iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Family Of Wal-Mart Employee Jdimytai Damour Sues Over Trampling Death

FRANK ELTMAN | 12/ 3/08 05:44 PM | AP

What's Your Reaction?
Longisland

GARDEN CITY, N.Y. — The family of a worker trampled to death in a "Black Friday" crush of bargain hunters at a Long Island Wal-Mart store filed a wrongful-death lawsuit on Wednesday, claiming store ads offering deep discounts "created an atmosphere of competition and anxiety" that led to "crowd craze."

The lawsuit claims that besides failing to provide adequate security for a pre-dawn crowd estimated at 2,000, Wal-Mart "engaged in specific marketing and advertising techniques to specifically attract a large crowd and create an environment of frenzy and mayhem and was otherwise careless, reckless and negligent."

Wal-Mart issued a statement saying it would cooperate with local law enforcement officials to develop stronger safety measures for the future.

"We consider Mr. Damour part of the Wal-Mart family, and are saddened by his death," the statement said. "We have been in communication with members of his family to do what we can to help them through this difficult time. Our associates know that when incidents like this occur, we take care of our own."

In addition to the retailer, the adjacent Green Acres Mall, a realty company that manages the property and a security company hired to patrol the property were all named as defendants. A spokeswoman for the realty company declined to comment on pending litigation; none of the other defendants immediately responded to phone and e-mail inquiries seeking comment on the lawsuit.

Jdimytai Damour, 34, had been hired by an employment agency as a temporary worker at the Wal-Mart store in Valley Stream and had been on the job about a week when he died, said his family's lawyer, Jordan Hecht.

The 6-foot-5, 270-pound man died of asphyxiation after being crushed early Friday morning by the crowd, which broke down the electronic doors in frantic pursuit of bargains. At least four other people were treated at hospitals, including a woman who was eight months pregnant.

Authorities suspect that because he was as big as an NFL lineman, Damour was placed at the entrance of the store to assist with crowd control.

"Those hundreds of people who did make their way into the store, literally had to step over or around him or unfortunately on him to get into the Wal-Mart store," Nassau County Police Commissioner Lawrence Mulvey said this week.

Police are reviewing store video to identify possible suspects in Damour's death, but Mulvey conceded that criminal charges are unlikely.

Mulvey said it was apparent to him that the Wal-Mart store about 20 miles east of Manhattan lacked adequate security to handle the crowds. He said police representatives met with retailers throughout the county two weeks before Thanksgiving and made it clear that security and crowd control for the sales were the merchants' responsibilities.

Hecht said Damour's family also plans to file lawsuits against Nassau County and its police department.

County Attorney Lorna Goodman said, "The county has no liability in situations of this kind."

The lawsuit against Wal-Mart and the other companies was filed Wednesday in state Supreme Court in the Bronx, the home of one of the victim's sisters, Elsie Damour Phillipe, the court-appointed administrator of his estate. It does not seek specific damages.

Shoppers around the country line up early outside stores on the day after Thanksgiving in the annual bargain-hunting ritual known as Black Friday. It got that name because it historically has been the day stores broke into profitability for the full year.

The National Retail Federation believes Damour is the first store worker to die on the job in the post-Thanksgiving rush.

Report Corrections
 
 
  • Comments
  • 745
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (19 total)
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
06:51 PM on 12/07/2008
"Post thanksgiving rush" ? Pretty tacky description of what really happened.
11:45 AM on 12/04/2008
I am so saddened by the loss of this man. I won't shop at Walmart. Their practices truly make me sick.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sandy972
11:02 AM on 12/04/2008
Sorry to say the family will have to hold their breath waiting for Walmart to pay up. At the age of 60 I fell in a Walmart store due to someone who mopped the floor and forgot to mop up the water and did not put a rubber sign saying to be careful because the floor was wet. I called over 50 lawyers before I found one who would take on Walmart. After more than 3 years, they still refused to pay for even my medical bills, which included a concussion, 3 broken ribs, injury to my back and hip and my wrist broken in 4 places. The lawyers gave up, but not me. I drove around and around Walmart with a sign on my car saying "Ask me about Walmart and how mean they can be", until they finally paid my medical bills (which they never even informed me that they had done so) but after all that time they never gave me one penny of compensation, even though I could not work for months. So if you think these people are really sympathetic or empathetic, think again.
04:30 PM on 12/04/2008
Sandy,that's a good argument for people not to shop there. You pays your money and you takes your chances.But at WalMart the odds are stacked in favor of the house-ALWAYS!
10:54 AM on 12/04/2008
Arrest the people who trampled. Charge them with manslaughter.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
10:38 AM on 12/04/2008
Get rich quick.

