The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Parents sue in toddler's fatal fall

19-month-old boy plummeted 5 floors out of open window.

- By Alexis Stevens astevens@ajc.com

Anthony Charles Hicks III loved to look out the windows to the street below his Buckhead apartment. It’s the last thing the curious 19-month-old did.

He and his mother were walking toward the elevator when Anthony looked down, then toppled out of the window in a common area of the apartment complex. There were no safety features preventing the fall, and Anthony hit the cement sidewalk five stories below. He died from his injuries that same day, July 4.

“It never even crossed her mind that the window would be open,” his parents’ attorney, Stephen Apolinsky, told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on. “It had never been open.”

In their wrongful death lawsuit filed in Fulton County

State Court by Jay Sadd of Slappey & Sadd and Apolinsky, Anthony’s parents say the Core at Lindbergh complex was negligent by not having any safety features in the window, as required by building codes.

The Internatio­nal Building Code, adopted by the state of Georgia, says an exterior wall window within 3 feet of the floor must have safety devices if opening the window would allow an object 4 inches in diameter or larger to otherwise pass through.

Anthony Hicks II and Desiree Williams are seeking a jury trial and unspecifie­d damages.

The complex’s owner, Matrix Residentia­l, did not respond to a request for comment on the lawsuit. After Anthony’s death, the complex installed safety features on the windows, Apolinsky said. The window where Anthony fell was bolted shut and a metal grid was installed, he said. The day Anthony died, the lawsuit states, no such features were in place.

“Without any such features, a person approachin­g the fifthfloor window would be prevented from readily discerning whether it was in a closed state or a fully unprotecte­d state due to the fact it looked essentiall­y the same regardless of whether it was open or shut,” the lawsuit states.

Anthony’s parents filed the lawsuit in hopes of preventing other families from enduring a similar tragedy, according to their attorney.

“They’re just trying to get by day by day, but they are still distraught over losing their son,” Apolinsky said.

Anthony would have celebrated his second birthday Dec. 4.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Anthony Charles Hicks III with his parents, who are suing the apartment complex where he fell to his death July 4.
CONTRIBUTE­D Anthony Charles Hicks III with his parents, who are suing the apartment complex where he fell to his death July 4.

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