Teen Decapitated at Six Flags over GA...

mickeymatt

Active Member
A six foot fence is the same height as most privacy fences. Personally, if I owned a theme park I would probably like a little higher fence and one that is not so easy to scale just because there are always people who disobey rules. We live in a litigious society. As an owner, I would want to protect myself a bit better. I just don't think six foot is tall enough, not even for two fences.
 

xsupaxmanxsfnex

Well-Known Member
This world is full of stupid morons who are intent on doing themselves in by their own stupidity. Apparently, this kid was one of them.

Six Flags did all they needed to do. They fenced off the area, which, IMO, is really all they need to to anyway. But beyond that, they even put signs up for anyone who is unintelligent enough to know that the reason the fence is there is to keep people out of an obviously unsafe area. Anyone with half a brain will know not to disregard the signs and the fence. Those who do choose to do so obviously don't even have half a brain, and companies should not have to spend tons of extra money to put other systems in place to prevent such imbeciles from getting themselves killed. The responsibility of the company is to put reasonable safety measures in place, which in this case, they did. After that, the responsibility to avoid accidents shifts to the patrons of the establishment, who have the responsibility to use their brains and not put themselves in a dangerous area. And if they don't, then they reap the consequences of their actions and there is no one to blame but the victim himself.

I couldn't agree with you more. It is a shame that something like this had to happen to a 17 year old but there is no excuse at all for what happened.

mickeymatt, I don't think it should matter how high the fence is. I know the kind of crowds that there are and how rowdy people can get but there is no excuse to jump over 2 fences. What he did is ridiculous and it is sad that it might take an event like this to get a message to people. Plus if they were to make the fence higher, it may cause a problem with safety with the ride itself. Also, think about a person that is 6 feet. A lot of people aren't even 6 feet. I think it is already pretty hard for a person to get over 2, 6 foot fences.
 

figmentmom

Well-Known Member
He was a KID. Kids do dumb things, without considering the consequences. Sometimes, as in this case, the consequences are tragic and fatal. Could Six Flags have done anything else to prevent this? No.

My heart goes out to his family.:(
 

wdwmomof3

Well-Known Member
Ultimately the most valuable gift of all

Oh how I know. It's just awful.

I worry when we are gone because we have a pool and if something happens, you know who's fault it will be. We have a fence but you see what good that does. People sue for everything, and I mean everything these days. It's insane.
 

EPCOT.nut

Well-Known Member
Oh how I know. It's just awful.

I worry when we are gone because we have a pool and if something happens, you know who's fault it will be. We have a fence but you see what good that does. People sue for everything, and I mean everything these days. It's insane.

Yeah - a company I worked for in the early 90's had to drain a fountain because it was extremely large and the city determined it was a "pool" and needed to be fenced around it. :hammer:
 

unkadug

Follower of "Saget"The Cult
Oh how I know. It's just awful.

I worry when we are gone because we have a pool and if something happens, you know who's fault it will be. We have a fence but you see what good that does. People sue for everything, and I mean everything these days. It's insane.

That's why there is attractive nuisance insurance.
 

figmentmom

Well-Known Member
I have never heard of that. We have our regular homeowners ins that would cover up to so much. Should I check on the other?

YES!!!!! It may also be offered as part of what our insurance agent refers to as "umbrella coverage," but I'm not sure. (We don't have a pool, but we have umbrella coverage - it's additional liability coverage - for other reasons.) Definitely worth a phone call. :)
 

k.hunter30

New Member
Sad.. but I'm sure he learned his lesson and won't do it again. ;)

Where's god when you need him he must have been looking the other way.:animwink:
Wow. You guys can't be serious.

What a lack of respect.:brick: There is a time and place for jokes and sarcasim. The death of someone's child is not one of them. There are two parents out there right now who's life turned into a nightmare today. Show a little respect.

My heart goes out to the boy's family.
I'm SO GLAD someone else posted regarding the above posts... Reading them made me sick.

My sincere condolences got out to the family and the church. :(
 

Pumbas Nakasak

Heading for the great escape.
Wow. You guys can't be serious.


