The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Apartment elevator collapse kills teen; state investigat­ing

Property manager says it was too full; residents say complaints ignored.

- By Asia Simone Burns asia.burns@ajc.com

A local student-athlete died Tuesday after an elevator at a northeast Atlanta apartment complex collapsed, pinning him between two floors.

Jaumarcus Mcfarland, 19, died after being trapped in an elevator at 444 Highland Ave. during an incident family friends are calling “preventabl­e,” Channel 2 Action News reported.

In a statement, the property manager for the complex said more than a dozen people were in the elevator moments before t he fatal incident, pushing it past its 3,000pound weight limit. However, re s idents said they’ve been voicing concerns about the elevator’s safety for months.

Firefighte­rs were sent to the complex about 3 p.m. after receiving a report of a man pinned in an elevator, the Atlanta Fire Rescue Department said in a statement. First responders found the teenager trapped between the second and third floors.

Crews worked for an hour to free the trapped man. As they worked to extricate him, they noted he had a faint pulse “but was not alert,” officials said. Mcfarland was taken to Atlanta Medical Center, where he went into cardiac arrest and died.

“The elevators have been shut down until a state inspector determines the reason for the collapse,” Atlanta Fire Rescue said. No other injuries were reported.

Though the fire department has not officially released the victim’s identity, peers told Channel 2 that Mcfarland was a football player at Champion Prep Academy. Mcfarland, who was from Missouri, had enrolled at the school last year, the news station reported.

“It’s heartbreak­ing,” teammate Bryson Grove told Channel

2. “Because I knew what he wanted. He wanted to go play ball.”

Some of Mcfarland’s Champion Prep teammates told Channel 2 the elevator had malfunctio­ned while they were inside it. The others made it out, but Mcfarland became trapped, the news station reported.

In an emailed statement, 444 Highland Avenue property manager Nathan Phillips offered condolence­s to Mcfarland’s family, teammates and friends after what he said appeared to be a “domino effect of events leading to the unfortunat­e death of this young man.”

“The state inspectors will release their findings in due course, so it would be inappropri­ate for us to discuss full details until that report is complete,” the statement said. “What we can say is the weight capacity of the elevator was 3,000 lbs. — but the 16 young athletes who were inside the elevator when this occurred pushed that limit to nearly 4,000 lbs.”

Residents of the complex told Channel 2 the elevator frequently malfunctio­ned and they had filed several complaints alerting property management about the issue. They also said the elevator’s inspection certificat­e had expired last year and the machine had not been inspected since August 2019.

“We knew this was going to happen one day,” Grove told Channel 2. “We didn’t know it was going to take one of our teammates’ lives.”

Phillips confirmed the elevator was last inspected in 2019 but said it was not due for its next five-year inspection until 2024.

“The elevator has been on a constant maintenanc­e program with a licensed Georgia elevator company,” he said. “The building’s two elevators were serviced as recently as last week.”

A spokesman for Safety Fire Commission­er John F. King confirmed inspectors are investigat­ing the incident. The findings of the inspection will “determine the need for further investigat­ion or action by our office,” the spokesman said.

 ??  ?? Jaumarcus Mcfarland
Jaumarcus Mcfarland
 ?? WSB-TV ?? Authoritie­s work at the scene Tuesday after Jaumarcus Mcfarland, 19, died after being trapped in an elevator at 444 Highland Ave. in Atlanta during an incident family friends are calling “preventabl­e,” Channel 2 Action News reported.
WSB-TV Authoritie­s work at the scene Tuesday after Jaumarcus Mcfarland, 19, died after being trapped in an elevator at 444 Highland Ave. in Atlanta during an incident family friends are calling “preventabl­e,” Channel 2 Action News reported.

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