Horrific Accident at 6 Flags Kentucky.

Here's a similar one from a local Nashville station on her condition.

"Doctors Reattach Girl's Severed Foot After Six Flags Accident"

The family of a 13-year-old Louisville girl whose feet were severed on an amusement park ride said doctors at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville have been able to reattach her right foot.

Doctors, however, said Kaitlyn Lasitter’s left foot was too severely damaged in the gruesome accident nearly two weeks ago to be saved.

Lasitter is in stable condition. Doctors said she is progressing as expected.

The teen's feet were severed just above the ankles as she rode the Superman Tower of Power thrill ride June 21 at Six Flags Kentucky Kingdom in Louisville.

Investigators with the Kentucky Department of Agriculture will be looking into what happened for several more weeks. Copyright 2007 by WKRN Nashville Tennessee. All Rights Reserved.
 
Thanks for the update. I think this lawsuit is a no-brainer.

Do we hear about lawsuits w/Disney or does Disney settle/pay them off before they even file?

When it comes to park related incidents, Disney is infamous for being an extremely tough entity to litigate against; they aggressively defend themselves against suits and hardly ever settle in advance. Here are the handful of notable cases they have lost or settled:

March 1981: Disney parks suffers it's first guest homicide. The victim was Mel Yorba, an 18-year old Riverside California man, who was attending a private party thrown at Disneyland by a local defense contractor. His family recalled that he and some friends were simply out "to have a good time".

The "good time" ended around 10 P.M. in Tomorrowland. James O'Criscoll, a 28-year old man from San Diego, accused Yorba of touching his girlfriend. There was a scuffle; blows were exchanged. O'Driscoll pulled a knife. Then, either O'Driscoll brutally stabbed Yorba, or Yorba stumbled while lunging forward, impaling himself on the blade.

No one criticized Disneyland security's handing of the killing. With efficiency rivalled only by certain Third-World dictatorships, they swung into action. O'Driscoll's girlfriend was quickly apprehended as she tried to slip out of the park. Divers found the alleged murder weapon, an 8 1/2 inch knife, in a Disneyland waterway. O'Driscoll only managed to evade a massive kingdom-wide manhunt for little more than an hour before he was found cowering in the bushes in Adventureland.

Meanwhile, as Yorba lay bleeding to death on the grounds of Tomorrowland, a Disneyland nurse made a fateful decision. Instead of calling local paramedics, she elected to have Yorba driven to the hospital in a park van. By the time the van, lacking flashing emergency lights, made its leisurely way to the hospital (which, unlike other nearby hospitals, did not have a trauma center), Yorba was dead from a knife wound piercing his heart and liver.

For once, Disneyland was roundly chastised in the media. Two Disneyland workers claimed "the rule at the park is don't call the paramedics". Presumably, flashing red lights and uniformed rescue personnel tearing up Main Street would mar the park's atmosphere. Not that the emergency crews wanted to disturb the guests; the Orange County Director of Emergency Medical Services was actually quoted as saying he would not be "adverse" to dressing up paramedics in mouse suits if necessary.

In wake of this criticism, Disneyland hired an ambulance and changed its emergency procedures somewhat. Not that this helped at the subsequent trials. In 1981, Driscoll was found guilty of second-degree murder and subsequently served sixteen years in prison.

Five years later, Disney was sued for damages. Contrary to what their employees thought, during the trial the park produced a written policy in effect at the time of the stabbing requiring that paramedics be called in life-threatening situations. Due to the lack of complaince with it, the jury found Disney neglegent to the tune of $600,000, making Yorba (or at least his family) the winner of the largest single identified damages ever paid by Disney to someone injured or killed at one of their parks.

December 1998: another death at Disneyland, this time due a design/procedural-related accident. A metal cleat holding a tightly stretched line breaks loose from the Columbia Sailing Ship in Frontierland, striking two Disneyland visitors who both suffer critical injuries. Luan Phi Dawson, 48, and his wife Lieu Vuong, 34, both from Washington state, are rushed to UCI Medical Center in Orange. Christine Carpenter, 30, of Anaheim a Disneyland employee also was hurt in the accident and was taken to Western Medical Center-Santa Ana/Hospital and Regional Trauma Center with a severely injured left ankle.

