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A Saturday afternoon in the City of Freeport usually means a trip to the coast or a gathered crowd for a youth soccer match at the municipal parks. But for many families in Brazoria County, it also means a drive up Highway 288 toward one of the massive indoor trampoline parks serving the City of Freeport area. You walk into a building filled with primary colors, the smell of pepperoni pizza, and the rhythmic thud-thud-thud of hundreds of children becoming airborne. You sign a waiver on a digital kiosk in twelve seconds. You hand your child a neon wristband. And you believe, because the marketing told you so, that the environment is "safe family fun." Then the double-bounce happens. One moment, your son is jumping on a bed he thinks is his own. The next, a larger teenager or an adult lands on that same mat, transferring thousands of Newtons of kinetic energy into your child’s frame. The physics are brutal: at a 3:1 weight ratio, a child’s launch force is multiplied by up to four times. The scream that follows is what Kaitlin Hill told ABC News was "the worst scream that you could ever have heard from a…