From the description he gave me, it sounds like the kid might have survived if his mother didnt yank him out of the door.
The whole thing is so sad.

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GuyJean wrote:The family should rape Mori for all they're worth.
GuyJean wrote: The family should rape Mori for all they're worth.
Meanwhile, Mori Building President Minoru Mori went to the wake for the child in Suita, Osaka Prefecture, Sunday, but was denied entry at the reception.
He left the funeral hall after bowing once toward the altar.
The family also refused offers from Mori Building and the doors' manufacturer, Sanwa Tajima Corp., to deliver flowers to the ceremony.
AssKissinger wrote:They were probably there to slip the mother the clean-up bill.
Taro Toporific wrote:Mori Building President Minoru Mori went to the wake for the child in Suita, Osaka Prefecture, Sunday, but was denied entry at the reception.
He left the funeral hall after bowing once toward the altar.
The family also refused offers from Mori Building and the doors' manufacturer, Sanwa Tajima Corp., to deliver flowers to the ceremony.
kamome wrote:O
You can just see Mori sitting at his desk and ordering the staff at all of the buildings he owns to check the doors. Why he didn't do this after the first injury is beyond me. Probably thought the first 30 incidents were abberations or something..
kamome wrote:ramchop wrote:Why is it that every small scale construction site has at least 2 geriatrics pointlessly waving people past (the other day one even spoke to me in English "Please, be careful"), but these mega-rich corporations can't even get a doorman? Are the cheap-labour geriatrics not beautiful enough for Ropongi Hills?
Sure, a doorman would be nice, but that would defeat the purpose of having an automatic door, wouldn't it?
dingosatemybaby wrote: I still don't know whether to smell a rat in cases like this or whether I'm just being cynical, but it did seem like they giving Mori the kid-glove treatment.
NeoNecroNomiCron wrote:dingosatemybaby wrote: I still don't know whether to smell a rat in cases like this or whether I'm just being cynical, but it did seem like they giving Mori the kid-glove treatment.
Because there is significant investment in the mori building. Living with ghosts devalues property and share holders dont like to find a pair of shoes on the chou line. Evenybody see where this joke is going?
dingosatemybaby wrote:..but it did seem like they giving Mori the kid-glove treatment.
Caustic Saint wrote:Too bad people in Japan don't make those little "deleted bear shrines" where ever a child has dies. I'd imagine that wouldn't sit too well with the building management. (And it'd probably play even worse if they sent someone out to bag all that stuff up for the trash and it ended up on the news.)
GuyJean wrote:dingosatemybaby wrote:..but it did seem like they giving Mori the kid-glove treatment.
Taro Toporific wrote:.. raided the headquarters Tuesday of a Tokyo shopping mall operator and the company that built the door..
GuyJean wrote:Thank you.. Sorry.. Thanks.. Sorry to bother.. Thank you."
GuyJean wrote:dingosatemybaby wrote:..but it did seem like they giving Mori the kid-glove treatment.
Between when and when?.....?A total of 133 people have been injured in 270 recent accidents involving revolving doors, a government poll has found.
Guards are on hand at the remaining 128 doors.
Of the 133 injured people, 23 suffered broken bones.
Sunday, its first anniversary, passed without any elaborate ceremonies. Officials explained this was out of respect for Ryo Mizokawa, the 6-year-old boy tragically killed in a revolving door accident one month ago.
The complex in Minato Ward also canceled most events that had been planned during the Golden Week holidays that start Thursday...
The number of visitors to the center's luxury brand shops and restaurants also fell after it was revealed that 32 revolving-door incidents had occurred at the complex since last year's opening...
Officers of Tokyo's Metropolitan Police Department investigating possible professional negligence resulting in death believe that both Mori Building and revolving-door supplier Sanwa Tajima Corp. were well aware of the risk.
Police learned that Mori Building and Sanwa Tajima came out with six safety measures after a similar accident in December. But most measures were not put in place, resulting in another injury accident in February.
Japan's 'killer doors' to spin again
Straits Times, Singapore - June 28
More than three months after a 1.5-tonne door crushed a six-year-old boy to death, the government is ready to vouch that such doors are safe.
2-year-old boy playing on the belt of an escalator located in a shopping complex in Nishinomiya, Hyogo Prefecture, fell 10 meters from the fourth to the second floor and died.
a 2-year-old boy was seriously injured after falling from an escalator installed in an atrium of a shopping complex in Ashikaga, Tochigi Prefecture, in 1996.
"There are a growing number of buildings that have atriums, so we would like to ask building managers to take safety measures," an association official said
Staffers posted on each floor of department stores are taking care to prevent children from wandering around by themselves. They've taken sufficient safety measures such as installation of protective nets around escalators,"
Didn't we already cover this in the previous 4 pages?AssKissinger wrote:Why should the buildings take safety measures? It's not their fault these murdering mothers are too lazy to watch their kids and hold their hands.
Didn't we already cover this in the previous 4 pages?
When there are design flaws, there should be accountability. It's very simple..
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