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10 Haunting Stories Of Those Who Never Left Disney Parks Alive
Disney is the epitome of fun. Almost everyone who visits its theme parks leaves with cherished memories and an urge to return.
Far from being a children’s-only thrill, Disney has legions of adult fans who weave its wonder into some of life’s most meaningful milestones. Even marriages.
But behind the fireworks, the princesses, and the whirling rollercoasters lies a darker theme that occasionally breaks through the fantasy.
These are some of the stories of people who went to Disney and never truly made it back. And if they do, they don’t stay long.
This post may include affiliate links.
Bogden Delaurot - Drowned
On June 20, 1973, two brothers Bogden and Dorian Delaurot, 18 and 10 respectively, had decided to elude staffers trying to close Tom Sawyer’s Island at the end of the day.
They hid out in the woods behind the burning settlers cabin but by 9:30 PM that evening, the boys decided they had had enough and wanted out.
But they did not want to get into trouble, so instead of calling for help, they decided to swim across the Rivers of America.
The fact that Dorian could not swim did not douse the enthusiasm for this plan; they decided that he would cling to Bogden’s back while the latter swam.
The plan worked until they got halfway across the river. Dorain slipped. Bogden could not get to him and was forced to summon help.
Said help searched for the boy through the night with no success, and Dorian was found the next morning, tangled in some fake rocks. Deceased.
According to Cat Leigh, who tells the story, his parents tried to sue, but Disney was cleared of any wrongdoing.
Why is the entry titled "Bogden" if Dorian is the one who died? Not complaining, just seems like a weird choice.
Of course they tried to sue rather than accept their own responsibility.
N just why would this be remotely Disney’s fault 🤷♀️idiot kids well adults one of em , decisions = consequences!!!!
Why is the entry titled "Bogden" if Dorian is the one who died? Complaining.
Bonnye Mavis Lear - Thrown From A Golf-Cart
An administrator at the park’s Club 33 expired at the hands of a reckless driver after she climbed into a faulty golf cart on a Wednesday in June 2024.
Bonnye Mavis Lear, as a result, struck her head and suffered “grave injuries” at 11:30 a.m. that morning.
According to witnesses, the accident – described by police as a collision – occurred when a vehicle hit a bump in the road.
Lear, who had been sitting in the rearward-facing seat, made to grab at a railing, but it gave way upon touch.
The result was “severe head trauma and a fractured skull,” which was beyond surgical remedy.
Writing in a Facebook post after the incident, a fellow employee by the name of Rae Delgado lamented Lear’s passing.
“It didn’t have to end this way. All of this mess could’ve been avoided if the driver of the golf cart wasn’t driving recklessly,” she wrote.
She also accused Disney management of telling employees not to share information about the accident.
I'm sorry, English is not my first language, but calling a person's deäth as the person having been expired sounds absolutely callous and ungraceful. I mean a jar of jam can expired or a pack of hotdogs.... but a human being?!!! So is this really a legitimate term in English/American English or is this stupid BoredPanda censorship policy which achieved quite the opposite?
Mel Yorba - Stabbed By Jealous Boyfriend
On March 7, 1981, 18-year-old Mel C. Yorba was hanging around near the Matterhorn at Disney World, Anaheim, when 28-year-old James O’Driscoll attacked him after the latter’s girlfriend claimed a strange man had pinched her.
The two got into a scuffle that took them to the ground and would end with a knife through Yorba’s heart.
According to the San Francisco Gate, the teen lay bleeding out for 20 minutes before park employees assisted.
Worried about the resort’s aesthetics, the staffers refrained from calling 911 and loaded him into a vehicle.
They left the resort at a leisurely pace, careful not to alarm anyone.
They drove past two medical facilities that could have saved the youngster’s life, and when they eventually deposited him at a hospital in Garden Grove, Yorba was already in cardiac arrest and pass the point of no return.
The public backlash was searing and came from, among others, civil instruments like the Fire Service and Emergency Medical operators.
They found that “Disneyland’s reluctance to summon paramedics was based on the fear that their arrival would mar the park’s image”—which is ironic since the Anaheim resort alone has tallied 68 demises in the last 70 years.
And these are just the ones we know of.
I worked at a plant that told us to call security in case of medical emergencies then they would call 911. We didn't, we called 911 directly. That policy was 86'd after the fire chief heard about it.
Wow. The thought that image was/is more important than someone's life is disgusting! Loyalty runs deep at Disney I guess. But I hope they got into hella trouble legal wise for their actions.
