Swimming Pool Drownings

Boy, 4, airlifted off Disney cruise after nearly drowning in swimming pool

A four-year-old boy was airlifted to hospital after nearly drowning on a Disney cruise on Saturday.

This is the second drowning incident in a month for the company who do not have permanent lifeguards at their pools. Warnings are posted by the side of the water that lifeguards are not on duty.

The child, whose condition or name have not been released due to privacy reasons, was found unresponsive in a swimming pool on the cruise ship Fantasy at around 3.30 pm.

The ship was briefly docked at Port Canaveral at the time of the near drowning.

After the boy was discovered Disney staff gave him medical attention. The boy was then airlifted to Arnold Palmer Hospital for Children in Orlando.

Disney told Fox Orlando that their ‘thoughts are with the family and they’re working to assist them at this time.’ The ship left port and continued on its Caribbean cruise 45 minutes after the near drowning.

This is the second drowning on Disney property this month. Missouri boy Anthony Johnson, 13, died after he was found at the bottom of a pool at a Disney hotel in Orlando on March 10.

The teen’s father and another guest at the hotel performed CPR after he was pulled out of the water.

Officials said the boy was staying at the Pop Century Resort, near the Epcot theme park, with his family.

Witnesses said the teenager was playing in the water on Sunday evening with family members. A cousin spotted him underwater around 9.10pm and alerted others in the group who pulled him out to the side of the pool.

Orange County Sheriff’s officials said the victim had a pulse and was breathing when he was taken to Celebration Hospital. He was then transferred to Florida Hospital South but later died

CRUISE SHIP ACCIDENTS AND INJURIES

When a passenger on a cruise ship is injured, the law that applies to an injury claim will most likely be the General Maritime Law of the United States.  At least if the ship is operated by one of the major cruise lines based in the U.S. such as Princess Cruise Lines, Crystal Cruises, Cunard Line, Royal Caribbean, Carnival Cruise Lines and most all of the others you will be familiar with.

Under U.S. Maritime Law, a cruise line can be held liable for damages if it negligently causes injury to a passenger, no matter where in the world the injury occurs.  Negligence can involve something dramatic, such as the listing event on the Crown Princess several years ago when a navigational error nearly caused the ship to capsize, injuring hundreds of passengers.  Negligence will certainly be a litigated topic for survivors and family members of passengers aboard the Costa Concordia, the  Carnival-owned cruise ship that ran aground off the coast of Italy in January 2012.

But usually the negligence is of a more ordinary sort.  For example a deck that becomes unusually slippery when wet or a poorly marked tripping or falling hazard.  And unfortunately, this sort of negligence is all to common on Cruise Ships.

U.S. Maritime Law protects you on these ships, no matter where in the world the injury occurs. And foreign passengers enjoy the same rights as a U.S. citizens.  But there are important limit on your rights as well that you need to be aware of.

Time Limitation

One of the most important of these limitations is that Cruise Lines are allowed to shorten the time you have to make a claim, and limit the place where you can file suit.  Almost all the cruise lines require an injured passenger to give them  written notice of the claim within 6 months and to file suit within one year of the date of the injury.

Venue Limitation

The second, the passage ticket will limit the place where you can file suit.  Most of the major cruise lines specify either Los Angeles or Miami but some lines specify other cities.

The time and place limits on filing suit must be stated in plain language in your passage ticket so you must check your passage ticket to see what limitations apply to you.  If you still have questions, and experienced maritime personal injury attorney will know what limitations apply for any of the major cruise lines.

Contact a Cruise Ship Accidents and Injuries Attorney

You have rights under maritime law that can protect you, but you also have obligations you must comply with.  Our mission is to help you understand both.

Our attorney’s are available for a no cost, no obligation consultation 24/7.  To arrange a consultation, please call us today toll-free at 1-877-465-8711.

 

 

Lake Elsinore Travel Inn Death Ruled Drowning

The investigation into a Murrieta woman who was found dead in the Lake Elsinore Travel Inn swimming pool on Thanksgiving continues, but authorities are releasing few details.

