Owner of inflatable that exploded and killed girl, 3, is jailed
Ava-May Littleboy was thrown into the air when the equipment failed on Gorleston beach in Norfolk.
The owner of an inflatable trampoline which exploded, killing a three-year-old girl, has been jailed for six months for health and safety offences.
Ava-May Littleboy was thrown into the air when the equipment failed on Gorleston beach in Norfolk, with a witness saying she went the āheight of a houseā, Chelmsford Magistratesā Court heard.
Pascal Bates for Great Yarmouth Borough Council, which brought the prosecution together with the Health and Safety Executive (HSE), said Ava-May suffered serious head injuries and died in July 2018.
He said witnesses described her being thrown up to 40ft in the air, with one saying she went āhigher than the surrounding buildingsā.
Mr Bates said that a second girl, aged nine, who had been on the trampoline suffered āno significant injuriesā.
District judge Christopher Williams, sentencing on Friday, said inflatable owner Curt Johnson was āwilfully blind to the riskā and that the inflatable āshould not have been in useā.
He said: āThis is a case thatās of such seriousness that I have to conclude a deterrent sentence is necessary.ā
The judge, jailing Johnson for six months, said: āI reflect on the suffering and anguish the family have been through.
āUltimately a child unnecessarily lost their life because of failures on your part to ensure you had appropriate risk assessments in place.ā
Ava-Mayās parents, who sat in the public gallery, hugged after the sentence was passed as wider members of the family wiped tears from their eyes.
Johnson, 52, showed no reaction a he was led to the cells.
The judge also disqualified Johnson from being a company director for five years and fined Johnsons Funfair Ltd Ā£20,000.
He awarded the full costs to the council and HSE, of almost Ā£300,000, with the court previously told that Johnson had an insurance policy in place that would cover this.
Johnson and his company Johnsons Funfair Ltd, both of Swanstonās Road, Great Yarmouth, had entered guilty pleas to two health and safety offences at an earlier hearing.
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.
They also both pleaded guilty to failing to ensure people not in their employment were not exposed to risks.
Mr Bates said the inflatable trampoline was a āsealed unitā but āhad no safety valve to release pressureā.
āA child whoās 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,ā he said.
Mr Bates said that in 2017 Johnson, on behalf of the company, arranged the bespoke manufacture of the inflatable trampoline from a Chinese manufacturer.
āItās 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,ā he said.
āWe say he didnāt to any great extent concern himself with safety.ā
Mr Bates said a userās manual āwas never supplied or sought prior to the explosionā.
He said the business ādidnāt meaningfully trade after July 1ā, the day of the incident, with its licences pulled and the beach compound not reopening.
Oliver Campbell KC, for Johnson, said that Johnson and his wife ādeeply regretā the incident and Ava-Mayās ātragic deathā.
āHe apologises sincerely to the court and the family for his failings,ā he said, adding that the company āceased trading some time ago and will not trade againā.
Mr Campbell said that ādespite the length of the investigation we do not know exactly how or why this trampoline so sadly explodedā.
He described the explosion as āunforeseeableā, adding that the āpossibility of an explosion was not a recognised riskā.
He said that Johnson tried to kill himself by overdose in 2018, āhas suffered from depression thereafterā and had received threats.
After Johnson was jailed, Mr Campbell said he would take instructions on whether the defendant would appeal against the sentence.
Ava-Mayās father, Nathan Rowe, said outside court that it was the āright decisionā and a āmassive weight lifted from our shouldersā when Johnson was jailed.
āJustice is being done,ā he said.
HSE principal inspector Ivan Brooke said: āThe operator flouted the rules on certification and testing to devastating consequences.
āHad the company carried out the required checks and followed the freely available, well-established guidance, this tragedy would not have happened.
āSince the tragedy, and following the inquest, we published supplementary guidance more specific to sealed inflatables.
āThey should be checked over by the responsible body before they are used, and maintained effectively throughout.
āIncidents with inflatables are extremely rare, but we will not hesitate to take strong action if funfairs do not take the required precautions.ā