Photos of blood stains on the jumping castle at the centre of the Hillcrest tragedy have been shown in court.
“Our products are produced according to Australian standards, even certified by the most strict European standards,” East Inflatables employee Fiona Chen said to Ms Gamble in an email around the time ...
Two workers who helped peg down the jumping castle at a Tasmanian primary school on the day six students died have told a Devonport court of the moment they realised it had been lifted into the air.
A first responder has described to a Tasmanian court hundreds of photos taken directly after a jumping castle tragedy killed six children. Tasmania Police Constable Dean Wotherspoon was among the ...
A Taz-Zorb worker tells about the aftermath of when a jumping castle became airborne at Hillcrest Primary School that resulted in the tragic death of six primary school students. “And then, we just ...
Photos were displayed at the second day of the hearing into the fatal tragedy centred around a jumping castle which killed six children.
A jumping castle was pegged to the ground by only half its anchor points when a sudden "mini tornado" tossed it in the air, killing six children, a court has been told.
Chinese manufacturers of a jumping castle that became airborne, killing six children, have been unable to detail how many pegs are usually supplied with the inflatable equipment.