![]() ![]() The lawsuit also details a history of crime and gunfire at the apartment complex, alleging that the apartment owners and management should have secured the complex to reduce the risk of gun violence. The plaintiffs also describe an unregistered master meter at the unit, and claims Atmos failed to ensure that the gas meter at the apartment complex complied with state and federal safety requirements. The apartment owners failed to set up protocols to prevent injuries during a gas leak, failed to maintain the natural gas systems at the apartment complex, and failed to install equipment that would have minimized leaks and shut off gas supply automatically, the lawsuit says. The lawsuit alleges that the explosion resulted, in part, from negligence on the part of the apartment owners and management, as well as Atmos. “But for Defendants’ negligent and grossly negligent behavior…Plaintiffs would not have suffered the pecuniary losses, mental anguish, disfigurement or permanent and disabling injuries they sustained in the explosion,” the suit says. He spent six weeks in the hospital.Īll three firefighters will require long-term care and continuing medical treatments for their injuries, the lawsuit said. Gadomski, also outside, was “thrown backwards a considerable distance, through two building walls,” by the force of the blast and also had serious burns. KERA News About 300 people were displaced by the explosion and it took nearly a month to restore gas to the apartment complex. Hall suffered a broken leg and serious burns to more than 40% of his body, the lawsuit said, requiring multiple medical procedures. Hall was outside of the building when the explosion occurred. She managed to pull herself out, but suffered second and third degree burns and several bone fractures that required multiple skin grafts and surgeries. Neither Atmos Energy nor Odin Properties have responded to KERA’s request for comment on the lawsuit.Īccording to the lawsuit, Perez was inside the unit when the explosion occurred, and was trapped by debris as the building caught fire. “As a result…three firefighters…sustained severe and permanent injuries and extensive burns.” Plaintiffs allege that the combination of failures prior to and on the morning of this incident caused this explosion to occur,” the lawsuit argues. It names Mountain Creek Apts., LP, Odin Properties, and Odin Management as the property owners. The lawsuit alleges that the complex’s owner and operator as well as its gas supplier, Atmos, failed to take appropriate steps to prevent such a disaster. A fourth firefighter was injured in the blast but is not party to the lawsuit. Residents were displaced for weeks following the explosion. Investigators would later determine that gas had been leaking overnight from a hose severed by a bullet fired into the building.Īfter finding the leak, the firefighters were unable to shut off the gas before a massive explosion ripped through the building, igniting a fire that destroyed the structure and seriously injured the firefighters. The firefighters were responding to a 911 call about a gas leak at one of the buildings in the Highland Hills Apartments in southern Dallas on Sept. ![]() The injured firefighters who filed suit are Captain Christopher Gadomski, Engineer Ronald Hall, and Officer Pauline Perez. ![]()
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