The family sued Disney and won less than they asked for but were good with that as they felt vindicated and wanted to stop Disney from covering it up!
Load More Replies...Who writes these? It's Disneyland not Disney World, Anaheim. That aside, this story doesn't surprise me.
okay, I know this isn't the point of the post but the first paragraph: "the Matterhorn at Disney World, Anaheim" No. Disneyland is Anaheim and Disney World is Florida... I start to question the credibility of the author's fact checking abilities when they can't get the basics right.
Marcelo Torres - Fatal Derailment
In September 2003, Disney’s Big Thunder Mountain Railroad rollercoaster partially derailed as it entered a tunnel.
The Tampa Bay Times reported that a 22-year-old, Marcello Torres, of Gardena, who rode in the carriage directly behind the computerized locomotive, lost his life.
It further noted that the train’s cars had separated from each other, resulting in ten people between the ages of 9 and 47 getting injured.
“Among the most severely hurt was Vicente Gutierrez, a 22-year-old Wilmington, Calif., man who suffered facial cuts and chest injuries, including possible broken ribs. He was listed in serious condition,” the outlet reported.
The accident it was referring to was the 10th to transpire at the Anaheim resort in California which had been fatality-free for the previous five years, but racked up ten since its opening in 1955.
According to a follow-up by the Los Angeles Times in November the same year, investigators found that Disney’s maintenance crew had hurriedly designated the ride safe for public use and signed off on it despite insufficient maintenance checks.
The investigation found that the “crew made the same mistakes on other unspecified rides elsewhere in the park.”
Lane Graves - Alligator Attack
Two-year-old Lane Graves was a foot deep in the water at Disney’s Seven Seas Lagoon on June 14, 2016, near the Grand Floridian Resort & Spa, when an alligator grabbed him by the head.
His father saw the commotion in time to wrestle the cold-blooded predator and try to prise its mouth open.
The animal got away with the boy, whose body police later discovered underwater not far from the attack. It was confirmed that it was the bite that claimed the boy’s life.
The incident had the internet up in arms, especially since there had been visible signs around the water's edge warning visitors not to swim.
Another mother, Jennifer Venditti Roye, would later post photos of her boy playing in the same spot Lane was snatched in a bid to prove to a judgmental public that the victim’s parents had not neglected their boy.
“There is a time to be critical when parents are doing [...] and their children get hurt,” Roye told People. “But this is just not the time. It’s heartbreaking.”
As a result of Lane’s passing, six alligators were fished out of the surrounding waters and euthanized.
Right, so the parents let their toddler play in the water despite signs telling people to not go in the water, and then another parent decided that the best way to prove that the parents weren't negligent was to put her own child in the water at the same spot. There really is no accounting for the sheer stupidity of people.
I mean, that's Florida, so what did you expect?
Load More Replies...I love how all these people are saying its not the parents fault and its the parks fault for not removing the alligators... are you all that dumb?!? its an honest question. they were not put there. they are native species and they are not fish who can only swim. they are f*****g alligators that can walk and run long distances and climb fencing and you cannot keep them out of bodies of water. This is why there are hige red and white warning signs everywhere you go in floridia and other states they live in. They dont care how much you spend on vacation. they are going to go wherever they want to. They have lived for millions of years and they dont care about your need to be right and do whatever you want wherever you want. You have the whole of the park to play in and if the signs say dont swim in this one pond but you just HAVE to because you paid all this money to go on vacation you have something wrong in your head.
everything you used to describe "alligator" behavior can also be said for toddlers- they can be anywhere in the blink of an eye.... it is to bad you dont recognize this before demonizing an accident
Load More Replies...Ok, so I'm confused. There were/are signs saying WARNING and DO NOT SWIM yet this loony mother says the parent's didn't neglect their child? Don't get me wrong, tragic for what happened to the child, but by all means, it was the parents fault for letting him swim in the area clearly marked unsafe. And for her to put her child in the SAME AREA of the attack? That was just stupid and fool hearty on her part! Poor alligators got off'd for sake of public interests.
Ignores signs, s**t happens and they k**l the non-fault alligators instead. I'm not sure I'm getting through this entire article.
I understand there were signs everywhere- but for everyone that has hateful things to say- shame on you. For those that are showing empathy/sympathy for the situation, give yourself some grace for the troll/hate comments and take solace in knowing that many of the individuals who write hateful things have a small range of human connection and it shows (I am guessing most are under the age of 14) so pay no mind (even if your comments go under "hidden!" no worries! cuz they are still getting read!
