Family of boy killed in Rhino rollover establishes memorial fund
March 3rd, 2009 by Kurt Niland
“I am downstairs sitting in my recliner watching TV. The recliner is in our little living room right at the base of the stairs. Sometimes I can see J.T. just out of the corner of my eye coming down. I hear the squeak of the third stair and see a flash of blonde shaggy hair. I find myself washed in a sense of relief until I turn to welcome him and find he wasn’t there and the sharp pain of disappointment stabs me back into reality. Do you ever do that?”
Those words were written by Heidi Crow, whose 9-year-old son Jeremy Todd “J.T.” perished on June 22, 2007 when the new Yamaha Rhino 450 he was a passenger in rolled over. J.T.’s older sister Madison was driving the Rhino on at their grandparents’ property when it tipped over suddenly while traveling at a low speed.
The Rhino rolled over on its side just a quarter of a turn, but it was enough to throw J.T. from the vehicle even though he was properly belted. The boy suffered massive head and neck injuries when the Rhino’s unpadded steel roll cage pinned him to the ground, underneath a thousand pounds of weight.
Emergency personnel rushed J.T. to a hospital in Jasper, Texas where he was pronounced dead.
“The seat belt system failed to restrain him. Nor was the Rhino equipped with doors and safety netting that could have kept J.T. inside the Rhino and saved his life,” writes Heidi Crow.
In August 2007, just weeks after J.T.’s death, Yamaha began issuing safety doors and hand grips for its Rhinos as a means of reducing the number of people who are seriously injured in Rhino rollovers. The announcement, which was made in the form of a “special offer,” told Rhino owners that Yamaha would retro-fit doors and handholds free of charge.
But Yamaha still hasn’t addressed the causes for all the rollovers, which include the ATV’s high center of gravity, narrow track width and wheels, and other design flaws.
According to his mother, “J.T. was a very smart and beautiful boy. He excelled at academics and sports, but most special was his compassion for others and gift for making people feel important.”
While J.T.’s life was cut short, his family lives on to spread the word about the dangers of Yamaha Rhinos. Heidi Crow believes it is now her responsibility to “help save others from a tragic fate like J.T.’s.”
“His memory will go on, and his story will be told as long as it needs to be told to save lives,”she says on a website devoted to his memory.
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