24/7 LIVE STAFF — Compassionate help, any time day or night
CALL NOW 1-888-ATTY-911
Blog | Collin County

Frisco Trampoline Park Injury Attorneys & Pediatric Catastrophic Accident Lawyers Attorney911 Ralph Manginello 25+ Years Experience & Lupe Peña Former Recreational-Defense Insider Defeating Sky Zone Urban Air & DEFY Waivers Expert Mastery of ASTM F2970 ASTM F381 & EN ISO 23659:2022 Standards Holding Unleashed Brands Seidler Equity & Palladium Equity Accountable for Sky Zone Urban Air Altitude Launch & Backyard Jumpking Skywalker Springfree Defects Proven by Cosmic Jump $11.485M Harris County Verdict Damion Collins $15.6M Urban Air Arbitration Mathew Knight $3.5M Surveillance-Glitch Spoliation Case & Active $10M UH Rhabdomyolysis Lawsuit Pediatric TBI SCIWORA Salter-Harris Growth Plate Fractures Vertebral Artery Dissection & Spinal Cord Injury Specialists Applying Delfingen Bilingual & Tex Fam Code 153.073 Waiver Attacks Beaumont v Geter TX 2024 Precedent & DVR Forensic Imaging Supporting Families at Childrens Medical Center Plano Hablamos Español Free Consultation No Fee Unless We Win 1-888-ATTY-911

April 25, 2026 26 min read
frisco-featured-image.png

At the Sky Zone in Frisco, specifically the Preston Ridge location near the intersection of Preston Road and Warren Parkway, a seven-year-old came off a court on a stretcher last year. His parents had signed the waiver at the kiosk twenty minutes earlier, assuming that because the facility was packed with Frisco ISD families, the safety protocols must be as high as the admission price. They were wrong. One bounce, one bad landing, and one broken neck are all it takes to change a Frisco family’s life forever. For over twenty-five years, Ralph Manginello has been fighting for injury victims against corporate giants like BP, Walmart, and Amazon. Now, we bring that same relentless energy to holding trampoline parks in Frisco and throughout North Texas accountable for the business decisions that maim children.

What happened to your child wasn’t a “freak accident.” It was the predictable output of a system designed to maximize throughput at the expense of safety. The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) has been warning since 1999 that trampolines do not belong in recreational centers or homes. Yet, in Frisco neighborhoods from Stonebriar to Phillips Creek Ranch, backyard trampolines are a staple, and the local indoor parks are booked solid for birthday parties every Saturday. We know the industry standards like ASTM F2970 for commercial courts and ASTM F381 for home equipment because we’ve spent our careers studying the ways corporate defendants cut corners to hit margin targets. When your eight-year-old comes off a court with a shattered tibia and the operations manager hands you a clipboard instead of calling 911, you need an attorney who can quote the industry safety floor from memory. You need Attorney911.

What Frisco Parents Need to Know: This Was Never an Accident

A trampoline injury at an Urban Air or a Sky Zone in Frisco is almost never an isolated event of “bad luck.” It is a business decision. Every double-bounce that shatters a child’s femur happened because a park decided to staff a Saturday afternoon at 60% of the required attendant-to-jumper ratio to save on labor costs. Our associate attorney, Lupe Peña, brings a unique advantage to our clients—he used to sit on the other side of the table, defending recreational businesses and insurance companies. He knows exactly which waiver clauses in the ones you signed at the Frisco parks are airtight and which ones are full of holes. He’s seen the defensive playbook because he helped write it. Now, he uses that internal knowledge to dismantle the park’s primary defense before they can even file a motion.

We represent families, we represent children, and we represent the parent standing at a hospital bedside in a Frisco trauma bay—likely at Children’s Medical Center Plano—watching a surgeon explain what happens when a growth plate is destroyed at age nine. That is who we fight for. Our firm has recovered multi-million dollar settlements for traumatic brain injury and spinal cord injury victims, the same catastrophic categories a park or a defective residential trampoline can cause in a single bad landing. Whether you were hurt at a commercial park along the North Texas Tollway or your child was injured on a neighbor’s Jumpking or Skywalker in a Frisco subdivision, we know how to document the medicine and secure the evidence before it vanishes.

