City of Montgomery Trampoline Park Injury & Pediatric Catastrophic Accident Attorneys Attorney911 of Houston TX 25 Plus Years Defeating Corporate Waivers Federal Court Admitted Former Recreational Defense Insider Lupe Peña Smashes Unenforceable Sky Zone Urban Air Get Air & Altitude Liability Contracts Grounded in Cosmic Jump 11.485 Million Harris County Verdict & Damion Collins 15.6 Million Urban Air Arbitration Precedents Mastering ASTM F2970 EN ISO 23659 2022 & AAP Standards for Pediatric TBI Spinal Cord SCIWORA Salter Harris Growth Plate Fractures & Rhabdomyolysis Hospitalization Active 10 Million Pi Kappa Phi Rhabdo Litigators Holding Unleashed Brands Seidler Equity Palladium & UATP Management Accountable for Sky Rider Strangulations Foam Pit Paralysis Climbing Wall Falls & Backyard Jumpking Skywalker Manufacturer Defects Hablamos Español Delfingen Bilingual Waiver Defeat No Fee Unless We Win Free Consultation 1-888-ATTY-911
One bounce. One bad landing. One broken neck. That is all it takes at a trampoline park, and for families in the City of Montgomery, the distance between a Saturday afternoon celebration and a lifetime of care is shorter than most imagine. "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." Those are the words of Kati Hill, a mother whose warning post was shared 240,000 times after her three-year-old sustained a broken femur in a body cast. We read those words not as isolated tragedies, but as the predictable output of an industry that prioritizes throughput and margin over pediatric safety. At Attorney911, we represent families in the City of Montgomery and across Texas who have been told that their child’s injury was a "freak accident" or that the kiosk waiver they signed ended their case before it began. We are here to tell you that neither of those things is true. What happened to your child in the City of Montgomery was not an accident—it was the result of a business decision. Whether it was the decision to…