{"id":143339,"date":"2023-11-16T01:53:02","date_gmt":"2023-11-16T01:53:02","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/celebrity-hub.com\/?p=143339"},"modified":"2023-11-16T01:53:02","modified_gmt":"2023-11-16T01:53:02","slug":"owner-of-inflatable-that-exploded-and-killed-girl-3-is-jailed","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/celebrity-hub.com\/world-news\/owner-of-inflatable-that-exploded-and-killed-girl-3-is-jailed\/","title":{"rendered":"Owner of inflatable that exploded and killed girl, 3, is jailed"},"content":{"rendered":"
The owner of an bouncy castle which exploded and killed a three-year-old girl by throwing her 40ft into the air has been jailed for six months.<\/p>\n
Ava-May Littleboy was flung ‘the height of a house’ as she played on the apparatus with her Aunt Abbie on Gorleston beach in Norfolk on June 1, 2018, Chelmsford Magistrates’ Court heard.<\/p>\n
Her parents watched on in horror as the force of the blast caused the little girl to flip over five or six times in midair before hitting the ground – suffering a fatal head injury.\u00a0<\/p>\n
Pascal Bates for Great Yarmouth Borough Council, which brought the prosecution alongside the Health and Safety Executive (HSE), described how Ava-May sadly died of her injuries.<\/p>\n
The bouncy castle’s owner Curt Johnson, 52, was ‘willfully blind to the risk’ and the inflatable ‘should not have been in use’, district judge Christopher Williams said.<\/p>\n
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Ava-May Littleboy was thrown into the air when the equipment failed on Gorleston beach in Norfolk\u00a0<\/p>\n
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Ava-May’s parents, who sat in the public gallery, hugged after the sentence was passed as wider members of the family wiped tears from their eyes\u00a0<\/p>\n
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A police cordon at Gorleston beach in Norfolk, where Ava-May Littleboy was thrown from a bouncy castle<\/p>\n
Prosecutor Mr Bates said witnesses described Ava-May being thrown up to 40ft in the air, with one saying she went ‘higher than the surrounding buildings’.<\/p>\n
Mr Bates said that a second girl, aged nine, who had been on the trampoline suffered ‘no significant injuries’.<\/p>\n
Judge Williams, sentencing on Friday,\u00a0said: ‘This is a case that’s of such seriousness that I have to conclude a deterrent sentence is necessary.’<\/p>\n
The judge, jailing Johnson for six months, said: ‘I reflect on the suffering and anguish the family have been through.<\/p>\n
‘Ultimately a child unnecessarily lost their life because of failures on your part to ensure you had appropriate risk assessments in place.’<\/p>\n
Ava-May’s parents, who sat in the public gallery, hugged after the sentence was passed as wider members of the family wiped tears from their eyes.<\/p>\n
Johnson, 52, showed no reaction a he was led to the cells.<\/p>\n
The judge also disqualified Johnson from being a company director for five years and fined Johnsons Funfair Ltd \u00a320,000.<\/p>\n
He awarded the full costs to the council and HSE, of almost \u00a3300,000, with the court previously told that Johnson had an insurance policy in place that would cover this.<\/p>\n
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Ava-May\u00b4s parents, Nathan Rowe and Chloe Littleboy, hugged in court when the sentence was passed (Joe Giddens\/PA)<\/p>\n
Johnson and his company Johnsons Funfair Ltd, both of Swanston’s Road, Great Yarmouth, had entered guilty pleas to two health and safety offences at an earlier hearing.<\/p>\n
Both Johnson and the company, for which he acted as operations manager, admitted to importing an inflatable trampoline that they failed to ensure was safe.<\/p>\n
They also both pleaded guilty to failing to ensure people not in their employment were not exposed to risks.<\/p>\n
Mr Bates said the inflatable trampoline was a ‘sealed unit’ but ‘had no safety valve to release pressure’.<\/p>\n
‘A child who’s ever got over enthusiastic with a party balloon knows if you put too much air into a sealed unit, sooner or later it will pop,’ he said.<\/p>\n
Mr Bates said that in 2017 Johnson, on behalf of the company, arranged the bespoke manufacture of the inflatable trampoline from a Chinese manufacturer.<\/p>\n
‘It’s common ground he negotiated hard on price and he had an eye to whether the inflatable he was supplied with was of suitable quality and durability,’ he said.<\/p>\n
‘We say he didn’t to any great extent concern himself with safety.’<\/p>\n
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Curt Johnson of Johnsons Funfair Ltd, pictured in 2020, has been jailed for six months for two health and safety offences (Joe Giddens\/ PA)<\/p>\n
Mr Bates said a user’s manual ‘was never supplied or sought prior to the explosion’.<\/p>\n
He said the business ‘didn’t meaningfully trade after July 1’, the day of the incident, with its licences pulled and the beach compound not reopening.<\/p>\n
Oliver Campbell KC, for Johnson, said that Johnson and his wife ‘deeply regret’ the incident and Ava-May’s ‘tragic death’.<\/p>\n
‘He apologises sincerely to the court and the family for his failings,’ he said, adding that the company ‘ceased trading some time ago and will not trade again’.<\/p>\n
Mr Campbell said that ‘despite the length of the investigation we do not know exactly how or why this trampoline so sadly exploded’.<\/p>\n
He described the explosion as ‘unforeseeable’, adding that the ‘possibility of an explosion was not a recognised risk’.<\/p>\n
He said that Johnson tried to kill himself by overdose in 2018, ‘has suffered from depression thereafter’ and had received threats.<\/p>\n
After Johnson was jailed, Mr Campbell said he would take instructions on whether the defendant would appeal against the sentence.<\/p>\n
Ava-May’s father, Nathan Rowe, said outside court that it was the ‘right decision’ and a ‘massive weight lifted from our shoulders’ when Johnson was jailed.<\/p>\n
‘Justice is being done,’ he said.<\/p>\n
HSE principal inspector Ivan Brooke said: ‘The operator flouted the rules on certification and testing to devastating consequences.<\/p>\n
‘Had the company carried out the required checks and followed the freely available, well-established guidance, this tragedy would not have happened.<\/p>\n
‘Since the tragedy, and following the inquest, we published supplementary guidance more specific to sealed inflatables.<\/p>\n
‘They should be checked over by the responsible body before they are used, and maintained effectively throughout.<\/p>\n
‘Incidents with inflatables are extremely rare, but we will not hesitate to take strong action if funfairs do not take the required precautions.’<\/p>\n