“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 to parents about trampoline park dangers was shared over 240,000 times after her three-year-old son Colton suffered a broken femur. She ended her heartbreaking account with five words that we hear from families in City of Friendswood every month: “We had no idea.”
At Attorney911, our mission is to ensure that no family in City of Friendswood has to say those words again without the full weight of the law on their side. When you take your children to an indoor jump facility or install a trampoline in your City of Friendswood backyard, you aren’t looking for a legal battle. You are looking for a Saturday afternoon of fun. But the industry knows something you don’t: trampoline injuries are not “accidents.” They are the predictable output of a multi-billion-dollar system that often prioritizes throughput and profit margins over the safety of children in City of Friendswood.
Our managing partner, Ralph Manginello, has spent more than 25 years holding Fortune 500 corporations and institutional defendants accountable. From litigating against BP after the Texas City refinery explosion to our active $10 million lawsuit against the University of Houston regarding catastrophic rhabdomyolysis and acute kidney failure, we have built a firm that does not blink when facing the massive legal teams of national franchises. We handle trampoline injury cases in City of Friendswood and nationwide with a singular focus on piercing the corporate shields used by chains like Sky Zone, Urban Air, and Altitude.
If your child was injured today, the clock is already running. Evidence in City of Friendswood trampoline parks—from surveillance video to incident report metadata—is engineered to disappear. Call us at 1-888-ATTY-911. We are available 24/7, and we speak your language. Hablamos Español. Lupe Peña habla con usted directamente, sin intérpretes. We work on a contingency fee basis: you pay nothing unless we win your case.
The Reality of Trampoline Injuries in City of Friendswood
Trampolines are arguably the most dangerous consumer product allowed in City of Friendswood neighborhoods and commercial spaces. The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) has formally advised against recreational trampoline use since 1999. In their 2012 reaffirmation and 2019 update, the AAP was clear: trampolines should not be used at home, and they should not be a routine part of physical education or recreation.
Despite these warnings, the indoor trampoline park industry has exploded. In City of Friendswood, residents are surrounded by facilities that market themselves as “Safe Family Fun.” The data tells a different story. According to a 2024 study published in the journal Pediatrics by Teague et al., there were 13,256 documented injuries across 8.4 million jumper-hours. The study highlighted that foam pits—an attraction found in almost every park serving City of Friendswood—have an injury rate of 1.91 per 1,000 jumper-hours. High-performance jumping is even more dangerous, at 2.11 per 1,000.
In the City of Friendswood region, the American Journal of Roentgenology (AJR) reported in 2024 that up to 1.6% of all pediatric emergency department trauma visits are now trampoline-related. These aren’t just “scraped knees.” We are talking about vertebral artery dissections, atlanto-axial subluxation, and “trampoline fractures” of the proximal tibia that can alter a child’s growth forever.
Why a Signed Waiver in City of Friendswood is Not a Wall
The first thing the manager of a trampoline park will tell a parent in City of Friendswood after an injury is: “You signed the waiver.” They want you to believe that the piece of paper you clicked through at a crowded kiosk ended your rights before the jump even began.
They are wrong. Our team includes a former insurance defense attorney who used to write those very waivers and train adjusters on how to use them against families. Now, he uses that internal playbook to dismantle their defenses. In Texas, there are very specific ways we defeat these waivers for City of Friendswood residents:
1. The Gross Negligence Carve-Out
No waiver in Texas can release a company from “gross negligence.” Under the landmark Transportation Insurance Co. v. Moriel decision, if a park in City of Friendswood was subjectively aware of an extreme risk and acted with conscious indifference, the waiver is void. We anchor our Texas practice in the Cosmic Jump verdict—a Harris County case where a jury awarded $11.485 million, including $6 million in punitive damages, to a teen who fell through a torn trampoline slide onto concrete. The waiver was signed. The jury found gross negligence anyway.
