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The accident happened at a primary school fair in Australia in 2021, on the last day of school before the children went on ...
Rosemary Anne Gamble, who was the owner of Taz-Zorb, which set up the equipment at the school, was accused of not following safety laws and securing the jumping castle.
Prosecutors had accused Rosemary Gamble, owner of party equipment company Taz-Zorb, of not anchoring the bouncy castle adequately. She was charged with failing to comply with a workplace health ...
Rosemary Gamble, owner of Taz-Zorb which set up the equipment, pleaded not guilty to failing to comply with a workplace health and safety duty.
On Friday, at the Devonport Magistrates Court, the jumping castle operator, Rosemary Anne Gamble, who traded as Taz-Zorb, pleaded not guilty to a failure to comply with health and safety duty.
Six children died at an end-of-year celebration in 2021 when a jumping castle became airborne at Hillcrest Primary School in Tasmania's north. Jumping castle operator Rosemary Gamble has pleaded ...
Taz-Zorb owner Rosemary Gamble has pleaded not guilty to one count of failure to comply with health and safety duty category 2. Chris Dockray lawyer for Rosemary Gamble.
The families of the children killed and injured in the Hillcrest tragedy will have to wait until June to find out if the jumping castle operator is criminally responsible for what happened.
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