Constructors LLC of gross negligence for instructing Infante and other employees to work in the heat, not having a heat-related illness program and “failing to develop a work/rest cycle based on validated measures of heat stress,” among other things.

B Comm Constructors LLC did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

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