Bogus Ad for Money Shocks Parents of Cerebral Palsy Teen Who Died on Flight

Uncle sets up legit fund to cover 16-year-old's funeral expenses.

ByABC News
December 13, 2013, 1:46 PM

Dec. 13, 2013— -- The family of Zachary Bisiar, the 16-year-old with cerebral palsy who died of a heart attack on board a Delta flight last weekend, has launched a fundraising campaign to help defray the costs of the teen's funeral after a bogus appeal appeared online.

The teen's uncle, Steven Leahy, said his sister Toni Rolando is "devastated" by the loss of her son and was horrified to run across an unauthorized news video of the tragedy asking for cash.

"We saw a YouTube video showing a CNN report and it had a donation button at the bottom that looked like someone was using the tragedy to get money," said Leahy, 40, who lives in Sugar Hill, Ga. "The thought that someone would try to get some financial gain off this really upset me."

So Leahy, an IT specialist, decided to set up his own fundraising campaign on gofundme.com and hopes to raise $15,000 to help offset funeral costs and to help his sister and her husband.

Volunteer doctors worry about deaths on planes.

The family was in the middle of a move from Ft. Lewis, Wash., to Ft. Stewart, Ga., where Charlie Rolando, the boy's stepfather, was being stationed. A quartermaster in the U.S. Army, Rolando was with one of the last units to pull out of Iraq.

"I used to be in the military and I know what limited pay you get," said Leahy. "There is the cost for the move. My brother-in-law was driving the car and bringing all their household necessities, and there was gas and lodging across country, then the tragedy hit."

"If people donate, I want it to go to something good," he said.

Zachary had both physical and mental deficits and had some difficulty talking, according to his uncle. "But he was able to do a lot of things and could ride a special bike," said Leahy. "He was also able to walk with a walker."

Zachary was flying with his mother, grandmother and 14-year-old brother Teran Bisiar on Delta flight 128 from Seattle to Atlanta when, 30 minutes into the trip, he went into cardiac arrest. The plane was diverted and landed in Spokane.

The teen had been cleared by doctors to fly, but Leahy said there had been some discussion over whether to fly or drive across country.

"They read about another child with a condition like his who drove across country and had a lot of issues in the car and got a blood clot," he said. "So they made the decision to fly."

"There were no heart issues," said Leahy. "They had visited the doctor because there was concern he would get a panic attack, because he had never flown before. They were asking about Valium or Ambien so he could sleep and relax, but the doctor worried that his heart rate would be too low."

The medical examiner in Washington's Spokane County is awaiting further tests of an autopsy before determining the teen's cause of death. Forensic pathologist Sally S. Aiken said in a statement this week that the death was "thought to be a rare complication of a rare disease process. The manner of death is natural."

One medical expert who has not treated Zachary said there was likely no connection between the heart attack and the cerebral palsy.

"Not knowing the details, I think it's probably unrelated," said Dr. James Blackman, a pediatrician and medical advisor for the New Jersey-based Cerebral Palsy International Research Foundation.

"Cerebral palsy is a pretty broad condition where there is injury to the brain and it affects primarily muscle control and movement," said Blackman. "There can be co-morbidities and a variety of other problems with cognition and communication, but not necessarily heart problems.