City of Glenn Heights Trampoline Park Injury & Pediatric Catastrophic Accident Attorneys at Attorney911: Leading Litigation for Sky Zone, Urban Air, DEFY, and Altitude Cases with 25+ Years Experience and the Insider Advantage of Former Recreational-Business Defense Attorney Lupe Peña to Defeat Waivers; Masters of ASTM F2970-22, EN ISO 23659:2022, and AAP Pediatric Standards holding Seidler Equity and Palladium Equity Corporate Parents Accountable; Anchored by the Cosmic Jump $11.485M Harris County Verdict, Damion Collins $15.6M Urban Air Arbitration, and Active $10M University of Houston Rhabdomyolysis Case; Expert Handling of Pediatric TBI, SCIWORA, Salter-Harris growth plate fractures, and Backyard Trampoline Defects from Jumpking, Skywalker, and Springfree using Delfingen Bilingual-Defeat and Tex. Fam. Code § 153.073 Signer-Authority Attacks; Serving City of Glenn Heights with 24/7 Legal Emergency Support, Hablamos Español, Free Consultations, and No Fee Unless We Win at 1-888-ATTY-911
One bounce. One bad landing. One broken neck. That is all it takes for a Saturday afternoon in the City of Glenn Heights to turn into a lifetime of medical monitoring and trauma-bay recovery. Families across the City of Glenn Heights often visit the massive adventure parks that line the I-35E corridor, from the Urban Air in Waxahachie or Mansfield to the Altitude in Cedar Hill. You sign a waiver because the line is long and your children are excited. You hand over your credit card and receive a wristband. You believe that because the facility is open to the public, it has been inspected by the state or follows professional safety protocols. The truth is much darker. In Texas, there is no statewide law regulating trampoline park safety. There are no mandatory state inspections of trampoline decks, and there is no requirement for the park to report injuries to the government. At parks across the City of Glenn Heights and the DFW Metroplex, the person watching your child is often a 17-year-old making near-minimum wage with fewer than four hours of training. When your child is launched into the air by a "double-bounce" or sinks to the bottom of…