While both Lieu Vuong and Christine Carpenter were released a few weeks later, Luan remained in critcial condition. It continous to deteriorate and on December 27,1998 -- when it is clear there is no longer any hope -- he dies after being taken off life support.

A year later, local authorities who have been investigating the accident release their report. Quote: "Through interviews and review of training records and procedures our investigators determined that the injured employee had not received training on the specific procedures to follow in docking the Columbia. The employee never performed a docking of the ship prior to the one that led to the bow cleat being ripped off the hull and propelled back toward the waiting passengers."

The report further revealed that the accident occurred because that despite the fact the cleat on the ship was not strong enough to be used to brake the vessel's forward motion, the Disney employee placed the docking line on the cleat while the vessel was moving.

January, 2000: Juan Phi Dawson's family files a suit against Disney requesting over $13 million in damages. That October, Disney agrees to settle for an undisclosed sum, which also contained funds to cover injuries to Dawson's wife, whose face was horrifically shattered in the accident.
 
My personal injury experience with Disney is when my mom broke her ankle in the campground in 1976.

They took her by ambulance to closest hospital. My dad and i were swimming at the Poly at the time (pool hopping was allowed back then so don't even go there.) Mom had taken my infant sis back to the site for a nap and fell. She broke her ankle because she stepped in a hole or defect in the road and when she fell she made sure dsis wasn't going to get hurt which didn't make for a graceful fall.

I still remember these men in black (security) coming to the pool to get Dad and i and them taking us right to her.
 
And heres the article

http://www.courier-journal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070714/NEWS01/70714010

Girl who lost feet on ride is released from hospital
The Courier-Journal





Kaitlyn Lasitter, the teenage girl who had her feet cut off on a ride at Kentucky Kingdom, has been discharged from the hospital.

John Howser, a spokesman for Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, made the announcement in a statement released today.

“Kaitlyn and her parents are still facing many challenges ahead,” he said.

The teenager’s feet were severed by a cable while riding the Superman Tower of Power at Six Flags Kentucky Kingdom on June 21.

Doctors were able to reattach her right foot but could not save her left foot.

The family, which has asked that the media respect its privacy, filed a lawsuit Thursday against the theme park, claiming that the park failed to maintain the equipment and ensure riders’ safety.

A Kentucky Kingdom spokeswoman refused to comment on the lawsuit yesterday.

The ride, formerly called the Hellevator, has been shut down since the incident as officials from the state Department of Agriculture investigate
 
She has had a setback.

http://www.courier-journal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070727/NEWS01/70727029

Girl who lost feet on ride now faces more surgery
By Charlie White
cwhite@courier-journal.com
The Courier-Journal





Kaitlyn Lasitter, the 13-year-old girl who had her feet severed by a ride at Six Flags Kentucky Kingdom, has been readmitted to Vanderbilt Medical Center for further surgery after complications.

She will remain at the hospital until early next week, her parents Randy and Monique Lasitter said in a statement released by hospital officials today.

“It is hard as parents to see our child lying in a hospital bed without her bright smile we all love, due to so much physical and emotional pain. The pain our daughter is going through is unimaginable for us to understand,” the statement read.

The family did not detail the complications that led to the additional surgery.

Her parents said the “reality of all this is finally setting in” — the family says they now realize their daughter will never be able to regain her early teenage years that are vital for development.

“We know in our hearts that Kaitlyn is a strong girl and will ultimately prevail through this horrible time in her life but at this moment it will be a very long recovery,” Randy and Monique Lasitter said.

Kaitlyn Lasitter had both feet severed above the ankles after a cable broke on the Supeman Tower of Power Ride on June 21.

The ride, formerly known as Hellevator, remains under a stop-operation order until the Kentucky Department of Agriculture’s investigation is complete.

