I injury at Raglan Road

Chi84

Premium Member
Boy that new member who posted this nonsense and then ghosted the thread like the katybug sure stirred up all the regulars. I guess that was her goal, and it succeeded. Also, I woke up this morning with my right eye totally blood red and I currently look like a zombie. I was diagnosed with a burst blood vessel that will take two weeks to get back to normal. Can I sue my partner of 20 years because it happened in his bed?
Actually she didn’t ghost the thread. She checked in again yesterday in post #70. It seems she’s struggling with some of her insurer’s requests for information pertaining to Raglan while dealing with a serious injury.
 

JoeCamel

Well-Known Member
I have receipts at Raglan Road, as well as a voice mail from the mgr after he took my son's phone number, medical record including an EMS , receipt from my visit that night.

I just received a form from Cigna asking for the commercial property's insurance information. I don't know who to list. I cannot get to anyone! I only know my neck is broken, I am in a LOT of pain with no assurance the halo will work. HELP me navigate this mess if you have the expertise. I am a newly retired school teacher and am not interested in a big settlement from anyone.
Thank you for coming back, this can be a rough group with the speculation but I am sorry to hear of your situation.
The company has a mailing address in a strip office near the temple on Vineland.
11476 S. Apopka Vineland Rd.
Suite 100 Orlando,
FL 32836.
I would send a certified letter asking for the company insurance info, the website has some folksy claims about their origins and history so lets see what you get. If you want it to have more impact have a lawyer draft a demand letter and refer them to Cigna
 
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LittleBuford

Well-Known Member
Thank you for comming back, this can be a rough group with the speculation but I am sorry to hear of your situation.
The company has a mailing address in a strip office near the temple on Vineland.
11476 S. Apopka Vineland Rd.
Suite 100 Orlando,
FL 32836.
I would send a certified letter asking for the company insurance info, the website has some folksy claims about their origins and history so lets see what you get. If you want it to have more impact have a lawyer draft a demand letter and refer them to Cigna
Wouldn't a demand letter (not to mention the expense of a lawyer) make sense only if Raglan Road refuses to provide the information the OP is looking for?
 

Chi84

Premium Member
Thank you for comming back, this can be a rough group with the speculation but I am sorry to hear of your situation.
The company has a mailing address in a strip office near the temple on Vineland.
11476 S. Apopka Vineland Rd.
Suite 100 Orlando,
FL 32836.
I would send a certified letter asking for the company insurance info, the website has some folksy claims about their origins and history so lets see what you get. If you want it to have more impact have a lawyer draft a demand letter and refer them to Cigna
Cigna is on the hook for the medical bills so it definitely has an interest in finding Raglan's property insurer for subrogation purposes - it also has people paid to find this very thing. Forms often ask for information on the chance that it may be available but there's no way Cigna won't be able to find out for itself.
 

JoeCamel

Well-Known Member
Cigna is on the hook for the medical bills so it definitely has an interest in finding Raglan's property insurer for subrogation purposes - it also has people paid to find this very thing. Forms often ask for information on the chance that it may be available but there's no way Cigna won't be able to find out for itself.
I agree, I had them and they wanted the most useless information plus each envelope (no electronic messeges) had a minimum of five sheets of paper in it. They must have their own paper plant.
In any case it should be a simple matter for the poster to ask or sit and wait for the insurers to work it out. Covered for now and the end result will be the same no matter what they do about finding the insurer
 

LittleBuford

Well-Known Member
Nope it just lays out what you expect them to do.
From the first line of the article (emphasis added):

A demand letter, or letter of demand (of payment), is a letter stating a legal claim (usually drafted by a lawyer) which makes a demand for restitution or performance of some obligation, owing to the recipients' alleged breach of contract, or for a legal wrong.
The websites below would seem to confirm that a demand letter is only appropriate if the OP is alleging that Raglan Road was somehow at fault for her injury. Moreover, the recipient of the letter should be Raglan Road's insurance company, not Raglan Road itself.

 

Chi84

Premium Member
I agree, I had them and they wanted the most useless information plus each envelope (no electronic messeges) had a minimum of five sheets of paper in it. They must have their own paper plant.
In any case it should be a simple matter for the poster to ask or sit and wait for the insurers to work it out. Covered for now and the end result will be the same no matter what they do about finding the insurer
I sympathize with the OP and anyone else who has to struggle through unfamiliar processes while also dealing with a serious injury. One of the first things you have to answer on any medical form is whether your injury was work-related or caused by an accident. It’s just the way the system works here.
 

Married5Times

Well-Known Member
Can you clarify what you mean?

