Town of Buffalo Gap Trampoline Park & Pediatric Catastrophic Injury Attorneys Attorney911 Of Houston TX 25+ Years Experience Defeating Sky Zone Urban Air DEFY & Altitude Waivers With Former Recreational-Defense Insider Advantage Lupe Peña Mastering ASTM F2970 EN ISO 23659:2022 & AAP Standards To Hold Corporate Parents Palladium Equity & Unleashed Brands Accountable For Pediatric TBI Cervical Spinal SCIWORA Salter-Harris Growth Plate Fractures & Rhabdomyolysis Cases Anchored By Industry Case Landmarks Like Cosmic Jump $11.485M Harris County Verdict & Damion Collins $15.6M Urban Air Arbitration Plus Sky Rider Strangulation Pattern Climbing Wall Falls & Backyard Jumpking Skywalker Springfree Manufacturer Defect Litigation For Town of Buffalo Gap Families Using Delfingen Bilingual Waiver Formation Attacks & Tex Fam Code 153.073 Signer Authority Defeat Hablamos Español No Fee Unless We Win 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 is Kaitlin "Kati" Hill, mother of three-year-old Colton, speaking to ABC News about the day a "toddler-safe" trampoline session changed her family’s life forever. Her son suffered a broken femur, spending weeks in a body cast because a larger child was allowed to jump in a zone meant for small children. Her warning post was shared 240,000 times, resonating with a terrifying truth: we had no idea. If you are reading this from a hospital room at Hendrick Medical Center or waiting for a specialist at a pediatric trauma center serving the Town of Buffalo Gap, we want you to know two things immediately. First, this was not an accident—it was the predictable output of a business model that prioritizes margin over your child’s safety. Second, the waiver you signed at the kiosk is not the absolute shield the park’s manager wants you to believe it is. At Attorney911, led by managing partner Ralph Manginello with over 25 years of experience, we have spent decades making corporate defendants pay for…