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inquest on 7 year old kid killed in Thailand

Replies: 5 - Last Post: 13-Oct-2007 12:46 Last Post By: callippo

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callippo

callippo avatar

13-Oct-2007 01:51
Posts:  6,464

inquest on 7 year old kid killed in Thailand

just in case it wasn't followed up by the BKK Post :

October 12, 2007

Boy, 7, killed by fake Gameboy charger bought on holiday

A boy was electrocuted by a counterfeit Gameboy charger while on a family holiday in Thailand, an inquest was told yesterday.

Connor O’Keefe, 7, was found dead on the floor of his hotel room in the island of Phuket, clutching the wires of the £9 charger. Thai police initially said that he had died because he was still wet from swimming when he plugged in the device.

Later tests on the charger, which Connor’s stepfather had bought for him in a Phuket store, found that it had “serious defects”, Southwark Coroner’s Court was told.

Wires within the charger were dangerously close together, which meant it could easily become live and electrocute a user.

On the day of his death, December 30, 2006, Connor had been out all day quad-biking with his family. When they returned to the Sunset Beach Resort at Patong Beach, he went for a swim in the hotel pool. He then returned to the hotel room and asked his mother, Kathleen Curry, for some food before going off to play with his Gameboy.

Ms Curry, 45, of Walworth, southeast London, said that Connor’s aunt, Maureen Hopkins, discovered the body. “I called him for his food and there was no reply. Connor’s auntie said she would go and look in the room and that’s where she found him. I just heard her, she called me. I ran into the room and I knew by the way she was calling something was wrong. “The Nintendo was on the floor. Maureen said that when she went in there he was holding the wires and she pulled the wires off him. When she went to separate him she got a shock.”

She added: “He wasn’t wet and he wasn’t wearing the same clothes he wore when he went swimming.”

Connor was taken to hospital where he was pronounced dead.

Keith Skinner, 49, Connor’s stepfather, said that he had bought the charger in the belief it had been made by Nintendo.

After Connor’s death, the device was sent to LGA, a German electrical laboratory, where it was found to be far below European safety standards.

The gap between the primary and secondary circuits was 1 millimetre wide, compared with European standards, which require 4.6mm gap.

Recording a ruling of accidental death, John Sampson, the coroner, condemned the sale of counterfeit goods. They “look as if they might be official, and there is no way of knowing by looking at them that they are anything but official”. Nintendo said that it would continue to work with Connor’s family in an effort to trace where the charger came from.

callippo

callippo avatar

13-Oct-2007 01:53
Posts:  6,464

1

Quote

Connor O’Keefe, 7, was found dead on the floor of his hotel room in the island of Phuket, clutching the wires of the £9 charger.


not only did they get sold a deadly piece of kit, but they got ripped off as well. They should have only have paid about 100 baht to aquire the faulty charger that killed their son.

Chanchao

Chanchao avatar

13-Oct-2007 02:06
Posts:  6,715

2


This is precisely the kind of thing that is included when I claim Thailand is NOT safe, or as safe as Western countries. For some reason people tend to focus on rare tropical diseases or terrorism, but there is just NO culture of safety and accountability in Thailand and other developing countries. It's fine when you're young and on holiday, but it really isn't a very safe place to raise a family.

Check out pics and reviews of all kinds of food at chanchao.fotopages.com. Get the Thai Travel Menu, a printable bilingual menu to help you order great food off the beaten path.

BeerLao

BeerLao avatar

13-Oct-2007 08:43
Posts:  1,949

3

"...but there is just NO culture of safety and accountability in Thailand..."

got that right Chan. go to any building site and see people laying rebar, pouring concrete, laying bricks, using power tools, etc while wearing flip-flops, no goggles when grinding, no goggles when welding, no safety harness when working aloft, and the list goes on and on. I was reading (and laughing) at an article I saw in a local Thai paper the other day how the Thai's are going to have a symposium to teach other countries workers about construction site safety. I actually 'laughed out loud', what a friggin joke.

pull my finger

VanDalen

VanDalen avatar

13-Oct-2007 12:18
Posts:  784

4

Yes agree with above
On myu site first think workers did was remove safety feature from grinder
No bike helmets 6 yr ioolds and obvious drunks careering down wrong way on highway 1 last night in pouring rain

Wghile some places liken China and Gulf its economic poor rural labourers exploited hwere I tyhink Karma and aftyer life shape minsets as India

In awful Howdy Arabia most folks like here have no rd insurance believing its anti Islamic questioning destiny etc
Science OM and Occupational Health education have abig curve tho Ive seen worse in Afghhanistan laos and C America
Very sad for O'Connor family they have my heartfelt condolences
I doubt any shopkeeper or importer manufacturer will be brouight to mjustice and if so will bribe or pay $100 fine and keep right on

Fringe Rug dealers Plan Persian Carpet Bombing

callippo

callippo avatar

13-Oct-2007 12:46
Posts:  6,464

5

Quote

NO culture of safety and accountability . . . fine when you're young and on holiday, but it really isn't a very safe place to raise a family.


there's just such a vast gulf between tourists and residents. When I saw (not in Thailand but elsewhere in SEA) a welder wearing sunglasses as 'protection', I just laughed my sandals off. I'd react different if I saw it every week.

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