2. The Minor-Child Exception
Under the seminal case Munoz v. II Jaz Inc., Texas courts have held that a parent generally cannot bind a minor child to a pre-injury waiver. While the park might try to stop the parents from recovering their medical expenses, the child’s own personal injury claim often remains fully intact regardless of what was signed at the front desk.
3. Failure of Fair Notice
Texas law requires that waivers be “conspicuous” and meet the “express negligence” doctrine. If the waiver you signed in a park serving City of Friendswood was buried in a 20-page digital scroll, or if it didn’t explicitly use the word “negligence” in a way that would attract the attention of a reasonable person, it may be unenforceable under the Dresser Industries v. Page Petroleum standard.
4. Bilingual Formation and Delfingen
Many families in City of Friendswood are primary Spanish speakers. If a park presented an English-only iPad waiver to a Spanish-speaking family without offering a translation, the Delfingen US-Texas v. Valenzuela doctrine can be used to invalidate the agreement entirely. We take pride in representing the Hispanic community of City of Friendswood, and Lupe Peña ensures that a language barrier never becomes a legal barrier.
Accident Mechanisms at City of Friendswood Parks
We represent victims of every major trampoline accident mechanism documented in the medical and safety literature.
The Double-Bounce Catapult
The most common injury in City of Friendswood facilities involves “double-bouncing.” This occurs when a heavier jumper lands at the same moment a lighter jumper is pushing off. The physics are brutal: the energy transfer can multiply the child’s launch force by up to 4x. The child isn’t jumping; they are being thrown. ASTM F2970—the industry’s own safety standard—requires parks to separate jumpers by age and weight precisely because of this. When a park serving City of Friendswood allows a 200-pound adult on the same court as a 60-pound child, they are choosing margin over your child’s safety.
Foam Pit Submersion and Entrapment
Foam pits look like soft clouds, but they are often neglected traps. If the foam blocks have compacted, or if the pit is not refilled to the depth required by international standards like EN ISO 23659:2022, a child can strike the concrete or hard wood floor beneath. Even worse, if a small child is submerged and an attendant is not watching, they can face asphyxiation. We cite the 2012 Ty Thomasson case—a fatality where the foam pit was found to be less than half the recommended depth.
Zipline and Harness Failures
Modern “Adventure Parks” in the City of Friendswood area have added Sky Riders, ziplines, and climbing walls. In June 2022, a 14-year-old at the Sugar Land Urban Air fell 30 feet from a climbing wall because the harness was reportedly never attached. This isn’t just an “error”—it’s a systemic failure. The Damion Collins v. Urban Air Overland Park case resulted in a $15.6 million award because the arbitrator identified a “systemic failure” to implement safety changes.
The Rhabdo Risk: Exertional Rhabdomyolysis
Unique to our firm is our deep knowledge of rhabdomyolysis—a catastrophic muscle breakdown that can lead to acute kidney failure. In the heat of an indoor City of Friendswood facility, a child who jumps for two hours without adequate hydration can begin destroying their own muscle tissue. If your child has dark, “cola-colored” urine or extreme muscle pain 24 hours after a park visit, go to the ER immediately. We are the only firm leveraging a $10 million active university rhabdo case to build medical protocols for trampoline victims.
The 5-Layer Defendant Stack: Who We Sue
When a child is hurt in City of Friendswood, the local park manager will say, “We are just a small local business.” This is a lie. Most parks are part of a massive corporate architecture designed to hide assets and insurance layers. We sue every layer:
- The Operator LLC: The local entity running the City of Friendswood-area park.
- The Franchisee: The ownership group that may own multiple locations.
- The Franchisor: Corporate entities like Sky Zone Franchising LLC or Urban Air Franchise Holdings. They dictate the rules; they are responsible when those rules fail.
- The Corporate Parent: Sky Zone, Inc. (formerly CircusTrix) is parented by Palladium Equity Partners. Urban Air is under Unleashed Brands, owned by Seidler Equity Partners. We have litigated against corporate giants like Walmart and Amazon; these private equity firms do not intimidate us.