The Evidence Clock: Why the Next 7 Days Are Critical in Frisco

In Frisco, the evidence clock runs much faster than the legal clock. While the Texas statute of limitations generally gives you two years to file a claim, the park’s surveillance DVR is likely set to overwrite in as little as 7 to 30 days. The incident report you were pressured to fill out is being “revised” on the park’s computer system right now. The foam pit where your child landed head-first is being refilled or rotated to hide the fact that the cubes were compacted far below the ASTM F2970 depth specification.

If you wait two weeks to call a lawyer, the Saturday afternoon your child was hurt is already gone from the hard drive. Our spoliation letter goes out within 24 hours of your retention. We demand more than just the video; we demand the DVR access logs, the attendant shift schedules for that specific Frisco location, and the digital version history of the kiosk waiver. We don’t rely on the park’s honesty—we rely on forensic digital examiners who can interrogate the park’s Microsoft 365 or Google Workspace cloud for every edit, every timestamp, and every author of that incident report.

How Trampolines Maim: The Physics of Injury in Frisco Parks

The most common mechanism of injury we see in Frisco is the double-bounce. This isn’t just “kids playing”; it’s physics that most parents don’t understand until the bone breaks. When a 200-pound adult lands on a trampoline bed at the same instant a 50-pound child is pushing off it, energy transfer multiplies the child’s launch force by up to 4x. The child isn’t jumping anymore—the child is being thrown by a catapult. This is precisely why ASTM F2970 requires parks to operationalize age and weight separation. When an Urban Air monitor in Frisco is on their phone while a teenager double-bounces a toddler, that is a direct breach of the industry’s own safety standard.

Beyond the double-bounce, the foam pits in North Texas facilities are often silent catastrophes. They look soft, but they harbor two distinct dangers. First, the biomechanical risk: if the foam is compacted—due to high throughput and deferred maintenance—a head-first entry results in the head wedging between cubes while the body’s momentum continues. This produce cervical hyperflexion or axial compression, identical to a diving injury in a shallow pool. Second, the biological risk: our firm is the only one in the region aggressively addressing the infection vertical. Foam pits are bacterial reservoirs. They absorb sweat, saliva, and blood, and they cannot be sanitized effectively. A small abrasion from a jump can lead to MRSA, staph, or even necrotizing fasciitis. If your child developed a skin infection after visiting a park in Frisco, that is a premises liability case that we are built to litigate.

Breaking the Waiver: Texas Law and the Frisco Family

The park’s insurance adjuster will call you within 48 hours. She will sound concerned. She will mention the waiver you signed at the Frisco kiosk as if it’s the end of the conversation. It isn’t. In Texas, the Dresser Industries v. Page Petroleum “fair notice” doctrine requires that any release of future negligence must be conspicuous and expressly use the word “negligence.” Rushed kiosk waivers in busy Frisco parks frequently fail this test.

More importantly, the Texas decision in Munoz v. II Jaz Inc. ensures that a parent cannot pre-emptively sign away a minor child’s personal injury cause of action. Even though you signed that iPad screen, your child’s right to recover survives. And if the injury was caused by the park’s conscious disregard of known safety standards—like operating at 50% staffing on a Friday night in Frisco—the jury can find gross negligence. In Harris County, a jury awarded $11.485 million against a trampoline park operator for exactly this reason. The waiver was signed. The jury found gross negligence anyway. We bring that same Texas-tough litigation strategy to every Frisco court.

