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Toddler Dies At Staples Center: Boy Falls 50 Feet From Luxury Suite After Lakers Game

RAQUEL MARIA DILLON   11/22/10 09:29 PM ET   AP

Staples Center Fall

LOS ANGELES — The family of a 2-year-old boy was posing for pictures in a luxury suite high inside Staples Center when he managed to scale a clear safety barrier and fell about 30 feet to his death, police said on Monday.

Lucas Anthony Tang suffered head injuries Sunday when he landed on rows of seats minutes after the Los Angeles Lakers beat the Golden State Warriors 117-89, police said. The boy later died at a hospital.

"Somehow the child went over the edge of the section," Officer Julie Sohn said.

Police were releasing few details about the incident as they tried to determine what happened.

Sohn said the boy's family was taking photographs at the time of the fall.

The Los Angeles Times, citing unidentified police sources, said the toddler's family was looking at digital photographs and lost track of him. He somehow got over the top of the glass barrier, the newspaper reported.

Sohn, however, said she could not confirm those details.

The luxury boxes have tiers of seats, fronted by concrete walls. Atop the walls are glass barriers. The barrier varies in height but at its lowest point is about the height of an adult's waist, said Michael Roth, a spokesman for Staples and owner, AEG.

Roth said the toddler fell into a general seating area about 30 rows up from the court.

Initial estimates put the child's fall at about 50 feet, but Roth later said the third tier of boxes is three stories up, or about 30 feet.

Witnesses said the boy was moving his arms, legs and head when paramedics put him in an ambulance, Roth said.

The 950,000-square-foot stadium opened in 1999 and has 160 luxury suites on three levels.

"In 11 years, we've never had an incident like this," he said.

The building is in compliance with city codes, Department of Building and Safety spokesman David Lara said.

Building regulations require guardrails that are at least 26 inches high in front of seats, he said. Guardrails in front of stairs must be 42 inches high.

The police department's juvenile division, which has investigative responsibility when a victim is under age 11, was handling the probe. "It's procedural" and did not necessarily indicate that a crime was involved, Sohn said.

The arena was conducting its own investigation, Roth said.

Roth declined to release details about the boy's family but said the luxury box – as with most suites – probably was owned by a corporation.

"Our condolences and prayers go to the Tang family," Roth said a short prepared statement.

The Lakers organization issued a statement expressing shock and sadness at the tragedy.

"To go from a moment of happiness and enjoyment, to the loss of this boy's life, is tragic and heartbreaking. We would like to ask Lakers fans to join us in keeping Lucas and his family in our thoughts and prayers," the statement said.

Roth said Monday night's game between the Los Angeles Clippers and New Orleans Hornets would go on as scheduled.

The arena is home to the NBA's Lakers and Clippers, the NHL's Los Angeles Kings and the WNBA's Los Angeles Sparks.

Adjacent to the popular LA Live entertainment complex, Staples is also one of the city's major venues for concerts and special events such as the Grammy Awards.

___

Associated Press writer Robert Jablon contributed to this report.

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LOS ANGELES — The family of a 2-year-old boy was posing for pictures in a luxury suite high inside Staples Center when he managed to scale a clear safety barrier and fell about 30 feet to his de...
LOS ANGELES — The family of a 2-year-old boy was posing for pictures in a luxury suite high inside Staples Center when he managed to scale a clear safety barrier and fell about 30 feet to his de...
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04:50 PM on 11/24/2010
Why would anyone take a two year old to a sports arena? Beats me. That said my heart goes out to the family - what guilt they will carry for the rest of their lives.
04:40 PM on 11/24/2010
This really is sad. I can not imagine looking down at a camera for a few seconds only to look up and see my child on a floor 30 feet below....horrible
04:20 PM on 11/24/2010
This could have happened to anyone. It is terrifying that it is so easy for a toddler to fall to his death. The glass partition is 18" high and sitting atop a concrete ledge. The ledge combined with the glass is about 26". However, a toddler can easily climb onto the concrete ledge, then only 18" separates him from a horrific fall. The concrete ledge is an "attractive nuisance" -- it attracts children to climb onto it. Toddlers will climb on anything, as parents will tell you. This is a venue which invites families (including children) and the purpose of the venue is to watch a game or some other entertainment event, meaning the focus of the invitee is intended to be drawn elsewhere: IT IS FORESEEABLE FOR ATTENDEES TO BE DISTRACTED. Given the venue skybox's purpose, it should not be that easy for a child to fall. The safety code requires the guard rails to be 42". The fact that the glass partitions were embedded in a concrete ledge effectively makes the barrier not up to safety code, as a child standing on the ledge only has 18" as a barrier -- not much of a barrier indeed. Staples permit children to be there, so it should be safe for them. The defective design of the skybox is partly to blame. This is a comparative negligence case: distracted parents are 40% at fault, Staples' defective design is 60% at fault. Staples is partly responsible. Look up "comparative negligence" and
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dr Confuso
Australian/American Broadcast veteran...
05:43 AM on 11/25/2010
You're wrong. This couldn't have happened to anyone. It could only happen to parents who for some reason, decided to bring a 2 year old to the Staples Center and take that child up to an elevated box and then not watch them. I wouldn't have done it...none of the people I know would have done it.
08:54 AM on 11/25/2010
First year law student? Actually, the doctrine of attractive nuisance only applies to trespass cases. Also, your proximate cause analysis is flawed. The question is not whether it would be foreseeable for attendees to be distracted, but whether it would be foreseeable for a child to climb up onto the ledge. I'd give you a B for this answer.
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the964kid
Friends don't let friends vote GOP
02:17 AM on 11/24/2010
What a sad story. I'm not going to jump to the conclusion that the parents were negligent. It's not uncommon for a 2 year old to slip out of the site of parents in a room for a moment, normally that room doesn't have an open window to a 30 ft drop. My heart goes out to the family, they will have to live with this tragic accident for the rest of their lives.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WSAY
Res ipsa loquitur
09:20 PM on 11/23/2010
The parents here were negligent - pure and simple. Look up "Res ipsa loquitur" to understand why.
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SocratesFan
Elitist who loves books and learning
10:39 PM on 11/23/2010
I apologize for my ignorance, but I've looked up "Res ipsa loquitur," "the thing speaks for itself," in regards to common law, and I still don't quite understand your reasoning.

