The January 2014 accident jolted the city school system and prompted calls for schools to overhaul how they approached science experiments.
$60 million awarded to N.Y. student engulfed in flames in chemistry accident
NEW YORK — A former high school
student was awarded nearly $60 million in damages Monday after a Manhattan jury
found the city’s Department of Education and his former teacher liable for an
accident that left much of his body scarred from third-degree burns.
Five years ago, when the former
student, Alonzo Yanes, was a sophomore at Beacon High School, a competitive
public school in Manhattan, he was engulfed in flames after a chemistry
experiment went awry.
The January 2014 accident jolted the
city school system and prompted calls for schools to overhaul how they
approached science experiments.
A
federal agency warned about the potential dangers of the experiment, known as
the Rainbow, just weeks before the incident. The same experiment has caused at
least two other accidents across the country in the past 15 years.
Students immediately jumped under
their desks and called for help after the fire began, but Yanes and another
student were caught in the flames.
While the other student suffered
first-degree burns, Yanes was left with burns so deep that his sweat glands were
numbed and he is no longer able to sweat through some parts of his body. Yanes
spent five months in hospitals after the accident, including two months in a
burn unit undergoing extensive skin graft surgeries.
“I was hopelessly burning alive, and
I couldn’t put myself out, and the pain was so unbearable,” Yanes said during
the three-week trial, according to the New York Post. Yanes declined an
interview through his lawyer, Ben Rubinowitz.
“The well-being of students is the
top priority of the Department of Education and this chemistry experiment is no
longer used in any classroom as a result of this tragic accident,” Nicholas
Paolucci, a spokesman for the city’s Law Department, said in a statement.
“While we respect the jury’s verdict, we are exploring our legal options to
reduce the award to an amount that is consistent with awards that have been
upheld by the courts in similar cases.”
The city law department argued that
Yanes should be awarded no more than $5 million for past damages, according to
the Post. Poole, who now works for the Department of Education’s central
office, wept during the trial, as did Beacon’s principal, Ruth Lacey.
“Ms. Poole said that she treated
these kids like her kids,” said city lawyer Mark Mixson during the trial,
according to the Post. “I want to suggest to you that everybody here should be
appreciative of people like Ms. Poole.”
Rubinowitz asked for $70 million in
damages. The jury granted $29 million for past pain and suffering, including
Yanes’ surgeries, and another $29 million for rehabilitation stretching 54
years into the future.
“To say the scars are disfiguring is
an understatement,” Rubinowitz said.
Yanes, now 21, studies animation at
the School of Visual Arts, a college in Manhattan. During the trial, he
testified that he sometimes takes off his glasses so he does not have to see
strangers gawk at his scars.
“I will never get used to that,” he
said last month.
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