The family filed suit on July 12 against Kentucky Kingdom, claiming the park failed to maintain the equipment and ensure riders’ safety. They are seeking an unspecified amount of punitive and compensatory damages, as well as a jury trial.

“We hope in the end of this tragedy we can help to prevent this from happening to anyone else,” the Lasitters said today.

Calls to Kentucky Kingdom and state Agriculture Department officials were not immediately returned tonight.

Park officials said last week they were not able to comment because of the ongoing state investigation, and state officials have said they will not release any of their findings until the investigation is complete.

The Agriculture Department began searching last week for an independent laboratory to examine the ride’s broken cable, though it was not clear tonight if one had been found.
 
This family is still having trouble. They have no insurance.


http://www.courier-journal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070810/ZONE01/70810040


Ride victim's family thanks residents, O'Shea's
By Charlie White
cwhite@courier-journal.com
The Courier-Journal





The parents of Kaitlyn Lasitter today thanked area residents and O’Shea’s Traditional Irish Pub, who helped raise $35,000 earlier this week for the family.

This money will be used to help pay for Kaitlyn’s mounting medical bills and the family’s trips to Vanderbilt Medical Center in Nashville, Tenn., her father, Randy Lasitter said in an interview with The Courier-Journal this evening.

“We feel quite overwhelmed with all of the compassion Louisville has shown as a community,” Randy Lasitter wrote in an email earlier in the day.

“It was unfortunate that we were unable to be there as a family, due to the constant returning to Nashville for surgeries and as of recent the MRI Katie had for the severe head pain she is having, but so many of our friends were there and they kept us updated as well as (pub owner) Tom (O’Shea) texting us with the news.”

Kaitlyn’s mother, Monique, worked at O’Shea’s for nearly four years after the family moved to Louisville from Florida.

Thirteen-year-old Kaitlyn had both feet severed while riding the Superman Tower of Power ride at Six Flags Kentucky Kingdom earlier this summer. Surgeons were able to reattach her right foot, but her left foot could not be saved.

The state Department of Agriculture continues to investigate the accident.

Contrary to a previously published report from a source close to the family, neither Randy nor Monique have health insurance through their jobs.

“We’ve never been sickly people,” Randy Lasitter said, noting they live a nearly-vegan lifestyle.

Before her injury on June 21, the family usually opted for homeopathic treatment instead of a trip to the doctor. “We don’t even take aspirin. We use willow bark,” he said.

Powerful prescription narcotics that Kailtyn has been taking for pain also have taken their toll on her as they only mask the pain.

On July 12, the family sued Kentucky Kingdom, claiming the theme park failed to maintain its equipment and ensure riders’ safety.

“Hopefully one day in the future all the information will be out there to let Louisville know exactly what happened and how imperative it is to have the proper people in place performing certain types of jobs,” Randy said in the email.
 
This family is still having trouble. They have no insurance.

How sad... It's nice to think they are healthy but you never know when accidents are going to happen

This is one of the reasons i've always had some kind of insurance. At one point we just had state insurance for our dd but i prioritized getting any job to get us family coverage.
 
How could they not have any money from Six Flags yet? At the very least, the cost of medical bills. What the heck is going on? :confused3
 
This family is still having trouble. They have no insurance.


http://www.courier-journal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070810/ZONE01/70810040


Ride victim's family thanks residents, O'Shea's
By Charlie White
cwhite@courier-journal.com
The Courier-Journal





The parents of Kaitlyn Lasitter today thanked area residents and O’Shea’s Traditional Irish Pub, who helped raise $35,000 earlier this week for the family.

This money will be used to help pay for Kaitlyn’s mounting medical bills and the family’s trips to Vanderbilt Medical Center in Nashville, Tenn., her father, Randy Lasitter said in an interview with The Courier-Journal this evening.

“We feel quite overwhelmed with all of the compassion Louisville has shown as a community,” Randy Lasitter wrote in an email earlier in the day.

“It was unfortunate that we were unable to be there as a family, due to the constant returning to Nashville for surgeries and as of recent the MRI Katie had for the severe head pain she is having, but so many of our friends were there and they kept us updated as well as (pub owner) Tom (O’Shea) texting us with the news.”

