A 75-year-old Boston Uber driver who was carjacked, brutally beaten and left for dead on a street in Dorchester earlier this year had died from his injuries. A passerby found Henry Miller dazed and bleeding near the intersection of Washington and Dunlap streets near Codman Square in early June. Miller recalls driving to the area to pick up a fare. "There were two people standing outside," Miller recounted. "I remember saying something to them, but I don't know what I said. Then I just went blank."His heart had stopped and doctors had to bring him back to life.The injuries the longtime Uber and Lyft driver suffered ultimately led to his death months later. "It was murder," his daughter Emily Miller said. "It was a slow murder. For an iPhone and a joyride."Emily said her father was hooked up to an oxygen machine just so he could breathe for the past few months. "Every day, he'd say, 'I'm going to drive tomorrow,'" Emily Miller, recounting her father's words, said. "'We're going to go practice in a parking lot; I'm gonna get back on the road.'"Henry Miller died Monday, leaving his family with deep sorrow, coupled with a deep resolve to find the people they consider his killers. Miller testified in front of a grand jury last Wednesday, just days before he died. Boston police are still looking for tips in the case.Click here to help the family's funeral expenses.

A 75-year-old Boston Uber driver who was carjacked, brutally beaten and left for dead on a street in Dorchester earlier this year had died from his injuries.

A passerby found Henry Miller dazed and bleeding near the intersection of Washington and Dunlap streets near Codman Square in early June.

Advertisement Related Content Uber driver speaks out about attack

Miller recalls driving to the area to pick up a fare. "There were two people standing outside," Miller recounted. "I remember saying something to them, but I don't know what I said. Then I just went blank."

His heart had stopped and doctors had to bring him back to life.

The injuries the longtime Uber and Lyft driver suffered ultimately led to his death months later.

"It was murder," his daughter Emily Miller said. "It was a slow murder. For an iPhone and a joyride."

Emily said her father was hooked up to an oxygen machine just so he could breathe for the past few months.

"Every day, he'd say, 'I'm going to drive tomorrow,'" Emily Miller, recounting her father's words, said. "'We're going to go practice in a parking lot; I'm gonna get back on the road.'"

Henry Miller died Monday, leaving his family with deep sorrow, coupled with a deep resolve to find the people they consider his killers.

Miller testified in front of a grand jury last Wednesday, just days before he died.

Boston police are still looking for tips in the case.

Click here to help the family's funeral expenses.