Nicole Lambert, 26, was found dead in the lodge’s swimming pool around 11:55 a.m. on November 24, 2011.

Today, Cpl. Courtney Donowho, spokeswoman with the Riverside County Sheriff’s Department, said “the cause of death is drowning, but there is no further information available at this time.”

It is unclear how Lambert Cruz drowned and who found her; motel staff are referring reporters calls to police.

According to the deceased’s mother, Lambert Cruz was living with her grandfather in Murrieta when she went missing November 19. “She left for a walk and never came back,” said Donna Lambert.

Details from the autopsy and toxicology reports have not been made available.

The Lambert family had been in the media spotlight prior to Thanksgiving for their staunch support of the medical marijuana movement.

Donna Lambert’s elderly father Don, who Nicole lived with, had been a fixture at Murrieta City Hall where he regularly advocated on behalf of medical marijuana patients. Don took up the cause after his daughter Donna was arrested in 2009 for marijuana possession in San Diego County.

Her case garnered significant media attention. She was accused of providing cannabis to an undercover police detective who posed as a medical marijuana patient. The sting was part of a larger investigation dubbed Operation Green Rx spearheaded by San Diego District Attorney Bonnie Dumanis.

In 2010, however, felony charges against Donna Lambert were dismissed.

The Law Offices of Gary A Kessler has successfully represented numerous families and individuals that have suffered serious injuries and deaths from swimming pools, association pools, jacuzzis, spas/ hot tubs, water parks and whirlpool bathtubs.

Many swimming pool drownings occur due to:

  • Negligently designed and misconstructed pools;
  • Pools not having adequate safety fences around their pools;
  • The pool was so filthy that you could not see the bottom of the pool (where the child fell in and drowned) or the child at the bottom of the pool;
  • Door lock mechanism malfunction from a state of disrepair on a sliding door to the house;
  • The patio/ entry was too easily accessible to a child from inside the house;
  • Screen door frames bent outward causing latch mechanisms to be out of alignment, defective and useless;
  • Inadequate fences or improperly installed fences;
  • Failure to install child safety locks on doors, screens, or fences;
  • Dangerously defective pool covers which could not support a child’s weight;
  • Negligent Supervision;
  • Poor or improper maintenance of the pool and surrounding area;
  • Too few lifeguards;
  • Lifeguards not paying attention to swimmers or children in the pool area;

Pool Association & Hotel/Motel Drownings

Defendant pool associations and Hotel/Motel pool drowning cases usually occur because the defendant commercial pool owner:

  • (1) Failed to hire experienced lifeguards
  • (2) Failed to hire enough lifeguards
  • (3) Negligent supervision of the swimmers by lifeguards
  • (4) Lack of warning signs
  • (5) Water rockslide pools do not providing proper rails or steps
  • (6) Surfaces are not “non-skid” surfaces
  • (7) Failure to mark the water depth so the unsuspecting swimmers will not know the accurate depth of the pool
  • (8) Hidden danger of a commercial pool
  • (9) Inadequate indicators of the pool’s depth
  • (10) Murky water, making it difficult, if not nearly impossible, to see children in the deep end
  • (11) Failure to repair the water pump system, keeping the pool properly clean

If you or a loved one is involved in a swimming pool drowning accident/death:

  • Seek medical attention and CPR for the victim immediately;
  • Insist that a report is filed by the police department or Sheriff’s Derpartment;
  • Obtain essential information (i.e., name, address, insurance information, witness information of any and all persons involved in the accident);
  • Photograph the accident scene as well as all of the surrounding area;
  • Shut up!  Talk to no one about the accident other than your attorney, never to an insurance adjuster or insurance investigator.  Do not volunteer a statement to any insurance company;
  • Sign absolutely nothing without consulting a lawyer;
  • Keep a diary of your loved one’s recovery;
  • Keep all receipts for all medical expenses and/or funeral bills and wage loss;
  • Contact the Law Offices of Gary A Kessler an experienced law firm to protect your rights and preserve the evidence!

