Ovilla Trampoline Park Injury Attorneys at Attorney911 of Houston TX Led by 25-Year Courtroom Veteran Ralph P. Manginello and Former Recreational-Business Defense Insider Lupe Peña Defeat Sky Zone and Urban Air Waivers Using the Delfingen Bilingual Attack and Texas Family Code 153.073 Signer-Authority Defeats to Hold Unleashed Brands Seidler Equity and Palladium Equity Partners Accountable for Pediatric TBI Spinal Cord Injury SCIWORA Salter-Harris Growth Plate Fractures Rhabdomyolysis and Sky Rider Strangulation Patterns Referencing the Cosmic Jump 11.485M Harris County Verdict Damion Collins 15.6M Award and Beaumont v Geter Masterfully Applying ASTM F2970 and EN ISO 23659 Standards to Commercial Parks and Backyard Jumpking Skywalker or Springfree Manufacturer Defects Serving Ovilla with No Fee Unless We Win Hablamos Español 1-888-ATTY-911
Kaitlin "Kati" Hill describes the moment in a way that stays with any parent who has ever visited a trampoline park in North Texas. Her three-year-old son, Colton, was jumping during a "Toddler Time" session—a window supposedly designed to keep small children safe from the chaos of older jumpers. But the segregation didn't work. A bigger child landed on the same trampoline bed as Colton, and his femur snapped. Kati later told ABC News it was "the worst scream that you could ever have heard from a child." Colton spent the next several months in a body cast that reached from his chest to his ankles. Kati’s warning post was shared 240,000 times, ending with a phrase we hear across Ovilla and Ellis County every week: "We had no idea." We hear that same sentiment at hospital bedsides when we represent families whose lives were upended in a single bounce. Families in Ovilla often visit the big chains along the I-35E or US-287 corridors—Urban Air in Waxahachie or Mansfield, Altitude in Cedar Hill, or Sky Zone in Irving. You walk through the doors, a teenager hands you an iPad to sign a waiver, and you assume the park has a…