The Liability Stack: Who We Sue After a Frisco Injury

When we say we sue a trampoline park chain, we don’t just name the local Frisco LLC. The money is upstream. We perform a corporate structure archaeology on every case, identifying the operator LLC, the franchisee, the franchisor (like Urban Air Franchise Holdings), the corporate parent (like Unleashed Brands or Sky Zone, Inc.), and even the private equity sponsors like Palladium Equity Partners or Seidler Equity Partners who approve the cost-cutting protocols.

The insurance tower for a national chain operating in Frisco typically includes a primary general liability policy of $1 million to $5 million, but it’s the umbrella and excess layers that reach $25 million or more. We also look at the component manufacturers. If a net anchor failed on a Jumpking or a Skywalker backyard trampoline in a Frisco yard, we analyze the engineering for design defects. If the climbing wall harness at a Frisco Urban Air failed to attach, as allegedly happened in the Lakhani case in Sugar Land, we go after the harness manufacturer and the auto-belay designer like Ropes Courses, Inc.

Medical Specificity: Your Child’s Injury is Not “Just a Break”

A “broken leg” at age eight is a medical and financial catastrophe that most generalist personal injury firms in North Texas don’t know how to value. At Attorney911, we use medical specificity because it changes the settlement math. We don’t talk about a “broken ankle”; we talk about a Salter-Harris Type III comminuted fracture of the distal tibial physis with displacement requiring ORIF (open reduction internal fixation).

In Frisco’s active youth sports culture, a growth plate injury is a decade of orthopedic monitoring. That child may face a limb-length discrepancy that doesn’t manifest until age 14, requiring corrective osteotomy. Our firm is currently litigating a $10 million lawsuit involving rhabdomyolysis and acute kidney failure. The injury physiology is identical to what happens to a child who jumps for 90 minutes in a heated Frisco indoor park without water and arrives at a North Texas ER two days later with cola-colored urine. We know the medicine, we know the experts, and we know how to build a life-care plan that covers the next 60 years of your child’s life.

Why Choose Attorney911 for a Frisco Trampoline Case?

Most personal injury lawyers handle trampoline cases like any other slip-and-fall. We don’t. We’ve gone head-to-head with Fortune 500 corporations like BP and won. We bring that same federal-court-level discipline to every Frisco case. We have three Texas offices, but our authority is nationwide. We advance every single cost for investigation—the biomechanical engineer, the pediatric orthopedic surgeon, the ASTM compliance specialist—and you pay nothing unless we win.

Hablamos Español. Llame al 1-888-ATTY-911. Lupe Peña habla con usted directamente—sin intérpretes. If your family primary language is Spanish and the park presented an English-only waiver at the Frisco kiosk, the doctrine from Delfingen US-Texas v. Valenzuela may let us void that contract entirely. We close the language gap that insurance adjusters use as a weapon.

Frequently Asked Questions for Frisco Families

Can I sue if I signed the waiver at a Frisco trampoline park?

Yes. Texas courts have voided trampoline park waivers for gross negligence, inadequate conspicuousness, and minor-child enforceability problems. If the park in Frisco violated ASTM F2970 by understaffing or failing to separate age groups, the waiver likely won’t protect them from a gross negligence claim. The Cosmic Jump $11.485 million verdict in Texas proves that a signed waiver is not a blank check for park misconduct.

What should I do if my child was injured today at a Frisco park?

Go to the emergency room immediately—Children’s Medical Center Plano is a top choice for Frisco families. Then, call us at 1-888-ATTY-911 while you are still at the hospital. We need to send a spoliation letter to the park along the Preston Road corridor or the Tollway TODAY to ensure the surveillance video of your child’s injury isn’t overwritten.

Who is liable for a backyard trampoline injury in Frisco?

Depending on the facts, we may target the homeowner (under the attractive nuisance doctrine if a neighbor child was hurt), the manufacturer (for a product defect), and the retailer (like Walmart or Amazon). Texas law allows us to pursue multiple parties simultaneously to find the deepest insurance pocket.

How much is my child’s trampoline injury case worth in Frisco?

