Claire Vickers, 46, and her friend Barry Douglas, 44, broke their legs during a visit to a waterpark. The pair were out of their mind drunk during the incident and snuck into a closed slide which was off-limits to guests. Because they ignored the warnings, the drunk “idiots” broke their legs on the ride because it was shut off with a steel barrier at the end of the ride.

The pair appeared in wheelchairs during their visit to ITV’s This Morning talk show. Douglas told hosts Holly Willoughby and Phillip Schofield that the park hadn’t tried hard enough to block them from sneaking into it after hours. As a result of their injuries, Douglas and Vickers may want to take “legal action” against the waterpark and file a lawsuit to get some money out of the deal.
However, the pair was inebriated during the incident and went down the slide when they were not supposed to.

Vickers said that she almost went down the waterslide headfirst. If she had not changed her mind and put her feet first, “I wouldn’t be here,” she said.

Douglas suggested that he didn’t think much about their injuries. He said that his first thought was, “I can’t feel my legs.”
Vickers pointed out, “There’s nothing on this ride that says you can’t use it, no signs saying ‘don’t go down.’ We couldn’t see anything.”

The pair planned to sue the waterpark and filed a claim which was “dismissed on liability,” according to their lawyer Tim Jones of Slater & Gordon Limited. He suggested that there had been “no justification” for the midnight closure and that they would file a personal injury claim against the waterpark.
Aldershot Lido has received complaints about people sneaking into the pool after hours, but it has never experienced injuries as serious as those which Vickers and Douglas sustained on this water slide, according to its manager, Ben Hill.

He said that the park would “take measures” to stop people from sneaking into it after hours in order to avoid this happening again. According to Hill, Vickers and Douglas were not supposed to be at the waterpark when they went down the slide because they hadn’t paid for admission. But he told ITV News that “our primary focus is on the recovery of both people.”
He said, “If they’re going to take legal action, then I think they should be entitled to do so but with health and safety in mind.”