Kaitlyn’s mother, Monique, worked at O’Shea’s for nearly four years after the family moved to Louisville from Florida.

Thirteen-year-old Kaitlyn had both feet severed while riding the Superman Tower of Power ride at Six Flags Kentucky Kingdom earlier this summer. Surgeons were able to reattach her right foot, but her left foot could not be saved.

The state Department of Agriculture continues to investigate the accident.

Contrary to a previously published report from a source close to the family, neither Randy nor Monique have health insurance through their jobs.

“We’ve never been sickly people,” Randy Lasitter said, noting they live a nearly-vegan lifestyle.

Before her injury on June 21, the family usually opted for homeopathic treatment instead of a trip to the doctor. “We don’t even take aspirin. We use willow bark,” he said.

Powerful prescription narcotics that Kailtyn has been taking for pain also have taken their toll on her as they only mask the pain.

On July 12, the family sued Kentucky Kingdom, claiming the theme park failed to maintain its equipment and ensure riders’ safety.

“Hopefully one day in the future all the information will be out there to let Louisville know exactly what happened and how imperative it is to have the proper people in place performing certain types of jobs,” Randy said in the email.

Wow...I really hope that they didn't turn down health insurance because they are never sick.:confused: Maybe the companies are small and don't offer it. Taking good care of yourself is important but accidents out of our control happen everyday. I hope her pain is better soon. So nice that others are helping out with bills, I'm sure the lawsuit will drag on.
 
Wow...I really hope that they didn't turn down health insurance because they are never sick.:confused: Maybe the companies are small and don't offer it. Taking good care of yourself is important but accidents out of our control happen everyday. I hope her pain is better soon. So nice that others are helping out with bills, I'm sure the lawsuit will drag on.

I dont think the companies offered it. I realize that they said it was because they were healthy, but I believe it was because it was too expensive (to get privately) Obviously, now, it would be unattainable.
 
This is so sad I hope she has a speedy recovery and that Six Flags reimbuses them with the law suit. Also I hate to say this but this was a few years back but in our Six Flags park the controller of the ring of fire was in the wrong area and got caught at the front and was just sitting there freaking out as this man got shreaded he died the time they got the ride stopped it was so sad
 
This family is still having trouble. They have no insurance.


http://www.courier-journal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070810/ZONE01/70810040


Ride victim's family thanks residents, O'Shea's
By Charlie White
cwhite@courier-journal.com
The Courier-Journal





The parents of Kaitlyn Lasitter today thanked area residents and O’Shea’s Traditional Irish Pub, who helped raise $35,000 earlier this week for the family.

This money will be used to help pay for Kaitlyn’s mounting medical bills and the family’s trips to Vanderbilt Medical Center in Nashville, Tenn., her father, Randy Lasitter said in an interview with The Courier-Journal this evening.

“We feel quite overwhelmed with all of the compassion Louisville has shown as a community,” Randy Lasitter wrote in an email earlier in the day.

“It was unfortunate that we were unable to be there as a family, due to the constant returning to Nashville for surgeries and as of recent the MRI Katie had for the severe head pain she is having, but so many of our friends were there and they kept us updated as well as (pub owner) Tom (O’Shea) texting us with the news.”

Kaitlyn’s mother, Monique, worked at O’Shea’s for nearly four years after the family moved to Louisville from Florida.

Thirteen-year-old Kaitlyn had both feet severed while riding the Superman Tower of Power ride at Six Flags Kentucky Kingdom earlier this summer. Surgeons were able to reattach her right foot, but her left foot could not be saved.

The state Department of Agriculture continues to investigate the accident.

Contrary to a previously published report from a source close to the family, neither Randy nor Monique have health insurance through their jobs.

“We’ve never been sickly people,” Randy Lasitter said, noting they live a nearly-vegan lifestyle.

Before her injury on June 21, the family usually opted for homeopathic treatment instead of a trip to the doctor. “We don’t even take aspirin. We use willow bark,” he said.

