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Jury acquits workers after 10-year-old decapitated on waterslide

Two Kansas water park workers were acquitted on Thursday of impeding an investigation into the 2016 death of a 10-year-old boy who was decapitated while on a ride that had been billed as the world’s tallest waterslide.

David Hughes and John Zalsman were found not guilty of obstruction of justice in connection to the death of Caleb Schwab, the son of a Kansas legislator. The boy was killed while on the 17-storey Verruckt waterslide at the Schlitterbahn water park in Kansas City.

Zalsman’s attorney called the prosecution “sloppy” and accused the attorney general of overreaching in an attempt to push innocent men to turn on employees higher up in the company. The attorney general’s office did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment.

Kansas jury acquits maintenance workers of obstructing justice after 10-year-old boy Caleb Schwab was killed riding a waterslide.
Caleb Thomas Schwab, 10, died on the waterslide in August 2016. Source: Supplied

Hughes and Zalsman, both maintenance workers, were the first employees to stand trial in the death. Others have also been charged, including one of Schlitterbahn’s owners and the designer of the slide, who have both pleaded not guilty to second-degree murder.

What caused the waterslide fatality

The since-closed waterslide used rafts that made the 17-story drop at speeds of up to 110km/h, followed by a surge over the hump and a 15-metre descent to a finishing pool.

Caleb was in a raft that went airborne and slammed him into a metal pole that supported a net meant to keep riders from flying off the slide. Two women on the raft also were injured.

Prosecutors alleged that Hughes and Zalsman failed to replace a brake mat that fell off the slide two weeks earlier but told investigators that the mat had only been on the slide during testing phases. Video evidence showed that the mat was used after the ride opened to customers in 2014, prosecutors said.

Riders are propelled by jets of water as they go over a hump on the water slide at Schlitterbahn Water Park in Kansas City, where the boy was killed. Source: AP Photo/Charlie Riedel, File
Riders are propelled by jets of water as they go over a hump on the water slide at Schlitterbahn Water Park in Kansas City, where the boy was killed. Source: AP Photo/Charlie Riedel, File

“This was not a mistake, this was intentional calculated conduct,” said Adam Zentner, assistant Kansas Attorney General.

The defence said prosecutors didn’t understand how the slide functioned and questioned the testimony of Jason Diaz, the Kansas Bureau of Investigation agent who interviewed the defendants. The defence also noted that another Schlitterbahn employee who made false statements to investigators wasn’t charged.

Maintenance workers acquitted

“These are just two good old boys, they’re hard working guys and because they’re the only two adults in the room they get singled out and have to get charged ,” said Scott Toth, defence attorney for Hughes, as he addressed jurors.

Diaz said he didn’t believe the other employee had intentionally misled him.

Schlitterbahn has said the company had no reason to believe any employee obstructed justice.

Kansas jury acquits maintenance worker David Hughes of obstructing justice after 10-year-old boy Caleb Schwab was killed riding a waterslide.
Kansas water park maintenance worker David Hughes was found not guilty of obstructing the investigation into the August 2016 death of Caleb Schwab. Source: Wyandotte County Detention Center via AP

“We have maintained our belief in the integrity of our staff and respect the process and decision by the jury,” Winter Prosapio, spokeswoman for Texas-based Schlitterbahn, said in an email after the verdict.

Others charges in Caleb Schwab’s death pending

The most serious charges in Caleb’s death have been filed against one of Schlitterbahn’s owners, Jeff Henry, Verruckt designer John Schooley and general contractor Henry & Sons Constructions. Each is charged with second-degree murder, which carries up to 41 years in prison; aggravated battery; and aggravated endangerment of a child. Another employee is charged with involuntary manslaughter.

They have all pleaded not guilty. Their trials have not yet been scheduled.

The slide was shut down after Caleb was killed.

Kansas jury acquits maintenance worker John Zalsman of obstructing justice after 10-year-old boy Caleb Schwab was killed riding a waterslide.
Co-accused park employee John Zalsman was also acquitted. Source: Wyandotte County Detention Center via AP

The boy’s father Scott Schwab, a Republican from the Kansas City suburb of Olathe, had no immediate comment after being informed of the verdict Thursday.

His son’s death prompted Kansas legislators to strengthen the state’s relatively lax oversight of amusement park rides. Their 2017 law required amusement park rides to be inspected every year by a qualified inspector after previously allowing the parks to do their own. The law also mandated that parks report injuries to the state.

But lawmakers quickly delayed criminal penalties for violations and then this year loosened rules further for county fairs and other short-term, one-location events run by nonprofit groups. They also exempted attractions such as hay-rack rides.

Schwab family compensated

The Schwab family will receive about $28 million in payments from legal settlements from companies associated with Schlitterbahn, the general contractor, the raft manufacturer and a company that consulted on the waterslide.

The elder Schwab is the Republican nominee for Kansas secretary of state.