I was talking about the prospects(meaning possibility) of the poster's contribution to the injury and from my point of view, which clearly differs from Florida, if personal carelessness reaches 50%ish of the reason for injury then I say one should be S. O. O. L.

my hypothetical position(obviously not Florida's) is if that Raglan Road floor had a spilled drink on it for the last hour making it slippery and one were horseplaying while under influence then I would assign maybe 20% fault to Rag Rd. and perhaps around 80% to the injured: thus, I say he don't deserve jack.
.
 

Chi84

Premium Member
I was talking about the prospects(meaning possibility) of the poster's contribution to the injury and from my point of view, which clearly differs from Florida, if personal carelessness reaches 50%ish of the reason for injury then I say one should be S. O. O. L.

my hypothetical position(obviously not Florida's) is if that Raglan Road floor had a spilled drink on it for the last hour making it slippery and one were horseplaying while under influence then I would assign maybe 20% fault to Rag Rd. and perhaps around 80% to the injured: thus, I say he don't deserve jack.
.
Oh, okay. The law does take into account the factors you're describing albeit not using those exact percentages. Negligence laws also differ quite a bit from state to state.
 

Heppenheimer

Well-Known Member
I agree, I had them and they wanted the most useless information plus each envelope (no electronic messeges) had a minimum of five sheets of paper in it. They must have their own paper plant.
In any case it should be a simple matter for the poster to ask or sit and wait for the insurers to work it out. Covered for now and the end result will be the same no matter what they do about finding the insurer
Off topic, but my dad worked for Cigna for most of his career (going back to when it was just called INA). Anyway, he would bring home a ton of blank letter heads for us kids to use as drawing paper....I guess they changed their heading somewhat frequently, and were left with a lot of excess old letterheads. So, you might be on to something about CIGNA having their own paper mill.
 

UNCgolf

Well-Known Member
Just as an FYI for anyone reading this thread, if you do have a legitimate personal injury claim and need legal assistance, try to find a well-regarded local attorney/firm and not a large PI firm you've seen on TV. Although it's not true 100% of the time, and there are plenty of small local attorneys who do this as well, the large PI firms tend to operate as settlement mills.

EDIT: That's not to suggest that any attorney who advertises should be avoided; just that you need to be careful.
 
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I was at Raglan Road on July 18. I was sitting on the bar stool so I could see the dancers better. Unfortunately, when I turned around to see them, my foot slipped on the floor as I stepped down to stand. I fell. Paramedics came and told my son to put me in the car and take me to the emergency room. When I screamed out in pain, paramedics were recalled by the Disney officer and I was transported to ORMC. My c1 neck vertebra was broken. Who do I report this to at Disney? The Raglan Road mgr called my son the next day to see how I was, but I have not heard from anyone at WDW. I called guest services and they did not have any record of an incident that evening. I looked at some website that said I should file a report, but where does it go? No, I have not contacted a lawyer.
My daughter slipped at epcot one year, scraped her face. Security did come and 2 ems on bikes also showed. She was hurting so we just left. She did get all better, but the following year we went back, before going back I did get in touch with Disney to get 4 new passes to epcot. (daughter fell right after we entered). After a few emails back and forth, they gave us all new passes. Disney does have cameras all over, so there should be some sort of documents. Try to email them not call, emails are a great way to show contact with someone from Disney. Good luck, hope you get better soon.
 

Ayla

Well-Known Member
My daughter slipped at epcot one year, scraped her face. Security did come and 2 ems on bikes also showed. She was hurting so we just left. She did get all better, but the following year we went back, before going back I did get in touch with Disney to get 4 new passes to epcot. (daughter fell right after we entered). After a few emails back and forth, they gave us all new passes. Disney does have cameras all over, so there should be some sort of documents. Try to email them not call, emails are a great way to show contact with someone from Disney. Good luck, hope you get better soon.
Raglan Road isn't owned by Disney.
 

lazyboy97o

Well-Known Member
I never heard of Raglan road (thought maybe it was a new Disney attraction), been away from Disney for 4 years now. They just have to find out who owns Ragland road, and see if they can help her out then.
Raglan Road has been open for nearly 17 years. The whole thread is because contact has had challenges.

Walt Disney World is also not the sort of total surveillance environment that people think.
 

Ayla

Well-Known Member
I never heard of Raglan road (thought maybe it was a new Disney attraction), been away from Disney for 4 years now. They just have to find out who owns Ragland road, and see if they can help her out then.
It's a restaurant that's been at Disney Springs (Downtown Disney) since 2005.
 

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