GUTWRENCHING details continue to emerge in the drowning death of influencer Emilie Kiser’s son.
Little Trigg Kiser, three, was in his family’s backyard pool for about seven minutes before he was found by his dad Brady on May 12.

Emilie Kiser’s son Trigg died after being found in the family’s pool in Arizona in May[/caption]
He was playing with an inflatable chair at the family’s Chandler home before tripping and falling into the pool.
He was rushed to a local children’s hospital where he died six days later.
Brady was looking after Trigg and the couple’s newborn son, Theodore, while Emilie was out with friends at a “taco place.”
In an interview with police, he told cops it wasn’t the “norm” for Trigg to play outdoors without supervision before recalling the moment he spotted the family‘s dog looking at water.
He admitted this gave him a “poor feeling.”
“It was out of the ordinary to see him standing there looking in the water as he was,” he said.
Brady then rushed to the pool where he found Trigg, according to a Chandler police report cited by Today.
He was “freaking out” when cops arrived at the scene, according to the report.
Cops revealed that Trigg was unsupervised for around nine minutes.
He was in the water for seven of those nine minutes.
Brady disputed the timings when being questioned by police.
“I didn’t have a clock, obviously, I don’t know the exact time, but it was moments, it wasn’t minutes,” he said.
Trigg didn’t know how to swim, but recently had lessons.
Cops revealed that an NBA basketball game was on the TV when they arrived at the family’s home in Chandler.
Brady had put a $25 bet on Boston Celtics ace Jayson Tatum scoring 40 points.
The wager came in and Brady received a $102.50 payout.
TRAGIC ACCIDENT
Trigg died on May 18 and his death was ruled as “accidental drowning.”
Cops reported how there was a lack of color in his skin and he didn’t appear to be breathing.
Meanwhile, Chandler cops recommended child abuse charges against Brady.
Last month, Maricopa County attorneys ruled that Brady wouldn’t be charged.
Attorneys revealed there is “no reasonable likelihood of conviction.”
“In order to convict a person of this charge, the state has to prove beyond a reasonable doubt to a unanimous jury that the person failed to perceive a substantial and unjustifiable risk, and that failure to perceive the risk was a gross deviation from the standard of care a reasonable person would show,” they said.
Emilie, a parenting influencer, has not spoken publicly about Trigg’s death.
Just hours before the tragedy unfolded, she shared a TikTok clip that showed Brady in bed with Trigg and Theodore.
She filed court documents in a bid to block some details about Trigg’s death becoming public.

Trigg Kiser celebrating his third birthday[/caption]
Brady with Trigg and newborn Theodore[/caption]