Village of Timbercreek Canyon Trampoline Park and Pediatric Injury Attorneys Attorney911 of Houston TX Ralph Manginello 25+ Years Federal Court Experience with Former Recreational Defense Lawyer Lupe Peña Using the Insider Advantage to Defeat Sky Zone and Urban Air Waivers Leveraging Cosmic Jump $11.485M Verdict and Damion Collins $15.6M Arbitration Precedent for Pediatric TBI SCIWORA Salter-Harris Growth Plate and Rhabdomyolysis Cases Across ASTM F2970 EN ISO 23659:2022 and AAP Standards for Sky Zone Inc Palladium Equity Unleashed Brands Seidler Equity DEFY Altitude Launch Backyard Jumpking Skywalker Springfree Defects and Sky Rider Climbing Wall Adjacent Attraction Injuries with Munoz and Delfingen Doctrine Mastery plus Texas Family Code 153.073 Signer Authority Attacks NO FEE UNLESS WE WIN Free Consultation Hablamos Español 1-888-ATTY-911
"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 was Kaitlin "Kati" Hill, a mother whose warning post about a trampoline park injury reached over 240,000 families. For parents in the Village of Timbercreek Canyon, that nightmare is not a distant headline. It is the predictable output of an industry that operates at the intersection of high-velocity physics and multi-layered corporate secrecy. At Attorney911, we recognize that when your child is injured at an indoor jump facility or on a backyard trampoline in the Village of Timbercreek Canyon, you are not just dealing with a medical crisis; you are entering a battlefield already staged by insurance adjusters and risk management teams. We have spent more than 25 years dismantling the defenses these companies use, and our managing partner, Ralph Manginello, has secured multi-million dollar results against some of the largest global corporations, including BP, Walmart, and Amazon. The parent conglomerates behind national trampoline park chains—Sky Zone, Inc. and Unleashed Brands—rely on the fact that most families will see a "signed waiver" as a dead end. We see it as…