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  4. An 11-year-old boy died in a mobile home with no heat during the winter storm in Texas, and authorities suspect he had hypothermia

An 11-year-old boy died in a mobile home with no heat during the winter storm in Texas, and authorities suspect he had hypothermia

Kelly McLaughlin   

An 11-year-old boy died in a mobile home with no heat during the winter storm in Texas, and authorities suspect he had hypothermia
  • Cristian Pavon's family was left without heat or power during a rare snowstorm this week.
  • The 11-year-old died on Tuesday. His family and authorities suspect the cause was hypothermia.
  • His family was among the millions of people in Texas who lost power this week.

An 11-year-old boy died on Tuesday in an unheated mobile home in Texas that had lost power $4. His family and officials suspect he had hypothermia.

Cristian Pavon was one of at least 30 people in Texas who died this week as temperatures plunged and millions of homes went without power for days, $4.

The boy's mother, Maria Pineda, $4 that her home in Conroe, near Houston, had lost power over the weekend and that temperatures had dropped into the single digits.

She said Cristian had gone to sleep under a pile of blankets on Monday. "He was OK," Pineda told Univision, adding that Cristian "had dinner, he played, and he went to bed."

But Cristian didn't respond when she and his stepfather tried to wake him up on Tuesday, she said.

Cristian's aunt, Jaliza Yera, $4, an ABC affiliate in Houston, that the family called 911 and performed CPR until officials arrived.

Now officials are investigating whether he died of hypothermia, The Post reported.

Sgt. Jeff Smith of the Conroe Police Department $4 that Cristian "was a normal, healthy child."

Cristian's family is $4 to transport the boy's body to Honduras, where they are from.

$4 lost power this week because of a devastating storm. It affected neighboring states with $4.

At least 47 people have died in the cold snap, The Post reported. Some are thought to have died from exposure to the cold or in house fires, while others died of carbon-monoxide poisoning.

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