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The following article was taken from the Daily Mail in June 2006
Millionaire's daughter dies of carbon monoxide poisoning at luxury home
By TAHIRA YAQOOB
The six-year-old daughter of a multi-millionaire City banker died of carbon monoxide poisoning after a faulty boiler at the family's luxury home pumped out lethal levels of toxic fumes. Elisabeth Giauque died at the £2million deluxe mansion with 20 times the normal levels of poisonous carbon monoxide in her blood. Now her devastated parents, banking director Nicolas Giauque and his wife Nathalie, have launched a campaign to highlight the dangers of the hidden lethal gas to other families.
Mr Giauque, 35, said: "Not getting your boiler checked or having carbon monoxide detectors is like driving your car with faulty brakes.
"You may think you can do without the expense but it is a small price to pay for a life. Before Elisabeth died we hardly gave it a second thought. "We have learned the hard way and our precious daughter has died."
French-born Mr Giauque, who is worth £50million, is a director of the London hedge fund firm Noonday Capital and has earned himself 86th place in the Sunday Times rich list. With his comfortable fortune - and with three small children to accommodate - he moved the family into the rented mansion in 2003 in Wimbledon, south London, while waiting for work to complete at their new £3million home nearby. The Giauques were shown a valid gas certificate issued within the previous 12 months and were satisfied every care had been taken with the deluxe property, which was rented privately. But an inquest heard the boiler was not checked again for at least two years - enough time for it to pump out lethal levels of the poisonous gas, which is invisible and does not smell. The fumes made their way through the cavity walls and floorboards above the boiler room directly into Elisabeth's bedroom.
Collapsed
The schoolgirl, a pupil at The Study prep school, Wimbledon, was found collapsed in her room in February last year and taken to hospital, where she died shortly afterward of carbon monoxide toxicity. Levels of the gas in her bloodstream should have been between 0 and 0.8mg but instead had shot up to 21.5mg. Staff at St George's Hospital in Tooting, south London, did not spot the astonishingly high levels, at least 20 times what they should have been and diagnosed her with meningitis.
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