A veterinarian who died while operating on a dog inside a mobile animal care van in Queens succumbed to accidental carbon ...
An investigation is underway into how a man and a dog died inside a mobile veterinary van in Flushing, Queens, on Sunday.
A second man was found unconscious outside the van. The police are investigating whether the deaths were caused by carbon ...
"His dedication to veterinary medicine touched countless lives," said the animal hospital where Dr. Ashraf Hussein worked ...
FLUSHING, Queens (PIX11) — A man and a dog found dead inside a mobile veterinary van in Queens may have died from carbon ...
A man and dog were found dead Sunday inside a mobile veterinary van in Flushing, Queens, according to New York City police ...
Ashraf Hussein was found dead inside the van parked next to a thick snow bank on 65th Ave. and Parsons Blvd. in Flushing ...
The Eltingville veterinarian volunteered multiple days a week at the low-cost clinic where he was discovered in a snowbound ...
Carbon monoxide may have killed a New York City veterinarian and dog found dead inside a mobile pet clinic.
A mobile veterinary clinic is working to provide affordable preventative care as pet owners face rising costs for routine veterinary visits.
Investigators were looking into whether the people working in the van didn’t have proper ventilation as the generator ran, police sources said.
ABC7 New York on MSN
Man, dog found dead inside mobile vet van in Queens
The discovery was made just before 9:30 a.m. on 157-18 65th Ave. in Flushing.
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