Double Amputee Iraq Veteran Thrown From Roller Coaster, Dies

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DARIEN, N.Y. (AP) — A U.S. Army veteran who lost his legs while deployed in Iraq was thrown from a 200-foot-tall roller coaster at an upstate theme park on Friday and was killed.

Sgt. James Thomas Hackemer, 29, was ejected from the Ride of Steel roller coaster at the Darien Lake Theme Park Resort, located between Buffalo and Rochester, at about 5:30 p.m., the Genesee County sheriff’s office said.


The park confirmed a guest “came out of the Ride of Steel roller coaster†and said it was “saddened to report that the guest has passed.†It said local authorities and its safety experts were investigating.


The park’s website describes the Ride of Steel as one of the tallest coasters east of the Mississippi River, climbing 208 feet and reaching speeds in excess of 70 mph.
The roller coaster and surrounding area were closed after the man’s death, park spokeswoman Cassandra Okon said.


“Our thoughts and prayers are with the friends and the family of the guest,†she said.


Hackemer, of Gowanda, lost his right leg below his knee and his left leg at his hip because of a roadside bomb while he was deployed in 2008, authorities said. He had been living with his parents.


“It’s going to help a little bit that he was happy,†his mother, Nancy Hackemer, told The Buffalo News. “We shouldn’t have had him for these last three years and four months.â€
She said the family had recently returned from the Walter Reed Army Medical Center, in Washington, D.C., where her son got “a new set of legs.â€


“He was assisted onto the ride,†she said. “He was doing what he wanted to do.â€


[video=youtube;-dAQDUIt2gs]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-dAQDUIt2gs&feature=player_embedded[/video]
 
Wow very sad to survive a war and then get killed doing a fun thing

Indeed..... but better than not surviving the war.

Bit of a paradox really.

One problem. If one assumes that the ride was designed to be 100% safe for able-bodied people, it therefore is logical that the fact that the victim was an amputee made it unsafe for him. Why did the ride's management allow him on in the first place?
 
One problem. If one assumes that the ride was designed to be 100% safe for able-bodied people, it therefore is logical that the fact that the victim was an amputee made it unsafe for him. Why did the ride's management allow him on in the first place?

That's what I was wondering too.

Was he wearing his prosthetics? I ridden many rides that the lap bar comes down to also block my legs from lifting too high.

Looks like the ride supervisor should have questioned his ability to safely ride. I would be the last person to tell a wounded vet he couldn't do something but I would also want to make sure it was safe for him/her. If it was unsafe then I would be the first to get between the wounded vet and the danger and see what we could do to make it safe.

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The Houston Chronicle reported the park has two coasters that state riders must have two legs to ride but this coaster did not have that restriction. It also stated for this coaster that passengers are held in by a bar that sits across their legs. The park's website also suggests that guest try using a test seat at the coaster's station house.


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