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onedef92
07-11-2011, 9:11am
Questions after war vet dies in roller coaster fall

Last updated 10:40 11/07/2011

A 63-metre-tall roller coaster in upstate New York remains closed amid questions about the falling death of an Iraq war veteran who lost both his legs to a roadside bomb and the decision to allow him on the ride.

Sergeant James Thomas Hackemer was ejected Saturday (NZ time) from the Ride of Steel coaster at Darien Lake Theme Park Resort, located between Buffalo and Rochester.

Amusement park industry consultant Dennis Speigel said two things should be considered when determining whether someone should be allowed on a ride.

"One is rider responsibility and then there is operator responsibility, and those two issues have to homogenise," Speigel said. "This just seems to me that it was a bad decision on both parts."

Hackemer's relatives have said they don't hold the park responsible for his death.

"It's nobody's fault. It was an accident. James thought it wasn't an issue," Jody Hackemer said over the weekend of her brother's disability.

Rules posted on the park's website for the Ride of Steel say guests with "certain body proportions" may not be able to ride it, but it doesn't give specifics. The rules specifically bar people without both legs from riding at least two other coasters in the park, the Motocoaster and the Predator.

Although an investigation of the accident is incomplete, Speigel, who is not involved in the probe, wondered whether Hackemer's military service played a role in the decision to allow the ride.

Parks in general are sensitive to the military, he said, with many offering significant discounts and ticket giveaways to service members and their families. As of July 5, since the start of US military operations in Iraq, 32,130 US service members have been wounded in hostile action, according to the Department of Defence's weekly tally.

"Here we have a situation where that individual has seen some pretty incredible things, I would imagine, and if I had to guess, was saying, 'I can ride this. Don't worry about me, I'll be fine.' And then you begin dealing with the forces of physics and it's a whole different situation," said Speigel, a past president of the International Association of Amusement Parks and Attractions, a trade association.

Ben Sobeck of Wellsville said he was with two friends on the Ride of Steel coaster a few seats behind Hackemer, who was riding with a college-age nephew, Ashton Luffred. The friends watched in horror as Hackemer was lifted from the seat and thrown as the car went over a hill after two big dips and some turns.

Ad Feedback "It's bad to deny him to ride, but they should not have allowed him to ride," Sobeck, an Alfred State College student, told the Hornell Evening Tribune. "The ride holds you in by the shins and thighs and a seatbelt."

One of Hackemer's sisters, Catie Marks, said Luffred told her that park attendants didn't challenge the disabled veteran's desire to ride the coaster.

"Not one objection," she said. "Not one question."

Hackemer, a father of two, suffered two strokes and spent six weeks in a coma after being wounded in 2008 by an armour-penetrating warhead. Brain-damaged by blood loss, he had to relearn to eat and speak.

In a video interview with The Buffalo News this year, he's seen doing pushups and other exercises. He told of having to relearn basic skills and how his parents had built ramps around the house to accommodate his wheelchair.

"I'll never feel actual normal like I was before," he said, "but I think I'm pretty close to it."

Jody Hackemer said she had no doubt her brother died doing something he loved.

"The minute he was on that ride, he probably felt the happiest and most normal he's felt in 3 1/2 years," she said.

It's a sentiment other amputees and veterans could relate to.

"Doing what he did, I completely understand that," said Jack O'Connor, a Vietnam veteran who co-ordinates mentors for veterans in Buffalo's court system. "He wanted to go on the roller coaster. He wanted to be normal again, like everyone else, and not be thinking about some of the things that probably happened to him overseas."

"You want to fit in again," said O'Connor, who also is a mental health consultant for Erie County. "You don't want to be that outside person, you don't want to be the person having the bad dreams and having the problems. You want to fit in to society. "

Molly French, who lost both of her legs below the knee following an infection that began with strep throat in 2008, said she, too, understands and has even thought about whether to ride a roller coaster since her life-altering illness.

