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"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 were the words of Kaitlin "Kati" Hill, a mother who watched her three-year-old son, Colton, suffer a broken femur during a "Toddler Time" session at a trampoline park. Like so many families in Town of Ransom Canyon, Kati thought the safety rules and the waiver she signed meant the facility was safe. She had no idea that a bigger child landing on the same mat could launch her son with enough force to snap the strongest bone in his body. At Attorney911, we lead our trampoline injury practice with one foundational truth: your child's injury was not an accident. It was the predictable output of a business decision that put profit margins above pediatric safety. If you are reading this from a hospital room at a pediatric trauma center serving Lubbock County or sitting at your kitchen table in Town of Ransom Canyon looking at mounting medical bills, you need to know that the paper you signed at the kiosk is not a wall. It is noise. In Texas, we…