Child in wheelchair broke legs at Westminster school after sliding down ramp, lawsuit alleges

The mother of this Adams County child with disabilities is suing his school district after her son allegedly broke both of his legs at school when he was unsupervised and his wheelchair slipped down a ramp. (Photo provided by Igor Raykin)

An Adams County mother filed a federal lawsuit Monday alleging her disabled 12-year-old son was left unattended at his Westminster elementary school, slid down a ramp in his wheelchair and crashed into a wall, breaking both of his legs.

The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Denver, alleges Adams 12 Five Star Schools violated the federal Americans with Disabilities Act by failing to provide reasonable accommodations for the child, resulting in him facing “severe and grievous physical, mental and emotional suffering, humiliation, stigma and other injuries.”

“Their failure to properly supervise him is what resulted in this catastrophic injury and then they made it worse because they minimized the effects of what happened,” said Igor Raykin, the attorney representing Patricia Portillo Estrada and her boy, who is not named in the lawsuit.

A representative from Adams 12 Five Star Schools could not be reached for comment Friday.

According to the lawsuit, the Rocky Mountain Elementary School student — who has intellectual disabilities and orthopedic, as well as speech and language, impairments — was left unsupervised on May 10, 2022. Video footage later recovered during an investigation of the incident showed the student tried to navigate a ramp by himself in his wheelchair and slid down, crashing into a wall at the bottom, where his legs took the brunt of impact.

“At least one unidentified school employee discovered the Plaintiff at the bottom of the ramp but did not assist him,” the lawsuit said. “Instead, the Plaintiff, a 12-year-old severely disabled child, was left to collect himself after sustaining serious injuries, and return himself to class.”

The child’s Individualized Education Program — a legal document outlining care needs for special education students — stated that while the child could independently move his walker and wheelchair, he required supervision and assistance for ramps and other uneven terrain, the lawsuit said.

The IEP also said the child required “safety monitoring from staff throughout the day due to medical, mobility and functional issues,” according to the lawsuit.

Despite the child being “on the verge of tears” all day, according to internal school reports, nobody investigated the situation or contacted Portillo Estrada, the lawsuit said. Portillo Estrada primarily speaks Spanish and has communicated with the school through occasional interpreters, school employees or free translation services like Google Translate.

When Portillo Estrada picked her son up from the bus stop, she said he was in pain and told her he fell at school. She messaged the school saying her son said he fell from his wheelchair and injured himself on campus.

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