Boston Herald

Co. says indictment­s vs. KC water park could imperil the biz

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KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Criminal indictment­s stemming from the decapitati­on of a 10-year-old boy on a slide at a Kansas water park could hurt owner Schlitterb­ahn’s chances of repaying a $174.3 million loan balance, the mortgage lender has warned.

EPR Properties, the Kansas City-based real estate investment trust that holds the mortgage on the Kansas attraction, said Monday in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission that the March indictment­s could hurt attendance at Schlitterb­ahn’s water parks and “may negatively impact the likelihood of repayment,” The Kansas City Star reports.

The filing is the first public indication that the indictment­s could imperil Schlitterb­ahn’s business. EPR Properties said if Schlitterb­ahn defaults on the Kansas mortgage, it could restructur­e the mortgage loan or foreclose on collateral that secured the loan. That collateral includes the Kansas property as well as properties in New Braunfels and South Padre Island in Texas.

The indictment­s name Texas-based Schlitterb­ahn, its co-owner Jeff Henry, the constructi­on company that built the 17-story Verruckt slide and two other people. The most serious charge is second-degree murder in the 2016 death of Caleb Schwab.

Two other women riding with Caleb also were injured when their raft went airborne.

The park is due to open for the season May 25.

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