You asked that I explain and I trust the following
details will be sufficient.
I am an amateur radio operator and on the day of the
accident, I was working alone on the top section of my own new eighty-foot
tower, necessary so that the antennae can receive and send signals across
continents.
When I had completed my work, I discovered that I
had, over the course of several trips up the tower, brought up about three
hundred pounds weight of tools and spare hardware. Rather
than carry the now unneeded tools and material down by hand, I decided to lower
the items down in a small barrel by using the pulley attached to the gin pole
at the top of the tower.
Securing the rope at ground level, I went to the top
of the tower and loaded the tools and material into the barrel. Then I went back to the ground and untied the
rope, holding it tightly to ensure a slow decent of the three hundred pounds weight
of tools.
You will note from my previous form that I myself weigh only one hundred and
fifty-five pounds. I’m sure you can only
imagine my surprise and shock at suddenly being yanked off the ground and high
into the air! Due to my own surprise at being jerked off the
ground so suddenly, I lost my presence of mind and forgot to let go of the
rope.
Needless
to say, I proceeded at a rather rapid rate up the side of the tower. In the vicinity of the forty-foot level, I
encountered the barrel on its descent.
This
is when I sustained my fractured skull and broken collarbone.
Slowed
only slightly, and now gripping on for dear life, I continued my rapid ascent,
not stopping until the fingers of my right hand were lodged two knuckles deep
into the pulley.
Fortunately,
by this time, I had regained my presence of mind and was able to hold onto the
rope in spite of my pain. At approximately the same time, however, the
barrel of tools hit the ground heavily and the bottom fell out of the barrel.
Without the tools, the barrel now weighed
approximately twenty pounds.
I refer you back to the note of my weight (in block
number 11).
In proper accordance with the laws of gravity, I
began a rapid descent down the side of the tower.
In the vicinity of the forty-foot level, I met the
barrel coming up.
This encounter accounts for my two fractured ankles,
and the lacerations of my legs and lower body.
The encounter with the barrel slowed me enough to
lessen my injuries when I fell onto the pile of tools and, rather fortunately –
as A&E observed, though in my pained state I could not agree - only three
vertebrae were cracked.
I regret to inform you, however, that as I lay there
on the pile of broken tools, in pain, and staring distractedly upwards towards
the empty barrel caught above at the pulley’s gin, I once again lost my
presence of mind.
Succumbing to the pain of my many injuries, I again
let go of the rope...
I am reliably informed that the quickly-descending
barrel again struck me on the head, though since I passed out immediately, I am
unable to give proper testimony to this.”
I have not learned how successful his insurance
claim proved to be!