City of Richland Hills Trampoline Park Injury Attorneys at Attorney911 of Houston TX: National Pediatric Catastrophic Litigation Leaders led by Ralph Manginello with 25+ Years Experience and Former Recreational-Business Defense Lawyer Lupe Peña using the Insider Waiver-Defeat Playbook to hold Sky Zone Urban Air Altitude DEFY Launch and Jumpking Skywalker Manufacturers Accountable utilizing Case Benchmarks like the Damion Collins $15.6M Urban Air Arbitration and Cosmic Jump $11.485M Harris County Verdict with Mastery of ASTM F2970 EN ISO 23659:2022 AAP and CPSC Standards for Pediatric TBI SCIWORA Salter-Harris Growth-Plate Fractures and Rhabdomyolysis Victims at Cook Children’s Fort Worth defeating Liability Releases via the Delfingen Bilingual Doctrine Texas Family Code 153.073 and the 2025 Cerna v Pearland Delegation Attack Hablamos Español Free Consultation No Fee Unless We Win 1-888-ATTY-911
At the Sky Zone in City of Richland Hills, or perhaps just across the city line in North Richland Hills or Hurst, a seven-year-old comes off a court on a stretcher. His parents had signed the waiver at the kiosk twenty minutes earlier. They were told it was just a formality. They were told the rules made the park safe. Then, in the blur of a Saturday afternoon near Loop 820, a double-bounce occurred on a crowded court, and the physics of the industry’s own design took over. "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 Hill, the mother of three-year-old Colton, telling ABC News what happened the day a trampoline park broke her son’s femur. Her warning post was shared 240,000 times. We read it. So did every parent of every child who has been hurt at a trampoline park in Tarrant County since. We represent families who have lived that nightmare. We represent children who are facing a decade of orthopedic monitoring because a business decided to staff its courts at sixty percent of…