I still don't know how the report will help, as they did not take any samples to test. What I have killed stems from me working very heavily with wild caught animals some time ago. A lot of baby ball pythons, and Leaf Tail Geckos. You're bound to lose some wild caught stuff. The most recent, and only one this year was a female ball python who did not do well when I lost power for 8 days during hurricane sandy. The temp dropped from 82 being a low to 45 being a high overnight. (power failure happened around 3 am) She was the only animal which did not take the crazy drop in temperature well.
As for your friend or whoever, If he is top 10 in breeding in the USA, then he likely has or had a name on here which he can pull out of the dust. You can not use third party things like that.
Finally, I had said the wobble can be affected by stressful situations. You put that snake through a lot. Any of that could cause the wobble to get worse. On top of it being around 100 grams. Something as small as direct sunlight for too long can do it. An ambient temp of 88 can. A drop from 110 to room temp back to 88 can. Forcing water can. Stress causes the wobble to get worse in some cases. I can not say this statement enough, as this is what likely happened. We all want to be perfect with our care and set ups, but sometimes when an animal needs more precise care, we miss it. Our small mess ups mean a lot more in some animals. Keep amphibians or smaller geckos, both of which I keep, and see what 2 degrees do to them.