Settlements for serious pediatric injuries in North Texas can range from $500,000 for complex fractures to over $10 million for catastrophic brain or spinal cord injuries. The value depends entirely on the life-care plan we build with our medical experts, forecasting the costs of future surgeries, physical therapy, and lost earning capacity.

Call Attorney911: The Case Starts Today

Your child’s case is decided by what gets preserved this week. The park has lawyers, the franchisor has lawyers, and the PE sponsor has corporate defense teams. You need Ralph Manginello. You need Lupe Peña. You need a firm that knows ASTM F2970 by heart and has spent 25 years making corporate giants pay for their negligence in Frisco and across the country.

Call 1-888-ATTY-911. Hablamos Español. No fee unless we win. Your child’s recovery fund stays untouched while we advance every expert cost. Don’t let a kiosk waiver in Frisco be the last word on your family’s future.

Detailed Analysis of Frisco Trampoline Park Locations and Risks

Frisco, Texas, has become a ground zero for the indoor trampoline and adventure park explosion. With one of the highest concentrations of families and youth sports participants in the DFW metroplex, venues like Urban Air Trampoline and Adventure Park on John W. Elliott Drive and Sky Zone at Preston Ridge are more than just weekend destinations—they are high-volume commercial enterprises. These facilities in Frisco have expanded far beyond the simple trampoline deck. They now feature “Battle Beams,” “Warrior Courses,” and the “Sky Rider” indoor coaster.

Each of these bolton attractions introduces a new failure mode. The Sky Rider, Urban Air’s signature zipline-style coaster, has been implicated in strangulation patterns across the country, from Newnan, Georgia, to Bloomingdale, Illinois. In Frisco, we monitor these chain-wide patterns because they prove foreseeability. If a harness failed in a Florida park in 2019, the Urban Air parent company — now owned by Seidler Equity Partners — was on notice. When that same failure happens to a child in a Frisco birthday party, it isn’t just negligence; it is an affirmative choice to continue operating a defective system.

Standards Violated: The ASTM F2970 Breach at Frisco Parks

Most personal injury firms in Collin County can’t tell you what ASTM F2970 requires of a trampoline park. We can cite it from memory. Section 10 of the standard mandates specific attendant-to-jumper ratios that most Frisco parks violate during peak summer hours when the 100-degree Texas heat drives every family indoors. When your child is launched off-center by a double-bounce at the Frisco Sky Zone, we look at the attendant’s training file. Did they receive the eight hours of initial training mandated by the industry’s own peer-written standard, or were they a high-school student hired two weeks ago from Frisco High with ninety minutes of video orientation?

We pair every ASTM F2970 mention with EN ISO 23659:2022 — the mandatory international standard used in Europe. We show Frisco juries that while Sky Zone, Urban Air, and Altitude operate to a voluntary floor in Texas, the rest of the developed world treats these same safety requirements as binding ceilings. The United States is one of the only developed economies without a binding national safety standard for these parks, leaving Frisco families at the mercy of private equity-backed operators whose primary focus is the quarterly margin target, not the depth of the foam pit.

The Rhabdo Bridge: A Unique Attorney911 Expertise for Frisco Families

Frisco is an elite youth sports market. Between the Dallas Cowboys’ Star and the numerous club soccer and cheer programs, Frisco kids are among the most active in the nation. This level of activity leads to a specific, under-reported medical risk: exertional rhabdomyolysis. Our firm is currently litigating a $10 million lawsuit against a major university involving rhabdomyolysis and acute kidney failure. We recognize the signs: a Frisco teenager jumps continuously for two hours at a “Glow Night,” becomes dehydrated in the humid indoor environment, and arrives at an emergency room on Monday with muscles feeling like stone and “cola-colored” urine.

If the park did not provide free water stations, did not enforce mandatory rest breaks, and sold high-sugar energy drinks instead of hydration, they have set the stage for rhabdo. We know how to document the myoglobin cascade and the renal tubular damage because we are already doing it in active litigation. We use the same medical experts from our $10 million university case to hold Frisco trampoline parks accountable for this muscle-and-organ breakdown.