Why blame the people who did this when we can blame the store for having a sale? It's the stores fault for making people want the stuff so bad and the store is therefore responsible to make the people behave in a civilized manner.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sueinmn
09:51 AM on 12/04/2008
I hope this family takes all they can from walmart! This type of selling frenzy has been going on for years and it was a matter of time before someone was killed. DO US ALL A FAVOR AND PUT WALMART OUT OF BUSINESS.
10:15 AM on 12/04/2008
It will take a whole lot more than that to put them out of business.
08:25 AM on 12/04/2008
Would the family settle for one of everything made in China that Wally World sells?
03:35 AM on 12/04/2008
They can find or make up a story about 19 Arab hijackers with boxcutters in one day but after a week they still can't pinpoint the people who trampled the poor guy, even with a video tape.
photo
barrycourage
You have an absolute right to my opinion
02:27 AM on 12/04/2008
I wonder if anyone was trampled in the stampede of lawyers to the Damour house.
08:24 AM on 12/04/2008
amen brother
11:47 AM on 12/04/2008
You're seriously mistaken. Suing a big firm on a contingency basis requires the plaintiff's attorney's firm to have a minimum of $100,000 for expenses. Walmart is very tough and has a rep of extending things out for over five years. There aren't that many small law firms with an extra $250,000 on hand to be able to fund a lawsuit.

There are big firms around that have the $250,000, but if they sue Walmart, they won't get business from Walmart or from firms that work for Walmart.
02:22 AM on 12/04/2008
Wal-Mart enjoys the publicity they get every year. I hope they lose big on this lawsuit. Why don't they hand out tickets like Best Buy, Circuit City, Office Depot..etc? Doing so would minimize this type of chaos.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Mort
Once I thought I was wrong, but I was mistaken.
11:58 PM on 12/03/2008
How about blaming the people that actually did the trampling instead of scapegoating the store? The sales may be an incentive, but it's the customers who act like animals.
12:22 AM on 12/04/2008
Gimme a break. Wal-Mart is obviously liable for gross negligence here. From failure to provide adequate security, irresponsibly baiting thousands of mob-like customers to its store in order to make a fast buck. Walmart does not care about its own, it cares about makin money. Period.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Mort
Once I thought I was wrong, but I was mistaken.
12:57 AM on 12/04/2008
Do you blame all the other stores that have big sales on black Friday as well? It's all about packing people in and making money. And most of them don't have "adequate" security. What about the people who chose to knock down the poor guy and stomp all over him? Or are they blameless because the evil store set their prices so low that no human can resist killing to get them?
photo
Totto
"Not 'Noise' One Round: *Music*
12:41 AM on 12/04/2008
Wal-Mart doesn't give a damn about its employees. The execs won't lose a bit of sleep.
11:50 PM on 12/03/2008
wal-mart does not care!
photo
GravitonX
10^300 bosons could care less.
11:41 PM on 12/03/2008
Before this goes to civil court, it needs to go to criminal court.
11:49 AM on 12/04/2008
ABSOLUTELY.
obamasandiego
Blame the strategery.
11:32 PM on 12/03/2008
I hope the family gets millions, but I know that no amount of money can ever bring back Mr. Damour. Wal-Mart, show them the money!!!
photo
GravitonX
10^300 bosons could care less.
11:39 PM on 12/03/2008
I hope alot of people go to jail.
photo
GravitonX
10^300 bosons could care less.
11:29 PM on 12/03/2008
It's %#@$^! like this that makes me SO disappointed in my people sometimes. Acting like a buncha no good ...... I am absolutely speechless at this despicable behavior. And, no, I'm not related to the victim.

There is NO WAY these people didn't know that they were stepping on a person. Where's all the other numerous injuries that would have come with an out-of-control stampede? I'm sorry. I've been to plenty of concerts in which everyone was packed in like sardines, and I ALWAYS knew what I was steps on. The prosecutor needs to go after every last shopper that went to Walmart that morning, and try it as a group crime (use the Nuremburg methodologies of prosecuting the Nazis if applicable). Yes, all 2000, if necessary. This needs to be an unprecedented case. You can't allow people to hide behind the anonymous cover of the mob to perpetrate murderous and criminal activities.

If I were the judge, I'd hand out at least one year sentences for every shopper, with time credited for community service (preferably paying back the victim's family).