City of Kirby Trampoline Park Injury Attorneys at Attorney911 of Houston TX Ralph Manginello 25 Plus Years Experience and Former Defense Lawyer Lupe Peña Defeating Sky Zone Urban Air and DEFY Waivers Using Tex Fam Code 153.073 and Delfingen Bilingual Doctrine Holding Palladium Equity and Seidler Unleashed Brands Accountable for Pediatric TBI Salter-Harris Fractures SCIWORA and Rhabdomyolysis Based on Cosmic Jump 11.485M Harris County Verdict 15.6M Damion Collins Urban Air Arbitration and Active 10M UH Rhabdo Lawsuit Mastery of ASTM F2970 ASTM F381 AAP and EN ISO 23659 2022 Standards for Commercial Park and Backyard Jumpking Skywalker Defects Across City of Kirby Hablamos Español No Fee Unless We Win 1-888-ATTY-911
One bounce. One bad landing. One broken neck. That is all it takes at a trampoline park. For many families in Kirby, a trip to a jump park is a routine Saturday afternoon—a way to escape the South Texas heat and let the kids burn off energy. You walk into a facility like Urban Air, Altitude, or The Rush Fun Park. You wait in a long line at a kiosk. You see a series of screens with dense legal text. You tap "agree" because your child is tugging at your arm, and you handed over your credit card twenty minutes earlier. You assume the park is safe because it is open for business. You assume the staff is trained. You assume the "waiver" you just signed is a formality. Then you hear it. Kaitlin "Kati" Hill, a mother who lived through the nightmare we see every day, told ABC News it was "the worst scream that you could ever have heard from a child." Her three-year-old son, Colton, broke his femur—the strongest bone in the human body—during a "Toddler Time" session. Like so many parents in Kirby and across Bexar County, Kati and her husband later said, "We had no…