Case So Bad, Jury Excused From Service...
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.If you are inside one and the suction seal causes it to close tight then you just have to stick your finger nails in the suction seal and pull it and it starts to let air in.. then 'tadah'.. door opens. :o) Does it to the one in our garage all the time but I have never been on the inside of it. But I just poke the suction seal and it hisses and set the door free.
Ooooh scary thought.. Imagine you're in the fridge trying to push the door open to get out and it falls over onto the door.. You would be trapped! eewwww!
That applies to the old (almost antique) fridges that didn't have magnetic seals but had a latching system. Most fridges nowadays simply have a magnetic seal so children can get out.
It used to be such a bad problem with children getting locked in fridges and dying in the U.S. that many states passed laws against the abandonment of fridges without having the doors removed.
Oh I remember that too Bluemukka, but I think there were 3 of them, it was a boy and his 2 sisters/brothers, I remember you being shown on the news the footprint on the door where he had kicked at it in a desperate attempt to open it and it has always haunted me.
I thought if you left an old fridge outdoors, ready to be dumped etc. then you had to legally take the door off of them incase of kids playing with them?
My grandfather was one of the people that helped pass a law in the US that made it illegal to throw away a fridge without removing the doors first. Junkyards were full of these older fridges with a latch handle that locked the fridge shut. Untold numbers of children were killed/injured this way. We have one of my grandads scrapbooks that is at least 3 inches thick filled with newspaper clippings of refrigerator accidents. It is not just fridges though, dishwashers, wood chests, anything that needs to have a button or latch used to open needs to be disable before discarding. I have a Lane cedar chest that belonged to my grandparents that had a recalled lock for this reason. If my grandfather only knew this was in his own house all along!
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