>>13860997Because of an ongoing knee injury, some believed that was the reason Oro wasn’t getting up. Outside, many people surround him, and the medics eased him on a stretcher to take him to the locker rooms and then to an awaiting ambulance. According to witnesses, Oro’s brother Plata tried to encourage his brother by telling him, "Don’t go to sleep, Oro!"
>Their mother and father (Calavera II, translated as Skull II) were also at the arena watching the match but unable to help. Oro, unfortunately, passed away en route towards the hospital.>Because Oro’s parents refused an autopsy for their son, there is much speculation about his death. A more agreed-upon theory is that he suffered severe head trauma or a brain aneurysm that led to a hemorrhagic stroke (intracerebral hemorrhage) within minutes. But in 1993, kayfabe was inseparable from Lucha Libre, and many fans still swear that Kahoz had a weapon that somehow damaged Oro’s throat, causing his death. On the day of Oro’s burial, his father, Esteban Hernández, said he doubts his son was a victim of foul play.>When reviewing the somewhat blurry and aged video of the match, it seems that Kahoz’s hands are empty during the second strike. But conspiracy theorists explain that his hands are bare because the first strike Oro received caused the permanent damage, not the second one.We cannot see if he has a weapon for the first strike because he is rather far away from the camera and with his back towards it. During the second strike to the throat, it is clear that Kahoz’s hands are devoid of any weapon. It is theorized that said weapon got disposed of with the aid of the fan in the aisle seat.
>Oro supposedly believed that something would go wrong in his life. He refused to go on a tour of Japan, and whenever possible, he ensured he took many family members to witness his final matches. The rumors are that the night of his death, 30 family members were in the audience.