Powerful prescription narcotics that Kailtyn has been taking for pain also have taken their toll on her as they only mask the pain.

On July 12, the family sued Kentucky Kingdom, claiming the theme park failed to maintain its equipment and ensure riders’ safety.

“Hopefully one day in the future all the information will be out there to let Louisville know exactly what happened and how imperative it is to have the proper people in place performing certain types of jobs,” Randy said in the email.

I would think since she was hurt on SF property, they would pay for her medical bills. Sort of like workmans comp would pay you if you were hurt on the job. Hope this young lady handles the trauma, both physical and mental.
 
Wow...I really hope that they didn't turn down health insurance because they are never sick.:confused: Maybe the companies are small and don't offer it. Taking good care of yourself is important but accidents out of our control happen everyday. I hope her pain is better soon. So nice that others are helping out with bills, I'm sure the lawsuit will drag on.

Yeah, companies being sued can make lawsuits drag on for YEARS, meaning that in the meantime, the family is responsible for all bills. Friends of my parents had a little boy who was severely injured while being treated in a hospital in FL (among other things, his trach tube came out, which basically killed most of his brain, and a nurse who was changing his bed linen grabbed the boy's leg to lift him up off of the bed and broke it (he had brittle bone disease in addition to the other problems he faced). The hospital kept stonewlling and stonewalling, delaying the suit as long as possible; in fact, the family still hasn't seen a dime from them. They eventually filed bankruptcy and still don't have enough to get by.

Unfortunately, their little boy passed away about a year ago, and due to the ongoing investigation against the hospital, they can't even have his remains to have a proper funeral. The family doesn't even have enough money to get school clothes for the remaining children; my mom is constantly sending down "care packages" for them, and the whole thing makes me so mad I could scream.
 
Heres some news on the girl who was injured at six flags. She has one prosthetic leg and one foot was reattached.

http://www.courier-journal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071205/NEWS01/712051064

Ride victim takes first steps
Pain, depression still haunt Louisville teen

By Charlie White
cwhite@courier-journal.com
The Courier-Journal



With the help of a prosthetic leg, 14-year-old Kaitlyn Lasitter took her first steps last week since her feet were severed last summer on the Superman Tower of Power ride at Six Flags Kentucky Kingdom.

"She's so proud of herself that she has gotten around on crutches," said Larry Franklin, an attorney for the Louisville teenager and her family.



Kaitlyn also has regained her appetite and some weight after the various prescription medications she takes made her sick, her family recently told The Courier-Journal in an e-mail. Because of that, she had to be hospitalized on her birthday, Sept. 6.

Despite the progress she has made, Kaitlyn continues to battle pain, depression and the uncertainty of what will become of her reattached right foot. Her family says doctors have told them they will not know for months if Kaitlyn's body will accept or reject it.

And recently, Kaitlyn has been experiencing phantom pain from her missing left foot.

"To watch our daughter continually try to overcome such extreme pain and adversity has definitely been five of the most trying months of our lives," her parents, Randy and Monique Lasitter, wrote The Courier-Journal. "It tears us up inside to know something like this can happen to our child."

The Lasitters sued Kentucky Kingdom on July 12, claiming the theme park failed to maintain the ride and ensure riders' safety.

Kaitlyn was riding the Superman Tower of Power -- which lifted passengers 177 feet, then dropped them at speeds of more than 50 mph -- on June 21 when a cable broke, severing her feet.

She first was rushed to University Hospital in Louisville, then flown to Vanderbilt Hospital in Nashville, Tenn., where she underwent surgery. After Kaitlyn was released from the hospital, she and her family had to make several trips back to Nashville -- about 175 miles away -- for treatment.

She has been receiving treatment recently at Frazier Rehab Institute in downtown Louisville.

Before Kaitlyn received her prosthesis, just getting from one room of the family's Germantown home to another was difficult for her because the door openings of the family's near-century-old home are too narrow for her wheelchair.

Randy Lasitter said he often had to carry her, while at other times, Kaitlyn had to crawl.