If I understand your argument correctly, you seem to believe that the parents violated their minimum duty to "act reasonably," that this directly resulted in the death of the toddler, that the toddler would not have died if the parents had acted otherwise, and the parents can therefore be held liable for damages. What exactly was unreasonable on the part of the parents that would have saved the toddler if not committed? I'm not quite sure I understand your reasoning. Will you please enlighten me?
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WSAY
Res ipsa loquitur
09:46 PM on 11/24/2010
"Res ipsa loquitur," basically means that the answer is obvious. The child was there because the parents brought him there. The parents are in charge of his safety. The child was injured. The parents are liable - what else could it be? The Thing Speaks For Itself.
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03:35 PM on 11/23/2010
I saw a child on a leash at the Dallas airport a few weeks ago and was really angered. I guess I understand how someone who want to protect his or her child is a crowded or potentially dangerous area. Sad.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Ricardo01
Mr Natural or Dr. O.G. Wotasnozzle?
03:23 PM on 11/23/2010
Sad, sad. I was at the Staples Center the first day it opened, for a Bruce Springsteen concert. It is a long way up to those boxes.
01:17 PM on 11/23/2010
Prayers to the family
11:53 AM on 11/23/2010
We know this family personally. They are amazing parents and huge Laker fans. Lil' Lucas loved the Lakers! Im sure this was a special treat for him. To accuse the parents of any wrong doing at a time like this is inconsiderate, mean & ridiculous. This family is GRIEVING an immense loss that no one, except one who has loss a child before, can begin to imagine. How about expressing condolences and kind words to this family?!
04:25 PM on 11/24/2010
This could have happened to anyone. It is terrifying that it is so easy for a toddler to fall to his death. The glass partition is 18" high and sitting atop a concrete ledge. The ledge combined with the glass is about 26". However, a toddler can easily climb onto the concrete ledge, then only 18" separates him from a horrific fall. The concrete ledge is an "attractive nuisance" -- it attracts children to climb onto it. Toddlers will climb on anything, as parents will tell you. This is a venue which invites families (including children) and the purpose of the venue is to watch a game or some other entertainment event, meaning the focus of the invitee is intended to be drawn elsewhere: IT IS FORESEEABLE FOR ATTENDEES TO BE DISTRACTED. Given the venue skybox's purpose, it should not be that easy for a child to fall. The safety code requires the guard rails to be 42". The fact that the glass partitions were embedded in a concrete ledge effectively makes the barrier not up to safety code, as a child standing on the ledge only has 18" as a barrier -- not much of a barrier indeed. Staples permit children to be there, so it should be safe for them. The defective design of the skybox is partly to blame. This is a comparative negligence case: distracted parents are 40% at fault, Staples' defective design is 60% at fault. Staples is partly responsible. See, "comparative negligence" and "attractive
09:31 AM on 11/23/2010
I have seen a friend with a daughter in the Terrible Twos. At any moment she would start running to explore. Mother or father together were needed to keep hauling her back. They have so much eagerness, so much energy at that age and no experience or judgement.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Daws
Wants to go to there.
08:50 AM on 11/23/2010
How horrible. That poor family. Kids wander and parents get distracted. I can remember shopping scares with my little brothers (Where's Rhys!!!). Just horrible :-(
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IamYourDrillThrall
You can't be pro-war & pro-life.
08:33 AM on 11/23/2010
How incredibly tragic. My heart goes out to this family.
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bushguy
A plague on both your houses
08:22 AM on 11/23/2010
As a parent, I could never recover from this. God, or whoever provides them with comfort, help them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
purenergy
08:21 AM on 11/23/2010
Horrible tragedy. Blessing and love to the family. I am hugging my 2 year old now. I don't know what I would do or how i would go on without him.
BrwnSknGurl4
We are what we repeatedly do.
02:09 PM on 11/23/2010
I agree! I hugged my boys immediately after reading the story...May this poor family find peace after such a tremendous loss.