"Just going to the amusement park and feeling normal and waiting in line with everybody else and doing what you used to love to do, I totally get that feeling," said French, who runs a support group for fellow amputees in Greenville, Ohio. "I'm sure he was the same way, just trying to figure out how to live his life again as an amputee."

The IAAPA's statistics show the likelihood of being seriously injured on a permanently located amusement park ride in the United States is one in nine million, spokeswoman Colleen Mangone said.

"Events like this are extremely rare and safety is the No. 1 priority for the amusement park industry," she said.

The park's website said the Ride of Steel coaster will be closed until the investigation is completed.

Joecooool
07-11-2011, 9:28am
Thats feked up.

VatorMan
07-11-2011, 9:31am
Guess that ride didn't have shoulder harnesses. :sadangel: for the soldiers family.

Kerrmudgeon
07-11-2011, 9:39am
Hmmm, sounds like a shitty way to spend the rest of your life, maybe he knew exactly what he was doing........:sadangel:

Jeff '79
07-11-2011, 10:45am
He lived in my general vicinity and the park is 20 minutes from my house......He was a wild man, and and gave his all for his country.....He also lived life to the fullest as a double leg amputee......That being said, his family knew that, and aren't holding the park responsible for him flying out of the coaster......This is not fact or hear say, but the topic of many conversations at parties over the w/e was, for all anyone knows, he just may have done it on purpose.....

repo
07-11-2011, 10:48am
....That being said, his family knew that, and aren't holding the park responsible for him flying out of the coaster.....

yet.......

onedef92
07-11-2011, 10:50am
yet.......


:iagree:

"The main thing about money, Bud, is that it makes you do things you don't want to do." - Lou Manheim, Wall Street (1987)

Jeff '79
07-11-2011, 1:12pm
yet.......

:yesnod: I was going to interject that, but I left it out.......:yesnod:

Burnt C6
07-11-2011, 1:21pm
Hmmm, sounds like a shitty way to spend the rest of your life, maybe he knew exactly what he was doing........:sadangel:


:iagree::sadangel:

God please help me from having the visual of him popping out of that seat

repo
07-11-2011, 2:45pm
Living in the area, believe me the jokes were flying till I found out he was a DAV>:sadangel:

yell01
07-11-2011, 3:21pm
The park's damned if they do and damned if they don't. They don't let him on and get sued...they let him on and he dies they get sued. They can't win.

repo
07-11-2011, 3:32pm
The park's damned if they do and damned if they don't. They don't let him on and get sued...they let him on and he dies they get sued. They can't win.

Exactly. My wife asked why they let him on and I said the exact same thing.

Can you imagine watching that? He was supposedly in the front row :ohnoes:

ft laud mike
07-11-2011, 5:17pm
He lived in my general vicinity and the park is 20 minutes from my house......He was a wild man, and and gave his all for his country.....He also lived life to the fullest as a double leg amputee......That being said, his family knew that, and aren't holding the park responsible for him flying out of the coaster......This is not fact or hear say, but the topic of many conversations at parties over the w/e was, for all anyone knows, he just may have done it on purpose.....
:iagree:
The park's damned if they do and damned if they don't. They don't let him on and get sued...they let him on and he dies they get sued. They can't win.

:iagree::cheers:
WTF is "homogenise"?
thisis as close as I could find
Adj. 1. homogenised - formed by blending unlike elements especially by reducing one element to particles and dispersing them throughout another substance
homogenized
blended - combined or mixed together so that the constituent parts are indistinguishable
2. homogenised - made homogeneous
homogenized
homogeneous, homogenous - all of the same or similar kind or nature; "a close-knit homogeneous group

Jeff '79
07-11-2011, 5:20pm
A witness said that after being thrown out, he hit the rail, and a split second later, the coaster ran him over....Damn, that dude just wasn't meant to keep his limbs.

Army amputee thrown from NY roller coaster, dies (http://www.wivb.com/dpps/news/nation/northeast/amputee-thrown-from-roller-coaster-dies_3873670)