A Florida amusement park ride will be permanently shut down following a 14-year-old boy’s fatal fall from the ride in March, the operator announced Thursday.

Ritchie Armstrong of Orlando Slingshot, the entity that operates the 400-feet-tall FreeFall ride at ICON Park in Orlando, said the ride will close following the March 24 death of Tyre Sampson, who was visiting Florida from Missouri with football teammates.

“We are devastated by Tyre’s death,” Armstrong said in the statement. “We have listened to the wishes of Tyre’s family and the community, and have made the decision to take down the FreeFall. In addition, Orlando Slingshot will honor Tyre and his legacy in the classroom and on the football field by creating a scholarship in his name.”

A makeshift memorial for Tyre Sampson
Tyre Sampson was visiting the park with football teammates.Phelan M. Ebenhack / AP

The FreeFall ride and another ride owned by Orlando Slingshot were both temporarily shut down after the March death.

The timeline for the removal of the ride is not immediately clear, according to the statement, which notes it will require the approval of “all involved parties and regulatory entities.”

The statement also notes that details of the scholarship are still being developed, adding that more details will be shared “in the future and after consultation with the family of Tyre.”

April 26, 202201:51

A statement from ICON Park, from which the Orlando Slingshot leases land for the ride, said it supports the decision to remove it.

“Tyre’s death is a tragedy that we will never forget. As the landlord, ICON Park welcomes and appreciates Orlando Slingshot’s decision to take down the ride.”

The day after the death, officials called the ride an “immediate serious danger to public health.”

Officials have said “operator mis-adjustments” contributed to Sampson sliding out of his seat to his death.

“Manual adjustments had been made to the sensor for the seat in question that allowed the harness-to-restraint opening to be almost double that of the normal restraint-opening range,” Nikki Fried, commissioner of the state’s Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, said in April.

Tyre, who was 6-feet 2-inches tall and weighed about 380 pounds before his death, making him about 100 pounds above the weight limit, slipped through the gap between the harness and the seat, according to a state report.

Photos and video posted online apparently show that Tyre was not fully buckled into the ride.

In video of the incident obtained by NBC News, a voice is heard asking: “Why doesn’t this have the little clicky click to it, like the seat belt?”

As the ride starts, a voice from the ground shouts: “Hey, did you check your seat belt on the left side? Seat belt! Seat belt!”

Officials said the ride had last been inspected about three months before Sampson’s death, on Dec. 20, and that no deficiencies had been found.

Florida officials have said there is no federal or state oversight of what thrill-ride manufacturers put in their manuals dictating safety measures.

Sampson’s parents, Nekia Dodd and Yarnell Sampson, filed a wrongful death lawsuit in April against Orlando Slingshot, ICON Park, and Funtime Handels GMBH and Gerstlauer Amusement Rides GMBH, an Austrian company that designed and manufactured the ride. They said they hope the lawsuit would spark change.

“He could have been a doctor, lawyer, astronaut, anything,” Yarnell said in April. “We both dealing with this day-by-day, second-by-second, minute-by-minute to be honest with you. The best thing to do is to get the ball moving towards the right direction — we can make change together.”

Elisha Fieldstadt, Antonio Planas and Tim Fitzsimons contributed.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Senators push for stricter rules on companies advising the U.S. and adversaries like China and Russia

A bipartisan group of senators wants to impose stricter rules on consultant…

Facing job scarcity in China, some find work as ‘full-time children’

HONG KONG — Six months ago, Jia Zhang was still running her…

FDA approves first over-the-counter birth control pill in the U.S.

The Food and Drug Administration on Thursday approved the oral contraceptive Opill…

Bernadette Carey Smith, Black Reporter in Mostly White Newsrooms, Dies at 83

Bernadette Carey Smith, who in the 1960s was one of the first…