If the girl was injured because of a safety issue with the ride ( the seatbelt did not secure her tight enough, and she flipped out of her seat, the elevator dropped, and did not brake, ect) then i would look at Disney and their ride policies.
The two very unfortunate events the past month has everyone scrutinizing Disney right now, but people, what is Disney to do when they have warning signs about what this ride can do, and parents put them on anyway?
Disney does not need to further restrict the height requirements. In both cases, neither incident had anything to do with them being too little for the ride itself. they could of had the SAME medical emergency if they had both been 20 years old.
You know how some posters here with start a thread about what they see in WDW? Basically moms and dads screaming at their kids, each other, ect? Well, they probably witnessed me one day going OFF on my DH. I was physically shoving him away from my Ds, who was 7yo at the time. h was finally tall enough to ride RnRC, my Dh was so excited, because I will not ride it, after my first ride. I vowed to never ride it again.
He was finally going to be able to go on with my DS. Well, we get over there, and Ds said he did not feel good and had a headache. My Dh just thought he was getting cold feet, and was trying to force him to go on the ride. I told him, if he has a headache, he is not going on the ride. I knew how the G-force made me feel, I was in a near panic, that my Dh was ignoring the fact that Ds had a headache, and of all rides, he wanted him on this one. Dh was taking him by the hand, and I was all but yelling and I finally shoved him away from taking DS's hand.
The whole time Dh was saying, he is faking the headache. Whatever. I was not going to take the chance. Besides, even if he was faking, he obvously was not ready to go on the ride.
So, if DS went on the ride, and something happened to him, believe me, it would of been my Dh in a world of hurt, NOT Disney!