Medical bills from Kaitlyn's surgeries and treatments already total in the hundreds of thousands of dollars, her father said. Her prosthetic leg alone cost about $20,000.

The doctors and hospitals have agreed to wait for payment until the family's case against the theme park is resolved, Randy Lasitter said.

After the family moved to Louisville from Florida, Kaitlyn attended sixth grade at Meyzeek Middle School then transferred to Highland Middle School during seventh grade.

She was just beginning to get close to a group of students at Highland when she was hurt, her father said last night.

Kaitlyn regularly had friends over to swim in the family's in-ground pool, but her parents had yet to let her spend the night away from home.

"She hasn't dated, barely even had a first kiss," her father said.

After she was injured, other teenagers Kaitlyn was not as close to began leaving phone messages with insensitive jokes about her condition.

"Due to fears of more ridicule from her peers," her parents said, they decided to keep Kaitlyn at home for her eighth-grade year, teaching her with the help of online courses.

Her parents are now both working online from home so they can be with their daughter.

The state Department of Agriculture, which oversees ride safety, is investigating the incident that maimed Kaitlyn. Another hearing in the case is scheduled for Dec. 14.

The Lasitters say they hope their lawsuit will accomplish three goals:

"First, there is no one that wants this ride (taken) down more than our family so no one will ever have the opportunity to be hurt on this ride again," the family wrote to the newspaper. "What happened to our daughter could have happened to anyone's child that day.

"Secondly, that Kaitlyn receive the best care we can give her and that when she reaches maximum medical improvement, a trust fund can be established to provide for her future surgeries, prosthetics, physical therapy, etc. for her lifetime.

"Last, but not least, it is our opinion that if the reckless conduct of this corporation continues, all of our children will be at risk. It is our duty, as a member of the community, as well as Kaitlyn's parents, to ensure that the appropriate intervention is taken to prevent this from happening."

Kentucky Kingdom officials released a statement last night saying, "Once again, our deepest sympathies and prayers go out to Kaitlyn and the Lasitter family. This was a horrifically tragic and random accident that has left all of us at Kentucky Kingdom deeply saddened."

Attorneys for the theme park had asked Jefferson Circuit Judge Barry Willett for permission to take down the Superman Tower of Power, which is in a prominent place near the park entrance.

Willett ruled last week that Kentucky Kingdom can begin tearing down the ride Feb. 1, a spokeswoman for Kentucky Kingdom said.

While the Lasitters say they are glad the ride is being torn down, they fear the park will "take advantage of Kaitlyn's tragedy by replacing" it and holding a "great unveiling." The family said they don't believe any new ride should take the Superman Tower of Power's place.

In their statement last night, Kentucky Kingdom officials said, "For the record, we never planned to replace the ride and have been waiting to remove it at the first opportunity per the discovery process. We also have no plans to install a new ride in its place next year."

The Lasitters are seeking a jury trial, and waiting for all of the details of the incident to be released.




If you click the link there is a picture of the family. Under "more photos" Kaityn comes home.
 
The situation is so awful, but this part has my blood boiling:
After she was injured, other teenagers Kaitlyn was not as close to began leaving phone messages with insensitive jokes about her condition.
How could anyone be so cruel to someone who has suffered such a terrible injury? :sad2: :sad2:
 
The situation is so awful, but this part has my blood boiling: How could anyone be so cruel to someone who has suffered such a terrible injury? :sad2: :sad2:

There are a LOT of Cruel People in the world, and its a shame she let that matter to her, she should have ignored it all and gone to school to show what its like to be different.:guilty: Hope she recovers.
 












Save Up to 30% on Rooms at Walt Disney World!

Save up to 30% on rooms at select Disney Resorts Collection hotels when you stay 5 consecutive nights or longer in late summer and early fall. Plus, enjoy other savings for shorter stays.This offer is valid for stays most nights from August 1 to October 11, 2025.
CLICK HERE







New Posts



DIS Facebook DIS youtube DIS Instagram DIS Pinterest

Back
Top