San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Size cited in lawsuit over teen’s amusement ride death in Florida

- By Curt Anderson

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — A rising middle school football player in Missouri, only 14 but already 6 feet, 5 inches tall and well over 300 pounds, Tyre Sampson fell to his death from a towering Florida amusement ride. Lawyers for his family want to know if negligence about his size, or other factors, played a role.

“This young man, he was athletic and he was big. He had no way of knowing,” said Bob Hilliard, a Texas attorney who represents Tyre’s mother, Nekia Dodd, in an interview Saturday. “This is going to be an issue of a lack of supervisio­n and lack of training. A straight-up negligence case.”

Investigat­ors on Saturday continued to examine what happened Thursday night when Sampson dropped out of his seat from a 430foot, free-fall amusement park ride in the heart of Orlando’s tourist district not far from Disney World.

The well-known civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who is working with Hilliard and represents Tyre’s father, Yarnell Sampson, said the family is “shocked and heartbroke­n at the loss of their son.”

The Orange County Sheriff ’s Office and the state Department of Agricultur­e and Consumer Services, which regulates amusement rides in Florida at all but the major theme parks, declined comment Saturday other than to say the investigat­ion is ongoing.

The Icon Park attraction said in a statement it is fully cooperatin­g with investigat­ors and that the ride will be closed indefinite­ly.

No criminal charges have been filed but a negligence or wrongful death lawsuit, or both, seem likely.

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