something else to add:
from
www.wtnh.com
(Agawam, Mass.-WTNH, May 3, 2004 Updated 10:00 PM ) _ It is still unclear how a 55 year old Connecticut man fell to his death while riding the Superman Ride of Steel at Six Flags New England.
News Channel 8 has learned that there were problems on another ride in the park the same day. Also, the victim's twin brother is speaking out.
The Massachusetts public safety department has suspended permits on all rides using the T-bar lap restraint system that is used in the Superman ride.
Stanley Mordarsky was thrown to his death from the Superman Ride of Steel roller coaster. Tonight questions remain how he was secured inside the car.
"Are you angry?" asks Verna Collins.
"Of course until somebody is honest, I don't know who to be angry with," says Daniel Mordarsky, victim's twin brother.
Daniel Mordarsky says there's no reason a ride at the Six Flags amusement park in Agawam, Massachusetts, should have killed his twin brother. On Saturday, 55 year old Stanley was thrown to his death from the Superman Ride of Steel.
"They realize these roller coasters go 80 mph. What's going to keep a person in there. It seems like it's just as a lay person or common sense that it should have been a little more. Err on the side of safety, not on the side of having a thrill ride," says Daniel.
Now the Department of Public Safety in Massachusetts, is forbidding any state park to operate rides that use the kind of restraint found on the Superman roller coaster. That T-bar lap restraint, is being tested and possibly redesigned. Daniel says it's too little too late.
"It makes you so angry that it takes something so tragic to make somebody do what a little bit of effort might have cured," says Daniel.
Tonight Six Flags speaks out for the first time about the restraint system inside the Superman ride.
"The Superman ride has dual restraints. The first is a seatbelt restraint just as you see in a car. It clips on. The second is a lap bar," says Mary Ann Burns, Six Flags New England spokesperson.
News Channel 8 has learned three hours after Mordarsky was thrown to his death, the Double Trouble, another roller coaster at the Six Flags stopped in mid ride stranding people upside down for 19 minutes.
"There was one kid who was yelling,'Get me down' but most of the crowd was supporting them and they were pretty calm and they kept supporting them and saying,'Hang in there. You will be okay' ," says Anna Gambini, Westbrook.
Anna Gambini took the pictures as she was passing by the ride. While they look dramatic, Six Flags says the ride was stopped as a safety precaution and performed exactly as it should.
"The ride computer actually picked up a detection of something wrong with the ride and did exactly what it was supposed to and stopped the ride," says Burns.
"What are they trying to prevent. That is what I would like to know. What would have happened if they kept going? You kept going. It would be better than hanging upside down for 20 minutes," says Gambini.
The ride is supposed to stop immediately when there is trouble detected by the computer. Even if it means hanging people upside down in one of the cars, preventing an accident is a top priority.
Meanwhile, officials say the suspension of operating permits on rides that use a T bar lap restraint for technical evaluation, testing and possible redesign is not intended to alarm the industry or riders that the restraints are unsafe.
The department expects to issue a report on the accident by the end of the week.
Daniel Mordarsky will visit Six Flags on Tuesday to see where his brother died.
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as a side note - stuck upside down for nearly 20 minutes? that's gotta suck!
I used to live across the river from this place...back when it was called "Riverside" (Six flags bought it out when I was in High School about 10 years ago...) I just hope they are employing better employees then Riverside did...