New information has emerged surrounding the terrible death of TikTok singer Emilie Kiser’s three-year-old son.
On May 12, tiny Trigg was playing in his backyard in Arizona when he slipped into an unprotected pool while being supervised by his father, Brady, who was also caring for his then-newborn baby, Theodore, while Emilie was out with her friends.
The boy, who had received lessons but did not ‘completely’ understand how to swim, was playing in the pool when the tragedy occurred.
“It is clear from the video that he did not go into the water intentionally; rather, he tripped and fell in while playing with an inflatable chair,” according to the article!

When paramedics arrived, they performed life-saving CPR on the youngster and took him to Chandler Regional Hospital before airlifting him to Phoenix Children’s Hospital, where he unfortunately died six days later on May 18.
Authorities suggested that Brady face child abuse charges at the time, but cops dropped them two weeks ago.
Brady said he lost sight of their son for approximately three to five minutes while caring for Theodore; however, CCTV footage shows that it was far longer.
According to a police report referencing the camera, Trigg ‘was in the backyard unaccompanied for more than nine minutes and in the water for roughly seven of those minutes.’
“Brady’s statements do not match what is seen on the video; he did not accurately describe one thing [Trigg] did after he went outside,” according to the investigation report.
“This leads to the inference that Brady was unaware of what [Trigg] was doing and did not observe him. The confluence of these causes resulted in drowning, and addressing any of the contributory situations may have avoided the tragedy.”
It comes after the Kisers won a court battle against Maricopa County public agencies to safeguard the records of their son’s death.

According to The Independent, over 100 public record requests were made with the city of Chandler and the Maricopa County Medical Examiner’s Office, which the complaint described as a ‘deep violation of privacy’ that would inflict ‘irreparable injury’ on Kiser and his family.
The Arizona Superior Court for Maricopa County found that Kiser can redact two pages from a Chandler Police Department report, allowing her to maintain some privacy over her son’s death.
“The transcript on the disputed sections is not necessary for public accountability,” concluded Judge Christopher Whitten in his finding on Friday (August 8). “Its disclosure would serve no purpose other than satisfying morbid curiosity.”
“These redactions do not alter any material facts of the accident,” the lawyer told E! News in a statement. “But they protect the dignity of a little boy whose memory should reflect the love and light he brought to the world.”