Identifying the Local Defendants in Frisco

When we build a case for a Frisco injury, we look at the entire liability stack. The owner of the Urban Air Frisco location is likely an LLC designed to shield personal assets. But the parent company, Unleashed Brands, is headquartered just down the road in Grapevine. This proximity allows us to depose senior risk officers and corporate trainers without the travel delays other firms face.

We also look at the Frisco landlords. Many of these parks occupy large retail vacancies in shopping centers. If the park’s lease required safety inspections that were never performed, the property owner may be a co-defendant with his own multi-million dollar general liability policy. We leave no stone unturned because the local operator LLC in Frisco is often the smallest pocket in the case. The money for a lifetime of care after a cervical injury is upstream at the franchisor and parent level.

The Frisco Lobby Inspection: What We Teach Parents

We encourage Frisco parents to perform their own lobby inspection before paying for wristbands. Stand at the rail near the Frisco open-jump court. Count the monitors. Is the ratio worse than 1:32? Is a monitor on a phone? Are there gaps between the trampoline mat and the perimeter padding? These gaps are where Frisco ankles are snapped. In Massachusetts, an investigation found 224 emergency medical calls at 5 Sky Zone locations over 7 years—most involving injured feet or legs caught in these exact gaps.

If you see these red flags at a park in Frisco, leave. But if the injury has already happened, your photographs of those gaps, those distracted monitors, and those compressed foam pits are the exhibits that kill the waiver defense. Take the photos before you leave the parking lot. In Frisco, the park will fix the foam or replace the pad by Monday morning to “remediate” the scene. Your phone is the most powerful investigative tool you have in the first hour.

National Statistics, Local Impact: The 300,000 ER Visit Crisis

Nationally, over 300,000 trampoline-related ER visits happen every year. Most firms stop there. We dig deeper. The American Journal of Roentgenology published “Pediatric Trampoline Injuries Head to Toe” in 2024, noting that up to 1.6% of all pediatric ED trauma visits are now trampoline-related. In a fast-growing city like Frisco, that share is measured in hundreds of children a year.

We cite the 2024 Pediatrics study by Teague et al. which tracked 13,256 trampoline-park injuries across 8.4 million jumper-hours. The foam-pit injury rate of 1.91 per 1,000 jumpers is why we tell Frisco families: foam pits are the highest-catastrophe attraction in the park. If your kid is diving feet-first or head-first into a pit along the Preston Road corridor, they are gambling with a 1-in-500 chance of injury. The industry’s own shift to airbags since 2018 is an admission that those pits were never safe to begin with.

The Strategic Waiver Teardown for Frisco Plaintiffs

Texas is often called “defendant friendly,” but that is a myth we dismantle every day in court. While the Texas Supreme Court issued a pro-defendant ruling in Cerna v. Pearland Urban Air in 2025 regarding delegation clauses, the foundational rule from Munoz v. II Jaz Inc. still stands: a parent in Texas cannot sign away a child’s right to sue.

If your child was injured in Frisco, the park’s lawyer will wave a piece of paper. We wave the Texas Family Code. We also look at who signed. Was it a non-custodial parent? A grandmother? An aunt taking the kids to a Frisco birthday party? Under Texas Family Code § 153.073, only a parent or court-appointed conservator has the authority to bind a minor. If the “wrong” relative signed the iPad at the Frisco park, the waiver didn’t even form a contract. We attack on signer authority, bilingual formation, and gross negligence simultaneously.

The Frisco Life-Care Plan: Building the Damages Architecture

For a pediatric catastrophic injury in a high-income metro like Frisco, the damages math is different than in other parts of the state. A Salter-Harris fracture at age nine means a decade of orthopedic monitoring. We retain a life-care planner to forecast the next seventy years of your child’s life. What will corrective surgery cost in 2035? What is the adult-life earning-capacity loss for a Frisco student who can’t enter their chosen career because of permanent functional impairment?

