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A jumping castle at the centre of a primary school tragedy that killed six children was lifted, spun around in circles and tossed 75 metres by a 'mini-tornado', a court has been told.
The families of six children killed in a jumping castle tragedy in Tasmania have lashed a judge's decision to clear the operator of breaching safety laws - with one grieving mother erupting in the ...
Jumping castle operator not guilty over fatal accident. Story by Ethan James ... They fell from the castle, while a blower attached to the castle to keep it inflated struck a nearby student.
Jumping castle at centre of Tasmanian tragedy that killed six children to be examined. ... They fell from the castle, while a blower attached to the castle to keep it inflated struck a nearby student.
Despite having enough pegs, the operator of the jumping castle at the centre of the Hillcrest tragedy has been alleged to have not secured all the anchor points. Simon McGuire less than 2 min read ...
The mother of one of the six children killed in a primary school jumping castle tragedy has directed her anger at the owner of the company accused of workplace safety breaches over the incident.
A jumping castle that lifted into the air resulting in the deaths of six children at a Tasmanian primary school was not completely secured to its anchor points, according to a court document.
Operators of jumping castles and other inflatable amusement rides are being put on notice after three potentially dangerous breaches were found by Victorian authorities last week.
For the third time since February, a jumping castle was launched into the air by a sudden gust of wind, injuring an unsuspecting group of children Friday afternoon, authorities said.