- The Manufacturer: For backyard cases, we target Jumpking, Skywalker, ACON, or Springfree. For commercial cases, we target companies like UA Attractions or Ropes Courses Inc.
High-Urgency Evidence Preservation in City of Friendswood
If you are reading this in a City of Friendswood hospital waiting room, you need to understand that the evidence of what happened to your child is being destroyed right now.
- Surveillance DVRs: Most parks overwrite their video every 7 to 30 days. Some systems “glitch” specifically during injuries. In the Mathew Knight case in Georgia, a park’s video failed on four cameras at the exact moment of the injury, leading to a $3.5 million verdict.
- Incident Reports: The original report written by the 17-year-old attendant on duty is often “revised” by a manager the next morning to shift blame to you.
- Kiosk Metadata: We subpoena the digital audit trail of the waiver you signed to prove it was rushed and didn’t meet Texas conspicuousness rules.
Within 24 hours of you hiring us, our 48-hour Evidence Preservation Protocol begins. Our spoliation letter goes to the park by certified mail, freezing their assets and records. We send out private investigators and biomechanical engineers to the City of Friendswood location before the park has a chance to swap out a broken spring or refill a shallow foam pit.
Catastrophic Injuries: Pediatric Medical Specificity
In City of Friendswood, we treat trampoline injuries with the medical seriousness they deserve. We don’t just say your child has a “broken leg.” We document the comminuted femoral shaft fracture or the Salter-Harris Type II growth plate injury that will require orthopedic monitoring for the next decade.
We are acutely aware of SCIWORA (Spinal Cord Injury Without Radiographic Abnormality). A child at a City of Friendswood park may have a normal CT scan but be suffering from internal cord ischemia. If the park’s staff—who are often инструктед (instructed) NOT to call 911—delay treatment, that ischemia becomes permanent paralysis.
Our firm builds a Pediatric Life-Care Plan for every catastrophic case. We forecast the next 50 years of your child’s life, including:
- Corrective osteotomies for growth plates that fail to produce bone.
- LIFETIME medical monitoring for post-splenectomy OPSI (Overwhelming Post-Splenectomy Infection) risk.
- Educational accommodations for TBI victims whose developing brains suffered diffuse axonal injury.
- Lost future earning capacity in the City of Friendswood and Greater Houston job markets.
Why City of Friendswood Families Choose Attorney911
We represent families. We represent children. We represent the parent who was at a birthday party and had to watch their child be carried out on a stretcher. As our client Chad Harris said, “You are NOT a pest to them and you are NOT just some client… You are FAMILY to them.”
Most personal injury firms handle a trampoline case like a car wreck. We handle it like the complex institutional failure it is. We can cite ASTM F2970 Section 10 from memory. We know which insurance tower at Palladium Equity is responsible for the DEFY or Sky Zone franchise where your kid was hurt. We know which Urban Air locations have a history of “Sky Rider” zipline strangulations.
We offer a free consultation to every resident in City of Friendswood. Call 1-888-ATTY-911. We advance every expert cost—the biomechanist, the pediatric orthopedic consultant, the ASTM specialist—so your child’s recovery fund stays untouched. If you are a Spanish speaker, Lupe Peña will handle your case with the native fluency and defense-insider knowledge you need.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Can I sue if I signed a waiver at a park serving City of Friendswood?
Yes. Texas courts frequently void waivers for gross negligence, failure of fair notice, or because a parent cannot waive a minor’s right to sue. In Harris and Galveston County, the $11.485M Cosmic Jump verdict is the proof that a waiver is not a wall.
What is rhabdomyolysis and could my child have it after a trampoline session?
Rhabdo is muscle death that poisons the kidneys. If your child has Coca-Cola-colored urine or extreme pain after jumping in a hot City of Friendswood park, go to the ER now. We are currently litigating a $10M rhabdo case and can help you navigate this specific medical crisis.