We use tax-adjusted present value calculations that most firms miss. We don’t just ask for the medical bills; we ask for the future special education costs, the vocational rehabilitation, and the hedonic damage — the loss of the ability to participate in Frisco’s active social and athletic culture. Our settlements in TBI, spinal cord, and amputation reflect these multi-million dollar realities. We build the case so the park’s insurer has to face a Frisco jury with a number that makes them uncomfortable.

Why Your Homeowners Policy Might Exclude Your Frisco Trampoline

If your child was hurt on a backyard trampoline in one of Frisco’s master-planned communities, don’t assume the neighbor’s insurance covers it. Most North Texas homeowners’ policies now have absolute trampoline exclusions or require specific riders that neighbors often forget to pay for. If the policy excludes the injury, we don’t stop. We look at the manufacturer of the trampoline—Jumpking, Skywalker, Springfree.

Did the netting fail due to UV degradation in the harsh Texas sun? Frisco’s climate cuts the usable life of a backyard net in half. If the manufacturer didn’t include a UV-resistant warning or specify a replacement cadence, they face strict product liability. We also look at the Frisco HOA. If the trampoline was in a common area, or if the HOA rules allowed an attractive nuisance to exist without a locked gate, the HOA’s master liability policy is a target.

The Fraud-on-the-Court Flag: When Frisco Parks Hide Evidence

Sometimes a Frisco park’s conduct goes beyond negligence and becomes fraud-grade. If the surveillance video “glitches” on four cameras at the exact moment of the injury—as happened in a Georgia case where the jury awarded $3.5 million—we escalate our framing to punitive damages. We look for incident reports that were revised after our spoliation letter was received in the Frisco mail. Metadata doesn’t lie.

When we find metadata showing the “final” report was edited 48 hours after our demand arrived, we file for discovery sanctions. We demand an adverse-inference instruction where the jury is told to assume the destroyed evidence was bad for the park. This is how we win cases that other Frisco firms would call “difficult.” We make the park’s obstruction our strongest asset at trial.

Frisco School Groups and Summer Camps

Field trips to trampoline parks are common in Frisco ISD and local private schools like Legacy Christian Academy. These outings layer multiple defendants: the park, the school district, the chaperone group, and the charter bus company. If the school failed to vet the park’s staff ratios before the trip, they bear independent negligence exposure.

The AAP is explicit: trampolines should not be used in schools or PE classes. A Frisco school that organizes a high-risk jumping event is operating against the clinical consensus of the entire pediatric medical community. We use that consensus as an anchor for the duty of care. Sovereign immunity for Frisco ISD can be complicated, but it is not a wall. We know how to navigate the Texas Tort Claims Act to reach the school’s insurance tower.

Why Attorney911 is Different: Our Frisco Capacity

You are not a pest to us, and you are not just another file on a Frisco lawyer’s desk. As our client Chad Harris said, “You are FAMILY to them.” We treat the parent at the hospital bedside with the same urgency we’d bring if it were our own child. Ralph Manginello is dual-state licensed in Texas and New York, bringing a federal court perspective that most North Texas firms lack.

Our firm was built for this fight. We have the $10 million UH rhabdo case. We have the BP Texas City experience. We have Lupe Peña’s inside-the-insurance-industry playbook. And we have a 50-state database of trampoline law that lets us handle your case in Frisco or anywhere your family travels. The park has a risk team working this weekend to protect their margin. We are working this weekend to protect your child.

Final Thoughts for the Acute-Stage Parent in Frisco

If you are reading this from a trauma bay at Children’s Medical Center Plano or a surgical waiting room in Frisco, the most important thing to know is that you are not alone. Kati Hill’s Colton is in school now. Max Menchaca survived his TBI. The Ispahani family in Sugar Land fought back. Your child’s case is decided by what gets preserved this week.