I'm SO GLAD someone else posted regarding the above posts... Reading them made me sick.

My sincere condolences got out to the family and the church. :(

The comments may be inappropriate, to you, but lets keep it in perspective. Gallows humour is nothing new and lets just be greatful that no one else suffered as the result of this youths actions.
 

Wilt Dasney

Well-Known Member
Don't ever hang out with cops, firefighters, paramedics or ED nurses and physicians...you may pass out from the shock.;)

I think public vs. private makes a difference. I'll admit I made a few cracks about the Six Flags incident in one-on-one conversations. I didn't know the kid, and the situation is so bizarre that I suppose it just lends itself to some morbid joking. And I'm sure when you see bizarre injuries, illnesses and deaths all the time in your job, you can develop a pretty dark sense of humor.

I do think it's in poor taste to post that kind of stuff on a public message board, though, since anybody (including friends or family of the deceased) could potentially find it.

Could be seen as hypocritical, I guess, but that's how I see it... :shrug:
 

Timmay

Well-Known Member
I think public vs. private makes a difference. I'll admit I made a few cracks about the Six Flags incident in one-on-one conversations. I didn't know the kid, and the situation is so bizarre that I suppose it just lends itself to some morbid joking. And I'm sure when you see bizarre injuries, illnesses and deaths all the time in your job, you can develop a pretty dark sense of humor.

I do think it's in poor taste to post that kind of stuff on a public message board, though, since anybody (including friends or family of the deceased) could potentially find it.

Could be seen as hypocritical, I guess, but that's how I see it... :shrug:

I agree...I wasn't trying to say it is or isn't acceptable, just that it does go on...and to a greater degree than has been seen here.

Last time I checked this isn't the local firefighter hangout nor is it the break room at your local hospital.

Super...now if you could show me where I said it was.:shrug:
 

unkadug

Follower of "Saget"The Cult
From Columbia, S.C. newspaper The State:
http://www.thestate.com/local/story/447392.html

Coaster tragedy: Teen was taking shortcut back to park

Keenan High student died after being hit by roller coaster

By CLIF LEBLANC - Staff Writer


“He was a beautiful boy. He was a happy-go-lucky guy,” Asia Ferguson III, whose son died Saturday at Six Flags Over Georgia


SPRINGFIELD — The skies darkened and thundered, and raindrops fell on a pained Asia Ferguson as he gazed toward the cemetery where he buried his father in April and soon will inter his teenage son.

Asia LeeShawn Ferguson IV, 17, died Saturday in a freak amusement park accident in Atlanta when he was struck by a roller coaster he was not riding and was decapitated.

Authorities said the rising senior at Columbia’s Keenan High School was taking a shortcut back into Six Flags Over Georgia after leaving for lunch with other children during a church outing.

Cobb County and park officials said Ferguson and another young man, later identified as the teen’s cousin, at about 2 p.m. scaled two fences where signs warned of a danger zone at Batman the Ride roller coaster.

Police will release no details of the accident until an autopsy is completed today.

During the bus ride back Sunday to this Orangeburg County town where the Fergusons have attended Oakey Spring Missionary Baptist Church for five generations, the father said, “We still don’t know what happened.”

All he could do was lament the gnawing loss.

“He was a beautiful boy,” Asia Ferguson III, a 54-year-old van driver for the Richland County library, said of the elder of his two sons. “He was a happy-go-lucky guy.”

Known by relatives as LeeShawn (pronounced LEE-shawn), the young man sang tenor in the church choir and occasionally played drums. His father is the keyboardist and his mother, Letha, is the secretary at the 137-year-old church.

As do many teenagers, he enjoyed pickup basketball at Greenview Park and video games, his father said.

Other relatives and members of the congregation repeatedly referred to the teen as “a good kid.”

“He was just a very personable young man,” church pastor, the Rev. Kenneth Perkins, said. “You couldn’t meet a better young man.”

Perkins delivered the eulogy in April for the teen’s grandfather, Asia Ferguson Jr. of Columbia.

On Sunday, five fading silk flower arrangements still adorned the burial site in the cemetery across from the church on Fire Tower Road. A heart-shaped wreath, crosses and floral sprays danced in the summer breeze in this rural community where cattle, goats and even donkeys graze by the roadside. Springfield is about 45 minutes southwest of Columbia.