Demand accountability from those responsible for the swimming pool drowning accidents.  Many times the insurance companies will play “hardball” if you try to settle the case yourself or you have employed a lawyer who does not have the litigation experience to handle such a complex case,  We at the Law Offices of Gary A Kessler have  over twenty years of litigation experience and know how to handle the insurance companies to your advantage.  We are prepared to front all costs required for the necessary investigation and expert witnesses needed to prepare your case for trial.

The laws regarding swimming pool drowning death cases are complex and include many facets of the law.  It is vital to surviving family members to seek the advice of an experienced swimming pool drowning lawyer such as Gary A Kessler at the Law Offices of Gary A Kessler to protect your rights and those of your loved ones.

Inquiry: Fall River pool should not have been open

 

BOSTON (AP) – The public swimming pool where the body of a woman lay unnoticed for more than two days should never have been opened on the day she drowned because the water was too murky, state investigators said Wednesday.

The pool’s manager, its assistant manager and the regional director of the Department of Conservation and Recreation were asked to resign for their roles in keeping the state-run Fall River pool open on June 26 when 36-year-old Marie Joseph drowned accidentally. A fourth employee, the agency’s district manager with oversight of the pool, was placed on leave.

A city health inspector also has been fired.    

“We think bad decisions were made,” said Edward Lambert, commissioner of the state Department of Conservation and Recreation. “The pool should not open if there is a water clarity issue.”

State officials released the preliminary findings of an investigation into the drowning and what happened during the two days that Joseph’s body lay at the bottom of 12 feet of milky water.

Investigators said a review of surveillance video showed Joseph going down a water slide into the pool’s deep end, surfacing briefly and bumping into a child before going under. The entire sequence lasted

only six seconds. The video showed no signs of Joseph struggling, investigators said.

“Water clarity was the primary factor in preventing lifeguards from being alerted to the drowning and from subsequently detecting Ms. Joseph at the bottom of the pool after she submerged,” said Carl Rudge, chief park ranger for the agency and lead investigator.

Rudge said one of four lifeguards on duty at the time of the accident was supervising the water slide, but he noted that department rules require that two lifeguards monitor the slide and that diving blocks be closed while the slide is in use – something that also was not done.

Investigators stopped short of blaming the lifeguard near the slide, saying her attention may have been diverted by a group of other swimmers.

A short time after Joseph went under, officials closed the deep end of the pool because of the cloudy water but allowed the rest of it to remain open, another violation of protocol, investigators said.

Joseph, a native of Haiti and mother of five, worked as a hotel housekeeper in Newport, R.I. Her body did not surface until the evening of June 28, more than two days after she drowned, when youths jumping a fence for an after-hours swim discovered it.

Massachusetts pools are expected to be crowded over the next several days as a heat wave that has gripped much of the nation’s midsection moves eastward. Lambert said he was confident the state-run facilities are safe.

“This tragic event leaves heavy hearts in an agency that prides itself on its ability to provide high quality, safe, recreational opportunities,” he said.

Investigators said they were unable to corroborate a report that the boy who Joseph bumped into told two lifeguards about the incident.

The boy’s mother told the Boston Herald that her son told lifeguards that Joseph did not resurface. She also said a lifeguard told the boy that they would check, but never did.

The pool’s entire staff was placed on administrative leave after the body was found and officials closed all 24 of the state’s other deep-water swimming pools for inspection. All were later reopened except for the one in Fall River, which was drained.

Five similar water slides at other state-run pools have been closed while officials review procedures, Lambert said.

Fall River Mayor William Flanagan told The Associated Press that on Wednesday he fired a city health inspector who checked on the pool two days after the drowning, while Joseph’s body was still at the bottom and other people continued to swim in it. Flanagan said the inspector should have taken action to protect other swimmers after noting that the water was cloudy.

A second inspector who had been placed on administrative leave was reinstated after it was determined that she had not seen the water, Flanagan said.

Protocols require that the grates at the bottom of pools always be visible, but a review of the video showed the water began to cloud up on Saturday – for reasons that remain unclear – and continued to be murky for the next few days, the state investigation found.

In the future, water clarity at all pools will be tested using a 5-inch black and white disk that must be visible at the bottom of a pool before it can open, Lambert said.