The DVR is clicking. The attendants are talking. The incident report is being “sanitized.” Don’t wait. We advance every expert, we pierce every corporate layer, and we dismantle every waiver. Call the firm that Frisco families trust. Call Attorney911.

1-888-ATTY-911.
Hablamos Español.
No fee unless we win.

Additional Frequently Asked Questions for Frisco Residents

What is the “Don’t Call 911” protocol I read about?
It is a documented industry pattern. A Tripadvisor parent review of an Urban Air in Southlake—very close to Frisco—alleged that employees were specifically instructed by management to NOT call 911 for injuries. We treat this as gross-negligence evidence the moment it surfaces in a Frisco case. It shows a systemic choice to put the park’s reputation ahead of the child’s emergency care.

Can I sue the go-kart manufacturer at a Frisco park?
Yes. Modern parks like Urban Air have bolt-on attractions. The Emma Riddle case in 2025 involved a go-kart mechanical failure that killed a six-year-old. When the “trampoline” park moves into mechanized rides, they trigger new layers of product liability and state-ride-regulator oversight. We sue the kart manufacturer and the software control-unit supplier in these cases.

Is Frisco covered by a state trampoline park regulator?
Texas has no specific trampoline park safety law, which means these facilities are largely self-regulated. However, certain “Class B Inflatables” inside Frisco parks are regulated by the Texas Department of Insurance. We use the TDI inspection records to show that while the state tries to regulate, the parks often operate right at the legal limit of non-compliance.

Will my Frisco neighborhood HOA be liable if a kid from the next street over gets hurt at my house?
In Texas, your HOA CC&Rs often dictate how recreational equipment is secured. If your Frisco HOA failed to enforce gate-lock rules or if they provided common-area equipment that was poorly maintained, they are in the liability stack. The attractive nuisance doctrine means you can be liable even for children you didn’t invite.

What happens if my child has a “panic attack” after a backflip?
Do not accept that diagnosis from an ER without a second opinion. As seen in the viral Elle Yona case from 2024, backflips can cause vertebral artery dissection, which leads to a spinal cord stroke. These are frequently misdiagnosed as panic attacks in the young. If your teen is experiencing back pain and neurological symptoms after a Frisco park visit, it is a medical emergency.

The Kill-Shot Sequence: Your Path Forward in Frisco

What happened to your child at an Urban Air or Sky Zone in Frisco wasn’t an accident—it was the predictable output of a system. The AAP has been warning about trampolines since 1999. ASTM F2970 was written by the trampoline park industry itself to establish a safety floor. The park operated below that floor to hit a margin target. The waiver was drafted by corporate counsel who knew it wouldn’t hold. The surveillance is engineered to overwrite before most families have a lawyer.

Attorney911 was built for exactly this fight. Ralph Manginello brings 25+ years of catastrophic injury and federal-court experience. Lupe Peña used to defend recreational businesses from the inside—he knows which waiver clauses hold and which ones break. Our UH rhabdomyolysis case uses the same medical experts and the same institutional-accountability framework applicable to trampoline crush and extended-exertion injuries.

Your child’s case is decided by what gets preserved this week. Surveillance DVRs overwrite in 7 to 30 days. Waiver databases purge on cycles as short as 72 hours. Attendants transfer. Foam pits refill. Incident reports get “revised.” In Texas, the statute of limitations on your child’s personal injury claim runs two years from the injury, tolled to age 20. We file fast. We don’t wait.

Call 1-888-ATTY-911. Hablamos Español. No fee unless we win. We advance every expense—biomechanist, pediatric orthopedic surgeon, ASTM compliance expert, life-care planner. Your child’s recovery fund stays untouched. Our Frisco spoliation letter goes out within 24 hours of your retention. The case starts today.

Share this article:

Need Legal Help?

Free consultation. No fee unless we win your case.

Call 1-888-ATTY-911

Ready to Fight for Your Rights?

Free consultation. No upfront costs. We don't get paid unless we win your case.

Call 1-888-ATTY-911