City of Leon Valley Trampoline Park Injury and Pediatric Catastrophic Accident Attorneys at Attorney911 of Houston TX: 25-Plus Year Veteran Ralph Manginello and Former Recreational-Business Defense Insider Lupe Peña Defeat Sky Zone, Urban Air, Altitude, and The Rush Fun Park Waivers via the Delfingen Bilingual-Formation and Texas Family Code 153.073 Signer-Authority Attacks; We Leverage the Cosmic Jump 11.485 Million Dollar Harris County Verdict and Damion Collins 15.6 Million Dollar Urban Air Arbitration to Hold Corporate Parents like Palladium Equity and Seidler-Backed Unleashed Brands Accountable for Pediatric TBI, Cervical SCI, Salter-Harris Growth Plate Fractures, and SCIWORA under ASTM F2970, ASTM F381, and EN ISO 23659:2022 Standards; Our City of Leon Valley Legal Team Secures Multi-Million Dollar Life-Care Plans for Sky Rider Strangulation Patterns, Foam Pit Entrapment, Double-Bounce Collisions, and Backyard Jumpking or Skywalker Manufacturer Defects; Federal Court Admitted Fighting for Families with No Fee Unless We Win and Direct Native-Fluency Spanish Representation; Call 1-888-ATTY-911 for the Definitive City of Leon Valley Trampoline Injury Authority
"His feet hit the mat, and almost instantly his knees buckled down, and he just let out the worst scream that you could ever have heard from a child." When Kaitlin Hill told ABC News about her three-year-old son Colton’s broken femur, she wasn't speaking about a freak accident. She was describing the predictable output of a multi-billion-dollar industry that has scaled a dangerous recreational activity to industrial proportions. That scream has been echoed by thousands of families across Texas and right here in the City of Leon Valley. Colton spent months in a body cast because a heavier jumper landed on his trampoline bed—a mechanism known as a "double-bounce." If you are reading this in a waiting room at University Hospital or any other San Antonio-area trauma center, or if you are at home in the City of Leon Valley watching your child struggle with a heavy, uncomfortable cast, we want you to know three things immediately. First, this is not your fault. You signed the kiosk waiver because you wanted your child to have fun, and the park told you it was safe. Second, the piece of paper you signed is not the absolute shield the park wants…