LeeShawn’s is the second death in six years tied to the popular roller coaster, which travels up to 50 mph after climbing the equivalent of 11 stories and takes riders through two corkscrew turns and dangles them beneath a track.

Park worker Samuel Milton Guyton died May 26, 2002, when he was kicked in the head by a teenage girl riding in the front car. Guyton was on a platform in a restricted area.

Six Flags closed the Batman ride Saturday evening. The rest of the park remained open. The ride might reopen today, a park spokeswoman said.

Cobb County police spokesman Sgt. Dana Pierce and park spokeswoman Hela Seth said the two youngsters scaled 6-foot fences — one wrought iron that forms the park’s perimeter and the other chain link around the ride.

Signs spaced about 45 feet apart on the perimeter fence warn it is a “restricted area” and for “authorized personnel only.”

A sign on the locked gate to the ride states, “Danger zone” and “Do not enter,” park officials said.

“Our thoughts and prayers are with the family,” said Seth, the Six Flags spokeswoman.

Many people saw the collision and flooded 911 with calls, Pierce said.

“It’s hard to imagine somebody not seeing the signs and jumping two fences,” he said.

Perkins, installed last week as pastor of the Springfield church after transferring from Topeka, Kan., said Sunday the family plans to hire a private detective.

Asked if the Fergusons will file a lawsuit, Perkins — with the teen’s father at his side — said, “We just want to know the facts.”

The church held a private, hourlong prayer service that doubled as a counseling session for the children after the shocking events of the Atlanta trip.

Families filed quietly off a GetaWay Travels bus about 1:40 p.m. Sunday. Some children held what appeared to be prizes won at the park. A girl hugged a large stuffed Pebbles, the daughter in the old television show, “The Flintstones.”

One little girl squealed, “Mommy,” and jumped into the waiting arms of a woman who was at the door of an adjacent church education building.

Congregants arrived to share in the grieving.

They emerged later, singing and clapping to the hymn, “God is Good.”

“God is a wonderful God,” they sang. “He can do anything but fail.”

Except for the minister and Asia Ferguson, none of the people who made the Atlanta trip would discuss the ordeal.

In remarks to media from Columbia, Augusta and Atlanta, the father tried to express the anguish.

“He was a good boy. He did whatever I asked him to do. He loved the church. He loved the Lord.”

He said his wife, a 48-year-old assistant to a Colonial Life insurance vice president, was too despondent to talk publicly.

“She just lost her oldest son,” he said, choking back emotion and draping his arm over the shoulder of Perkins as if for help in uttering the toughest words of his life.

The couples’ other son, Jacolby Jerrod Ferguson, is 13.

The father and the minister said the church takes its young members every summer for a big outing.

Asia Ferguson IV had attended most of them, including the last two to Disney World in Florida and the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, Perkins said.

The teen was considering college or joining the military, perhaps the Navy or the National Guard, his father said.

He wasn’t sure his son was ready for military service.

Funeral plans are being determined, but the family tentatively has selected Saturday, the minister said.

LeeShawn likely will be laid to rest next to his grandfather, who died the same month his grandson turned 17, Perkins said.

“It’s our faith,” he said, “that keeps us going.”

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution contributed to this article.
 

xsupaxmanxsfnex

Well-Known Member
I'm sorry but that story just sounds so fake. It may be the truth but it seems so unrealistic. Is it even possible to scale the perimeter fences of the park? It may just be me but I am thinking that is a cover up story. Sorry.
 

wdwmomof3

Well-Known Member
I'm sorry but that story just sounds so fake. It may be the truth but it seems so unrealistic. Is it even possible to scale the perimeter fences of the park? It may just be me but I am thinking that is a cover up story. Sorry.


It's real alright. My mother in law lives in Atlanta and she said that the ride is still closed while Six Flags looks at new fencing or what ever. You would think that this type of thing would never happen, but it did. It's unbelievable, but true.
 

Register on WDWMAGIC. This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.

Back
Top Bottom