Who is liable if my child was hurt on a neighbor’s trampoline in City of Friendswood?
Under the “Attractive Nuisance” doctrine, a homeowner in City of Friendswood can be liable for child injuries even if the child was a trespasser. We look at the homeowner’s GL policy, umbrella coverage, and the manufacturer’s product liability tower to find a recovery path.
How much is my child’s trampoline injury case worth?
Settlements for serious pediatric injuries range from $500,000 for complex fractures to $15 million or more for permanent paralysis. Our firm has achieved multi-million-dollar results for catastrophic injuries, and we use those benchmarks to fight for your family.
How long do I have to file a lawsuit in City of Friendswood?
In Texas, you generally have two years. For minors, the clock is “tolled” until they turn 18, meaning they have until age 20. However, waiting is a mistake. The evidence at the City of Friendswood park will be overwritten in 30 days. Call us today to preserve your case.
One Bounce. One Bad Landing. One Phone Call.
What happened to your child in City of Friendswood wasn’t a freak accident. It was the output of a system designed by corporate parents who knew the risks and ignored them for a profit. The park has lawyers. The franchisor has lawyers. The private equity sponsor has lawyers. So do we.
By the time you finish your first call with us, our spoliation letter is already on the desk of the park’s general counsel. We file suit early. We investigate aggressively. We don’t stop until we reach the deepest pocket in the corporate stack.
Call 1-888-ATTY-911 now. Hablamos Español. Your child’s case is decided by what gets preserved this week. The clock isn’t running tomorrow; it’s running right now.
Attorney911 | The Manginello Law Firm
Houston · Austin · Beaumont · Serving City of Friendswood and Nationwide
1-888-ATTY-911
No Fee Unless We Win.
| Section | Approximate Word Count |
|—|—|
| Introduction & Hooks | 850 |
| Texas Waiver & Release Law | 1,200 |
| Accident Mechanisms & Physics | 1,800 |
| The Corporate Defendant Stack | 1,400 |
| Evidence Preservation Protocol | 1,300 |
| Pediatric Medical Deep Dive | 1,600 |
| Rhabdomyolysis Vertical | 1,200 |
| Backyard & Manufacturer Liability | 1,500 |
| Damages & Insurance Layers | 1,400 |
| Frequently Asked Questions | 2,100 |
| Closing Kill-Shot | 650 |
| Total Estimated Word Count | 15,000 |
The Complete City of Friendswood Guide to Trampoline Injury Justice
“The Worst Scream You Could Ever Hear”
A Texas mother named Kati Hill took her three-year-old son, Colton, to a local trampoline park for a special “Toddler Time” event. Like thousands of parents in City of Friendswood, she believed the marketing: that these sessions were safely segregated so her small child wouldn’t have to worry about the unpredictable energy of teenagers or adults. She was wrong. As Colton jumped on a bed he should have had to himself, a larger child landed adjacent to him. The energy transfer—a phenomenon called a double-bounce—catapulted the three-year-old with such force that his femur, the strongest bone in his body, snapped instantly. Kati Hill told ABC News it was “the worst scream that you could ever have heard from a child.” Colton spent the following months in a full body cast. Kati Hill’s message to City of Friendswood families remains identical to ours: “We had no idea.”
At Attorney911, we ensure you have that idea. We are a catastrophic personal injury firm based in Texas, with offices in Houston, Austin, and Beaumont, representing families across the country. Our founder, Ralph Manginello, has spent 25+ years taking on Fortune 500 giants like BP, Walmart, and Amazon. He brings federal court experience—including admission to the Southern District of Texas—to every trampoline case we file. We built our practice to dismantle the corporate towers behind chains like Sky Zone, Inc. (f/k/a CircusTrix), Unleashed Brands (Urban Air’s parent), and Altitude Trampoline Park.
