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A man died at the new Universal theme park in Orlando after becoming unresponsive following a ride on Stardust Racers Wednesday night, the authorities said on Thursday. He was pronounced dead at the hospital, according to the Orange County Sheriff’s Office.
Read more from The New York Times (gift link).
Indicates they have not settled:
“Stardust Racers is evidence in an active death investigation. Reopening the ride before our experts can examine every component is unadulterated spoliation of evidence, a grave risk to public safety, and puts profit over people’s lives. Universal reportedly told employees the ride functioned as intended. If that is accurate, then the design itself is deadly. We are demanding that Universal pause the reopening, preserve all evidence, and allow our experts to inspect it. If they refuse, we will address Universal’s callous actions in court,” said Attorney Ben Crump.
The public posturing by the lawyer and the park's decision to reopen suggests to me that it's not particularly dangerous for almost everyone. The other story about what the EMT's found is pretty ambiguous as far as what people say they encountered.
Jeff - Editor - CoasterBuzz.com - My Blog
Universal is pretty darn risk averse when it comes to their rides (look who debuted metal detectors) if they are opening it with no modifications it tells me the state and company know exactly why the death happened and it was pretty specific to the victim. Sounds an awful lot like his spine condition contributed to his death, which will lead to more restrictions for handicap riders.
2025 Trips: Universal Orlando, Disneyland Resort, Knotts, Dollywood, Silver Dollar City, Cedar Point, Kings Island, Canada’s Wonderland, Busch Gardens Williamsburg, Sea World Orlando, Discovery Cove, Magic Kingdom
From the article linked at the bottom of this post.:
“...Guests using mobility devices must be able to walk independently.” You must also be able to “(1) maintain an upright position, (2) support your torso, neck, and head while absorbing sudden and dramatic movements, and (3) brace your body with at least one natural upper extremity.”
Sounds very familiar. I'm almost positive that this has been Cedar Point's policy, word-for-word, for at least 25 years since I worked there.
Anyway, this article is very thorough.
-Travis
www.youtube.com/TSVisits
Crump's legal team and family had another press conference late this morning.
Seems like they are to a certain extent in pound the table mode at this point.
Said they found out about the reopening when members of the media told them about it. Park did not let them know in advance. Said when they found out, they were working with park's legal team to schedule an inspection of the ride by Crump's experts. May be the case the park was looking to schedule quickly and Crump was looking to push that out somewhat, and the park just decided to reopen and deal with any consequences later.
Family indicated that the ride ops tried multiple times to get the restraint to latch before it actually did.
Reporter asked question about whether reports that Kevin passed out during the ride which led to him being forced against the restraints causing his injuries. Crump denied he passed out.
Nothing was said/asked about how the injuries were sustained (in terms of what Kevin hit -- restraints, other part of the ride vehicle).
Said park provided some type of chair/seat which was used to lift Kevin from wheel chair to the ride seat. His spinal injury/disease/condition was lifelong.
With many of the risk factors/warning conditions for rides, parks are likely to have idea if any given guest presents with any of them. Can't tell if someone has heart conditions, high blood pressure, is pregnant (in early stage) or back issues. With someone who is unable to walk at all, park has reason to know. And to me, there is a significant difference between someone who is unable to stand/walk for a long time versus someone who cannot stand/walk at all. Soft tissue/bone density will be very different. Park supposedly had a chair/seat they could use for people unable to walk at all. Here seems likely that Kevin's spinal issues contributed in a significant way to the accident (notwithstanding Crump's/family's express statements to the contrary). Questions to me are how much and whether the park should have let someone like Kevin ride. That other parks would not would be part of a negligence/industry standard analysis.
That's an interesting point about liability the park may incur as far as seeing what a person's physical capability is. But on the flip side, didn't the family/lawyers say that he has been on all kinds of stuff, so it "must" be the design of this specific ride? I mean, if he knows better, then why would the park have a say? That's probably a thin argument, but interesting to me.
Is there any real legal reason the park can't operate their ride? As far as we know, they haven't modified it in any way, and their internal investigation and statement that the ride "worked as designed" came out pretty soon after the accident. If the state and local authorities didn't find any reason to keep it closed, I have a hard time believing that there would be a reason to.
Jeff - Editor - CoasterBuzz.com - My Blog
While it’s nice the parks internal investigation found nothing, I don’t put much stock in that as they are just as biased as the lawyer. The key is the state investigation, that’s the impartial body/observer. They say the ride functioned as intended and can reopen, then it can.
2025 Trips: Universal Orlando, Disneyland Resort, Knotts, Dollywood, Silver Dollar City, Cedar Point, Kings Island, Canada’s Wonderland, Busch Gardens Williamsburg, Sea World Orlando, Discovery Cove, Magic Kingdom
I don't know exactly how it works in Florida, but generally the state government's regulating entity will require all documentation and do an independent inspection, and once they clear it your insurer will require that they do the same. Sometimes the manufacturer will get involved, as well. Once they're all done, it's fair game to reopen.
If the insurer in particular says it's safe to run then that's a pretty good indication that there's nothing inherently wrong with the ride. They're the ones that are ultimately paying out.
Hi
Would be very surprised if the park lacked the legal authority to open the ride. They have in-house and outside legal counsels who are experts in the various regulatory schemes at issue. And they would have gotten state, insurer and manufacturer thumbs up for the re-open.
Crump will argue in court (if it ever gets that far) that re-opening the ride before Crump and his team had a chance to review/investigate deprived them of the opportunity to discover evidence that may have helped them establish their case. Would argue evidence wasn't preserved/was spoiled. How successful that argument is would need to be seen. Expect the park, manufacturer, state and insurance companies documented their reviews/investigations very well. So, Crump would need to establish there is something his experts could have found that none of those other parties didn't. Not sure how likely that is.
GoBucks89:
Said park provided some type of chair/seat which was used to lift Kevin from wheel chair to the ride seat
Does this even exist? I’ve never seen it if it does. I’ve read that they are not even allowed to assist someone into the ride and that it’s drilled in their training that they can’t.
Looks like two small stairs so you can scoot over from your device, (very informative) full source here:
https://inspectionsada.com/...ical-z86bp
Touchdown:
I don’t put much stock in that as they are just as biased as the lawyer.
But as others have said, the park is not the only stakeholder. Not only that, but if parks were flippant about injuries, they wouldn't be in business very long.
Jeff - Editor - CoasterBuzz.com - My Blog
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