Five-year-old Charles Miller was sitting in his father’s lap on the Timber Mountain Log Ride at Knott’s Berry Farm in California when the ride came to a screeching halt after the last drop. According to a lawsuit filed against the theme park by his father, Miller flew forward, forcing his head to be “sandwiched between his father and the back of the seat causing an orbital blowout.” Miller suffered a fractured eye socket, and the lawsuit claims Knott’s Farm negligently maintained the ride.
It turns out this is not the first problem with the log ride or the first lawsuit filed against the park: the family of a 6-year-old girl settled with Knott’s Berry after she broke a bone above her right eye hitting her head on the ride, and the Miller suit cites ten other examples where guests were injured in similar incidents.
Improper Water
The problems for the log ride allegedly occur on the final descent into a large pool of water. According to the lawsuit:
[T]he water sensing system for the Timber Mountain Log Ride was not properly monitoring the water level on the ride, especially at the bottom of the last drop, where there was improper water for proper braking, which increased the deceleration experienced by the guests in the log and contributed to their being injured by being thrown against the log’s interior components.
The suit also claims the California Division of Occupational Safety had previously inspected the ride, made Knott’s Berry Farm aware the water sensing system was not working properly, and that the ride was operating out of compliance for almost two years.
Contemptible Conduct
“The conduct of the Defendants was so vile, base, contemptible, miserable, wretched and loathsome,” the lawsuit claims, “that it would be looked down upon and despised by ordinary decent people.” Along with compensatory damages for the child’s injuries, the suit is also asking for punitive damages against Knott’s Berry Farm as well as attorneys’ fees.