Gregg Miliote, a spokesman for Bristol District Attorney Sam Sutter, said Wednesday that the DA is continuing a separate, “intensive investigation” into the circumstances of Joseph’s death, that he hopes to conclude next month. No criminal charges have been filed.

Gov. Deval Patrick ordered the state review, calling the case “terrible,” and “bizarre.”

Dr. Lauren Smith, a state public health official, said the presence of the body in the pool was unlikely to pose a health risk to other people who continued to swim.

It’s a step in the right direction and have some heads roll over this. But it still won’t bring this woman back to her family.

The Law Offices of Gary A Kessler has successfully represented numerous families and individuals that have suffered serious injuries and deaths from swimming pools, association pools, jacuzzis, spas/ hot tubs, water parks and whirlpool bathtubs.

Many swimming pool drownings occur due to:

  • Negligently designed and misconstructed pools;
  • Pools not having adequate safety fences around their pools;
  • The pool was so filthy that you could not see the bottom of the pool (where the child fell in and drowned) or the child at the bottom of the pool;
  • Door lock mechanism malfunction from a state of disrepair on a sliding door to the house;
  • The patio/ entry was too easily accessible to a child from inside the house;
  • Screen door frames bent outward causing latch mechanisms to be out of alignment, defective and useless;
  • Inadequate fences or improperly installed fences;
  • Failure to install child safety locks on doors, screens, or fences;
  • Dangerously defective pool covers which could not support a child’s weight;
  • Negligent Supervision;
  • Poor or improper maintenance of the pool and surrounding area;
  • Too few lifeguards;
  • Lifeguards not paying attention to swimmers or children in the pool area;

Pool Association & Water Park Drownings

Defendant pool associations and water park pool drowning cases usually occur because the defendant commercial pool owner:

  • (1) Failed to hire experienced lifeguards
  • (2) Failed to hire enough lifeguards
  • (3) Negligent supervision of the swimmers by lifeguards
  • (4) Lack of warning signs
  • (5) Water rockslide pools do not providing proper rails or steps
  • (6) Surfaces are not “non-skid” surfaces
  • (7) Failure to mark the water depth so the unsuspecting swimmers will not know the accurate depth of the pool
  • (8) Hidden danger of a commercial pool
  • (9) Inadequate indicators of the pool’s depth
  • (10) Murky water, making it difficult, if not nearly impossible, to see children in the deep end
  • (11) Failure to repair the water pump system, keeping the pool properly clean

If you or a loved one is involved in a swimming pool drowning accident/death:

  • Seek medical attention and CPR for the victim immediately;
  • Insist that a report is filed by the police department or Sheriff’s Derpartment;
  • Obtain essential information (i.e., name, address, insurance information, witness information of any and all persons involved in the accident);
  • Photograph the accident scene as well as all of the surrounding area;
  • Shut up!  Talk to no one about the accident other than your attorney, never to an insurance adjuster or insurance investigator.  Do not volunteer a statement to any insurance company;
  • Sign absolutely nothing without consulting a lawyer;
  • Keep a diary of your loved one’s recovery;
  • Keep all receipts for all medical expenses and/or funeral bills and wage loss;
  • Contact the Law Offices of Gary A Kessler an experienced law firm to protect your rights and preserve the evidence!

Demand accountability from those responsible for the swimming pool drowning accidents.  Many times the insurance companies will play “hardball” if you try to settle the case yourself or you have employed a lawyer who does not have the litigation experience to handle such a complex case,  We at the Law Offices of Gary A Kessler have  over twenty years of litigation experience and know how to handle the insurance companies to your advantage.  We are prepared to front all costs required for the necessary investigation and expert witnesses needed to prepare your case for trial.

The laws regarding swimming pool drowning death cases are complex and include many facets of the law.  It is vital to surviving family members to seek the advice of an experienced swimming pool drowning lawyer such as Gary A Kessler at the Law Offices of Gary A Kessler to protect your rights and those of your loved ones.