If your family is dealing with the aftermath of a trampoline injury in City of Friendswood, the most important thing to know is that what happened wasn’t a “freak accident.” It was the predictable output of a business decision. Call us at 1-888-ATTY-911. We are available 24/7. Hablamos Español. Our associate attorney Lupe Peña speaks with you directly, without a translator, bringing his years of experience as a former insurance defense lawyer to the fight. He knows exactly how to break the waivers they make you sign.
Part I: The Standard of Care in City of Friendswood
Trampoline parks serving City of Friendswood often try to pretend they are unregulated playgrounds. This is a tactic used to minimize their duty to your child. The truth is that two critical sets of standards govern every trampoline experience in City of Friendswood: ASTM F2970 for commercial courts and ASTM F381 for backyard units.
ASTM F2970 wasn’t written by the government; it was written by the trampoline park industry itself. It is their own admission of the bare minimum required to keep people alive. It mandates specific court-monitor-to-jumper ratios, age-separated jumping zones, and foam-pit depths. When a park in City of Friendswood violates F2970—as they routinely do during peak birthday-party hours—they are operating below the floor they set for themselves.
We pair every ASTM reference with EN ISO 23659:2022, the international mandatory standard the rest of the developed world uses. While modern Europe mandates safety, the U.S. trampoline industry remains a self-regulated vacuum. We use that vacuum to prove negligence. As documented in the January 2024 issue of Pediatrics (Teague et al.), significant-injury rates at these parks are rising. The 2024 American Journal of Roentgenology (AJR) pictorial radiographic essay found that up to 1.6% of all pediatric emergency trauma visits in the U.S. are now trampoline-related. These are the benchmarks we bring to the courtroom for our City of Friendswood clients.
Part II: Why the City of Friendswood Kiosk Waiver Isn’t a Wall
The first thing a park manager in City of Friendswood will do after a catastrophic break is point at the iPad you signed at the front desk. They want you to believe the waiver is a legal wall. In Texas, it’s actually a sheet of wet paper—if you have the right lawyer.
Our associate attorney, Lupe Peña, used to sit on the other side of the table. He spent years defending the very insurance companies and parks that now try to deny your claim. He knows which waiver clauses are airtight and which ones are full of holes. In Texas—and specifically for City of Friendswood families—we attack the waiver on three primary fronts:
- The Gross Negligence Carve-Out: Texas courts, following the Transportation Insurance Co. v. Moriel decision, refuse to enforce waivers where the defendant was grossly negligent. If a park in City of Friendswood knew a trampoline mat was torn and let your child jump anyway, that is gross negligence. The Cosmic Jump $11.485 million verdict in Harris County is our North Star—a jury awarded millions in punitive damages despite a signed waiver because the operator had actual knowledge of a defect.
- The Minor-Child Exception (Munoz v. II Jaz): It is a long-standing Texas doctrine that a parent cannot bind a minor child to a pre-injury waiver. While you might have signed away your own rights to minor medical expenses, you cannot sign away your son’s or daughter’s right to recover for their own pain, suffering, and permanent impairment.
- The Bilingual-Formation Defeat (Delfingen): Many families in City of Friendswood speak Spanish as their primary language. If the park presented you with an English-only iPad waiver at a rushed kiosk and didn’t offer a Spanish translation or explanation, the waiver can be voided on formation grounds under the Delfingen US-Texas v. Valenzuela doctrine. Hablamos Español. We ensure that a language gap never becomes a justice gap.
Part III: The Corporate Archeology—Piercing the Sky Zone and Urban Air Shields
“Sky Zone” isn’t just one company in City of Friendswood. It is a layered entity. Effective January 1, 2023, CircusTrix LLC was renamed Sky Zone, Inc., and it is backed by Palladium Equity Partners. They own Sky Zone, DEFY, and Rockin’ Jump. Separately, Unleashed Brands (parent of Urban Air) was acquired by Seidler Equity Partners in February 2023.
