Village of Palisades Trampoline Park & Pediatric Injury Attorneys Attorney911: 25-Year Federal Court Trial Lawyers Defeating Sky Zone, Urban Air, Altitude & DEFY Waivers via Former Recreational-Business Defense Insider Edge; Master Litigators of the $11.485M Cosmic Jump Harris County Verdict & $15.6M Damion Collins Urban Air Arbitration for Pediatric TBI, SCIWORA Spinal Cord Trauma, Salter-Harris Growth Plate Fractures & Rhabdomyolysis; Holding Unleashed Brands, Seidler Equity & Palladium Equity Corporate Parents Accountable under ASTM F2970-22, EN ISO 23659:2022 & AAP Safety Standards; Experts in Backyard Jumpking, Skywalker, Springfree & Bouncepro Manufacturer Defects plus Sky Rider Strangulation & Climbing Wall Litigation; Hablamos Español Utilizing Bilingual Delfingen & Tex Fam Code § 153.073 Parent-Cannot-Bind-Minor Defense; 1-888-ATTY-911 Free Consultation No Fee Unless We Win
"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." That is Kaitlin "Kati" Hill, a mother whose warning post about a trampoline park injury reached over 240,000 families across social media. She was at a birthday party, and in less than thirty minutes after arrival, her three-year-old son Colton was in a body cast with a broken femur. In the Village of Palisades, we see this exact scene play out for families who make the short drive into Amarillo for a Saturday afternoon at a place like Urban Air Adventure Park on I-40 or similar facilities serving Randall County. You take your children there because the marketing promises "active indoor fun" and a safe environment for a child’s energy. You sign the waiver at the iPad kiosk because the line is long and your children are eager to jump. You believe the "court monitors" are trained professionals. Then the double-bounce happens. Or the harness on the climbing wall isn't attached. Or the foam pit has compacted until it's as hard as the concrete floor in an Amarillo warehouse. What follows…