Fontana toddler drowns in jaccuzzi

FONTANA– 20-month-old Aubrey Aguilar died at a hospital Thursday after being found submerged in an in-ground jaccuzzi at a residence.

Fontana police officers and firefighters responded to a report of the drowning just before 12:57 p.m.in the 18000 block ofFairview Drive. They arrived to find that the girl had fallen into the ground-level jaccuzzi and was found several minutes later by her parents.

The parents started giving the girl CPR as dispatchers directed them over the phone, according to a news release issued by the Fontana Police Department.

Paramedics responded and rushed the girl to Kaiser Permanente Fontana Medical Center where she was pronounced dead at 1:38 p.m.  

California is second only to Florida in swimming pool related deaths in the United States. In particular, Southern California pool related deaths is the number one cause of death for children ten years old or younger.

The Law Offices of Gary A Kessler has successfully represented numerous families and individuals that have suffered serious injuries and deaths from swimming pools, association pools, jacuzzis, spas/ hot tubs, water parks and whirlpool bathtubs.

The laws regarding swimming pool drowning death cases are complex and include many facets of the law.  It is vital to surviving family members to seek the advice of an experienced swimming pool drowning lawyer such as Gary A Kessler at the Law Offices of Gary A Kessler to protect your rights and those of your loved ones.

The California wrongful death attorney Gary A Kessler and the Law Offices of Gary A Kessler are compassionate and fully understand that you are attempting to cope with extreme grief and sorrow associated with the loss of a loved one in a tragic drowning accident.  The Law Offices of Gary A Kessler carefully selects its wrongful death/drowning cases so that we may give you (the client) the substantial personal attention neccessary to obtain a successful result for your drowning/accidental death case.

The Law Offices of Gary A Kessler is prepared to front all costs required for a thorough investigation and expert witnesses to prepare for trial of your case.  As in all wrongful death and serious personal injury cases, we advance all legal costs to prepare and present our client’s claim, and receive for our services only a percentage of what we recover for our attorney fees on their behalf.  Upon settlement our costs shall be reimbursed to us from the gross recovery.  If there is no recovery, no atoorneys fees or costs are owed to our firm.

Update: Autopsy rules Newark teen drowning during California school trip an accident


newark-student.JPGCourtesy of FacebookShaunakaye Williams

NEWARK — The 16-year-old Newark girl found dead at a hotel pool on a high school
field trip to Southern California could not swim, according to her mother.

Shaunakaye Williams, who flew with her West Side High School classmates
to Long Beach to compete in a robotics team, died in an apparent drowning Friday. Shaunakaye’s friends had pulled her from the water and were attempting to resuscitate her when emergency officials arrived, according to the Long Beach Fire Department.

Paula Watson, Williams’ mother, said her daughter could not swim, and she is not sure why her daughter would have gone in a pool at all.

“She is not a swimmer,” Watson said. “Why would she go in so deep when she knows she cannot swim?”

Williams was a junior at West Side. She had traveled to Long Beach to compete in the LOGO MOTION Regional Competition at the FIRST Robotics Competition at the Long Beach Arena, which ran from Thursday through Saturday.

When a swimming pool drowning or injury occurs, the following causes of action may be possible. A cause of action is theory of liability, or a reason the owner, operator or manufacturer is responsible.

Premises Liability: Owners are responsible for hazards on their land. The extent to which they are responsible depends on the “classification” of the injured person; for example, different duties are owed to invitees, licensees and trespassers (many states have different classifications). A pool can qualify as a hazard when it has dangers that the owner knew or should have known about. Therefore, owners must take reasonable steps to make sure  their pools are safe.

Product Liability: Sometimes pools or pool equipment may be defective Some type of defects including design defects (the pool was incorrectly designed), manufacturing defects ( the pool’s design was correct but it was improperly constructed); and failure to warn (for example, lack of signs about the pool’s depth, causing someone to jump into a shallow area).

Negligence: Owners and operators of pools have a duty to act reasonably in their ownership and maintenance of the pool and it’s surroundings. If they are negligent by failing to have lifeguards on duty, failing to properly train lifeguards, or failing to keep the pool safe, they may be responsible for pool-related injuries or drownings.