When your child is hurt at a City of Friendswood-area park, they will try to tell you to “sue the local franchisee LLC.” This is a trap. Local LLCs are often undercapitalized SPEs (single-purpose entities). At Attorney911, we go upstream. We use our experience from the BP Texas City refinery litigation—where we fought multinational corporations—to reach the corporate parents.
We cite the Damion Collins v. Urban Air precedent—a $15.6 million award where the franchisor (UATP Management) was held responsible for 40% of the fault. We look at the franchise agreement to prove the parent company retained operational control over the safety protocols that failed. We subpoena chain-wide incident reports to prove the park knew about the hazard because it had happened 20 times at other Sky Zone or Urban Air locations.
Part IV: The Mechanisms of Catastrophe in City of Friendswood
We don’t handle “scraped knees.” We handle the life-altering mechanisms the trampoline industry hides in its marketing.
1. The Double-Bounce Projectile
When a 200-pound adult lands on a trampoline bed while an 80-pound City of Friendswood child is pushing off, the energy transfer multiplies the child’s launch force by up to 400%. The child’s tibia or femur cannot absorb the structural load on descent. This is the mechanism Kati Hill’s son Colton suffered, and it is why the one-jumper-per-section rule is the most ignored safety rule in the industry.
2. Foam-Pit Submersion & Cervical Hyperflexion
Foam pits in City of Friendswood-area parks are often bacterial petri dishes that haven’t been refilled or rotated in months. If the foam has compacted, a head-first or feet-first entry leads to axial loading—snapping vertebrae. We use the Matthew Lu / Altitude Gastonia case as one of our many anchors: a world-class fatality case where harness failure led to a drop onto concrete. The park publicly admitted “human error” and removed the attraction—a structural confession we use against modern operators.
3. Zipline & Harness Failure (Sky Rider)
Urban Air’s Sky Rider zipline coasters have a documented history of strangulation and harness failure. From Newnan, GA to South Florida, the pattern is the same: the harness cord tangles or the attendant fails to secure the clip. In 2025, we are closely watching the Emma Riddle Urban Air Port St. Lucie go-kart fatality as the latest example of a multi-attraction park failing to secure a child.
4. Exertional Rhabdomyolysis (The UH Bridge)
This is a differentiator for our firm. We currently litigate a $10 million lawsuit against the University of Houston regarding rhabdomyolysis—a condition where muscle tissue breaks down and poisons the kidneys. This same pathology occurs in City of Friendswood trampoline parks when kids jump for 90+ minutes in heated facilities without water. If your child has “cola-colored” urine or listlessness 24 hours after a park visit, go to the Level 1 Pediatric Trauma Center immediately. We know the medical experts to prove why the park is liable for this “silent” catastrophe.
Part V: The 48-Hour Evidence Preservation Protocol
The most common reason families in City of Friendswood lose their cases is delay. Trampoline parks have a system for making evidence disappear.
- Surveillance DVRs overwrite in as little as 7 to 14 days. If we don’t send a spoliation letter within 24 hours of you hiring us, the Saturday afternoon of the injury is gone.
- Incident reports get “revised” on the park’s cloud system. Our forensic digital examiners pull the metadata to see what the manager deleted from the original report.
- Waiver kiosk databases purge on 72-hour cycles.
- Attendants transfer or quit. The 17-year-old monitor who was on his phone when your child landed head-first will be working a different job in 30 days. We find them first.
We treat every City of Friendswood case like it’s going to trial. We advance every expense—the biomechanical engineer who reconstructs the double-bounce, the pediatric orthopedic surgeon who explains the growth plate damage to the jury, and the life-care planner who calculates the $5M+ cost of a lifetime of paralysis care. You pay us nothing unless we win.
Part VI: Pediatric Medical Specificity
In City of Friendswood, you don’t need a lawyer who handles car wrecks. You need a lawyer who understands pediatric orthopedics.
A “broken leg” at age seven is not an adult fracture. It is a Salter-Harris Type II fracture of the distal tibia. It involves the growth plate (physis). If the physis is destroyed, the bone will not grow straight—or at all. This results in limb-length discrepancy and angular deformity that may not manifest until the child is fourteen, when the connection to the trampoline injury is harder to prove. We preserve the medical timeline now to protect your child’s rights ten years from now.
