Alton Towers victim slams '˜7 legless' students on pub crawl dressed as rollercoaster

A YORKSHIRE victim of the Alton towers 'Smiler' crash has attacked students who dressed as a rollercoaster for a charity pub crawl, calling themselves 7 Legless.
Victims Joe Pugh and Leah WashingtonVictims Joe Pugh and Leah Washington
Victims Joe Pugh and Leah Washington

The group denied the costume for the night out in Nottingham was a reference to last year’s incident in which two teenagers each lost a leg.

One victim, Joe Pugh, from Barnsley, who had been in the front row of the roller coaster with his girlfriend, Leah Washington, when it ploughed into an empty carriage, criticised the costume choice.

Miss Washington, 17, had to have her leg amputated.

The Smiler ride at Alton TowersThe Smiler ride at Alton Towers
The Smiler ride at Alton Towers
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Mr Pugh tweeted: “How awful and disrespectful can people get? Disgusting.”

Nottingham University Students’ Union released a statement refuting a link to the crash but apologising to anyone who was offended.

It said: “The costume was in no way intended to reference the tragedy that occurred on the Smiler roller coaster at Alton Towers.

“Its design was based on a traditional concept that has existed for several years and no reference was made to the Smiler by the students involved.

The Smiler ride at Alton TowersThe Smiler ride at Alton Towers
The Smiler ride at Alton Towers
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“’7 legless’ was intended to be a pun on the name of the bar crawl ‘7 Legged’ and the state of being inebriated.”

It added: “The students involved further wish to apologise unreservedly to those affected by the Smiler incident for any offence or distress they may have unwittingly caused.”

Vicky Balch, then 19, also had to have a leg amputated after the incident on June 2 2015, while Mr Pugh, Daniel Thorpe, and Chandaben Chauhan, who was sitting in the second row, were all seriously injured when their packed carriage was crushed against another car.

The theme park’s owner, Merlin Entertainments, was fined £5 million last month after admitting health and safety breaches.

Judge Michael Chambers QC, passing sentence at Stafford Crown Court, called the accident a “catastrophic failure” by the company involving basic health and safety measures.