What to do if you or a loved one suffered from a swimming pool injury?

Swimming pool injuries may involve injuries from falls, near drownings causing serious brain injury, and death. If you live in California and believe you may have a claim for a swimming pool injury, call The Law Offices of Gary a Kessler at (877) 465-8711 for a free consultation or fill out our online confidential consultation form at garyakesslerlaw.com on your potential pool injury claim.

 

Child Drowns in Pool

A 2-year-old boy drowned in a swimming pool at a barbecue party in Laguna on April 10. Elk Grove police say that the child went missing for several minutes before he was discovered floating facedown in the backyard pool.

The incident occurred around 5:30 p.m. on the 9100 block of Sage Glen Way.

Sacramento County coroners identified the victim as Christopher Ramirez of Sacramento.

“They do happen a few times a year,” Elk Grove police spokesperson Christopher Trim said about young child falling into Elk Grove pools. “Unfortunately, when they do happen, they typically they have a tragic result.”

He explained there were about 10 people in the house who were walking between the house and the backyard when the drowning occurred. It’s currently unknown how Ramirez ended up in the pool, police say.

A short, makeshift fence that was between one and two feet high was placed around the pool, Trim said.

CPR was attempted on Ramirez followed by more medical aid from Cosumnes paramedics who arrived to the scene. The victim was taken to a local hospital where he was pronounced dead.

Trim said that no criminal charges were filed in the case.

He advises pool owners to install a fence around their pools that have an alarm in place, if they have young children or provide general pool access to children.

When a swimming pool drowning or injury occurs, the following causes of action may be possible. A cause of action is theory of liability, or a reason the owner, operator or manufacturer is responsible.

Premises LiabilityOwners are responsible for hazards on their land. The extent to which they are responsible depends on the “classification” of the injured person; for example, different duties are owed to invitees, licensees and trespassers (many states have different classifications). A pool can qualify as a hazard when it has dangers that the owner knew or should have known about. Therefore, owners must take reasonable steps to make sure  their pools are safe.

Product Liability: Sometimes pools or pool equipment may be defective Some type of defects including design defects (the pool was incorrectly designed), manufacturing defects ( the pool’s design was correct but it was improperly constructed); and failure to warn (for example, lack of signs about the pool’s depth, causing someone to jump into a shallow area).

Negligence: Owners and operators of pools have a duty to act reasonably in their ownership and maintenance of the pool and it’s surroundings. If they are negligent by failing to have lifeguards on duty, failing to properly train lifeguards, or failing to keep the pool safe, they may be responsible for pool-related injuries or drownings.

What to do if you or a loved one suffered from a swimming pool injury?

Swimming pool injuries may involve injuries from falls, near drownings causing serious brain injury, and death. If you live in California and believe you may have a claim for a swimming pool injury, call The Law Offices of Gary a Kessler at (877) 465-8711 for a free consultation or fill out our online confidential consultation form at garyakesslerlaw.com on your potential pool injury cla

 


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Gary Kessler, California Personal Injury Lawyer Disclaimer: The California personal injury, wrongful death, swimming pool drowning, boating accident, dog bite, amusement park negligence, pedestrian accident, product liability, aviation accidents, or any other California legal information presented at this site should not be construed to be formal legal advice, nor the creation of a lawyer or attorney client relationship. The information contained herein is intended for information purposes only and should not be considered legal advice. All results described on this site were based on the individual facts of those said cases and are not indicative of future settlements. Results will differ from case to case. Please contact Gary A. Kessler, a California lawyer at our California law firm offices in Newport Beach or our San Francisco Bay Area office.

The Law Offices of Gary A. Kessler are licensed to practice in California, District of Columbia & Pennsylvania. Through local law firms with which we have associations, we are able to represent Personal Injury and Wrongful Death cases across the United States. Our associations allow us to represent clients"pro hac vice", meaning "for this particular occasion". In order to effectively and efficiently represent the client in these cases, we will employ the local law firms (at no additional cost to our client) to make routine court appearances and proceedings where it is necessary to assist our clients case.