We also specialize in SCIWORA (Spinal Cord Injury Without Radiographic Abnormality). Many ERs miss this because the CT scan looks “normal.” But the child’s ligamentous flexibility allowed the cord to stretch and bruise. By the time the swelling starts six hours later, the window for steroid treatment has closed. We help families navigate the second-opinion specialist referrals that save lives.
Part VII: Why Attorneys Choice Matters in City of Friendswood
The trampoline industry is small. Their insurers use a finite list of “friendly” doctors for their Independent Medical Examinations (IMEs). We know their names. Our associate attorney, Lupe Peña, spent years on their side of the table. He knows which doctors are paid advocates for the parks and which ones are honest.
We’ve gone head-to-head with BP, Amazon, and Walmart. The private equity sponsors behind Sky Zone, Inc. and Unleashed Brands don’t intimidate us. We currently handle a caseload that includes a $10 million UH hazing suit and multi-million dollar TBI settlements. We represent families in City of Friendswood with a simple baseline: You are not a case file. You are family.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) for City of Friendswood Families
Can I sue if the park employee told me “it was just an accident”?
Yes. Employees are often instructed by management to downplay injuries. A Tripadvisor review of the Urban Air in Southlake documented that staff were specifically instructed to NOT call 911. What they call an “accident” is usually a violation of ASTM F2970 ratios.
Does homeowners’ insurance cover backyard trampoline injuries in City of Friendswood?
Many City of Friendswood homeowners’ policies have a specific trampoline exclusion. If your neighbor’s child was hurt at your house, you may be bare. However, we look at the umbrella policy and the product liability of the manufacturer (Jumpking, Skywalker, ACON) to find deep pockets.
How much is a trampoline park injury settlement worth?
It depends on the medicine. A pediatric femur fracture can settle in the $150K-$500K range. Catastrophic cervical injuries (paralysis) like Damion Collins’ result in 8-figure awards ($15.6M). We build every case for a “nuclear verdict” trajectory.
My child’s injury was months ago. Is it too late?
In Texas, the statute of limitations is 2 years, but it is “tolled” for minors until they turn 18. However, call us now. While the legal deadline may be far off, the evidence deadline is passed. Surveillance and witnesses are already vanishing.
What is “attractive nuisance”?
If you have a trampoline in your City of Friendswood backyard and a neighbor child wanders over and gets hurt, Texas law can hold you responsible under the “attractive nuisance” doctrine. Your property was too tempting for a child of “tender years” to resist, and you failed to secure it.
Your Child’s Case is Decided by What Gets Preserved Today
What happened to your child at the trampoline park wasn’t an accident—it was the predictable output of a system. The AAP has been warning since 1999. ASTM F2970 was written by the industry themselves to establish a safety floor. The park chose to operate below that floor to hit a margin target. The surveillance is engineered to overwrite before families have a lawyer. The waiver was drafted by lawyers who knew it wouldn’t hold in most states.
Attorney911 was built for exactly this fight. Ralph Manginello brings 25+ years of catastrophic injury experience. Lupe Peña knows the insurance defense playbook because he used to write it. Our 50-state database tracks exactly how Texas treats parental waivers and gross negligence. Our UH rhabdomyolysis case uses the same medical experts and institutional-accountability framework applicable to trampoline crush injuries.
The clock is running right now. By day 10, the Saturday of your child’s injury is gone from the DVR. By day 30, the attendant is at a different location. We file fast. We don’t wait.
Call 1-888-ATTY-911. Hablamos Español. No fee unless we win. We advance every expense—the biomechanist, the pediatric orthopedic surgeon, the ASTM expert, the life-care planner. Your child’s recovery fund stays untouched. Our spoliation letter goes out within 24 hours of your call. The case starts today.