Ten-year-old Chloe Johnson of Kansas City was afraid of sharks -- something that she made well known to her parents during a 2005 vacation to Florida.
But it was only on the way back from the vacation, in Atlanta's Hartsfield International Airport, that she received an unexpected bite -- from an escalator. "She was not goofing around at all, but she must have been standing in a way that brought her left Croc shoe into contact with the side of the escalator," recalls Chloe's father, Neil Johnson.
"I started hearing her squeal, and my immediate reaction was, 'Oh goodness, what now?'" he said.
But the pain Chloe experienced was all too real. The shoe had been bitten and twisted by the escalator mechanism, wrenching her foot along with it.
By the time she had limped off of the top of the escalator, helped by her parents, blood from her seriously injured toe began seeping out from the shoe.
"Her left big toe was mutilated like you wouldn't believe," Johnson said. "I sat on the floor and held her foot somewhat elevated, with blood running down my forearms."
Fortunately Chloe recovered fully. "It's a little disfigured, but she played soccer all through last year," Johnson said. But in recent months, a growing number of reports have joined those of Johnson's family as more children worldwide are experiencing foot and toe injuries from wearing the popular shoes on escalators.
According to foreign media reports, there have been dozens of reports in Asia as well of the shoes getting jammed and twisted in escalators, often resulting in serious foot and toe injuries in children.
The original story was that in other foreign media outlets there were reports
of the dangers of crocs and escalators. This is a news follow because it relates the story back to the U.S. with a young girl who was hurt in her crocs on an escalator and it is a follow up to the original story.
1 comment:
This post does link to a news-follow feature, but the rest of the requirement was to post the lead and the nutgraph and to explain on your post why this is a NFF. Therefore, this required post is incomplete. We will have sometime in class today to revise our No. 2 posts.
Mariel
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