Actually, I can help you with that. First and foremost, there were massive signs all around the water feature where he was was attacked, which warned that alligators were present in the water, and swimming was forbidden. The parents admitted they saw those warnings... and IGNORED them. Even when they were told when they checked in, that swimming was only allowed in certain locations, and to be mindful of small children, as there were areas where alligators were known to be on the property. So that's why the parents are blamed, because they saw the warnings, knew the danger, and ignored it because they were "special" or something similar. No one really knows why the parents ignored the warnings, though as I said, they admitted they knew the warnings were there.
Load More Replies...It's easy to blame parents when there's massive red and white signs all around the water that say "DANGER Alligators present. DO NOT SWIM!" and those parents go "eh, that doesn't apply to me, let's let our kid go swimming in the water with a potentially twelve foot long reptile that eats smaller animals. What harm would come of it?"
Load More Replies...It's not easy to keep a body of water in FL alligator-free. They're known to walk long distances and they can climb fences. The gator could've just shown up that day, for all they know. I grew up near a very small lake (a pond, really). As soon as they "removed" the alligator there (due to it serial-k*****g pets), another one moved in within a week.
Load More Replies...Google images, "alligator climbing fence'. Go on... I'll wait.
Load More Replies...Luan Phi Dawson - Fatal Sailing-Ship Cleat Accident
Thirty-three-year-old Luan Phi Dawson was standing in line to board the Columbia sail ship at the brand’s Anaheim park on the morning of Christmas Eve, 1998, when a mooring rope ripped a cleat off the replica’s deck and brought it crashing down on him.
The impact resulted in ultimately fatal brain injuries.
He was kept on life support at the University of California, Irvine Medical Center long enough for relatives to fly and say their goodbyes, but doctors noted there was no brain activity.
The flying piece of metal had also struck his 43-year-old wife, Lieu Thuy Vuong, putting her into the ICU.
Doctors at the time expressed confidence in her recovery but noted the necessity for plastic surgery and their belief that she would be paralyzed on one side of her face for the rest of her life.
A worker at the park, Christine Carpenter, was also affected and suffered “serious injuries” to her leg.
But it appeared that this event was not merely another Disney accident, as Anaheim’s police were back at the park less than a week later, this time investigating it as a homicide.
Two years later, the Los Angeles Times reported that a lawsuit ensued, and Disney settled, but officials refused to say how much.
The rope that connects a ship to the dock is supposed to break before the cleat is pulled from the dock or the ship. The boat was coming in too fast because the captain was showing off to a young guest. An untrained assistant manager hooked the rope onto the speeding boat's cleat. The hemp rope that should be used for docking had been replaced by a less expensive nylon rope. Instead of breaking as expected from a hemp rope, the nylon rope stretched. It pulled the cleat out of the ship and it shot right back into the crowd k*****g one guest and severely injuring (severe facial injuries and disfigurement) another guest and a cast member (crushed leg). This happened in front of the couple's children. The settlement was estimated to be $25 million but it was confidential and actual amount is unknown. This accident led to more strict regulation of California amusement parks and improved investigation of future accidents. Disney also increased training and supervision on all of its rides.
If memory served, wasn't also dryrot of the dock area where the cleat was attached found to be a factor?
Load More Replies...Robert Johnson Jr - Amoebic Brain Infection
Eleven-year-old Robert Johnson Jr. visited Walt Disney World’s River Country resort four years after its 1976 landmark upgrade.
Photos from the time show a large stretch of territory peppered with water features and characterized by the iconic A-frame structure of the Contemporary Hotel on its island-like parcel of land.
As guests did when at the River Country resort, Robert went swimming. While in the water, an amoeba entered his nose, climbed up to his brain, attacked his nervous system, and caused what doctors called meningoencephalitis.
The boy was the fourth person to have his life cut short by Florida’s water bacteria. The parents sued, and a judge awarded them $2 million in damages.
The facility, which had gained a grim reputation as one of the park’s most common sites of tragedy, shut down permanently in 2001.
Reports indicate that after nearly two decades of standing derelict, Disney began filling its main pool again in 2019 as part of a repurposing effort to transform the area into a lakeside resort.
"The boy was the fourth person to have his life cut short by Florida’s water bacteria. " Amoebae are not bacteria.
yeah...there are a lot of things in this list with things like that. Just small enough that people might not catch it or care, but enough to make the whole thing questionable (makes me think it is likely populated by AI)
Load More Replies...Not sure you can actually pin this on Disney just because it happened there.
Woman In Her 60s - Passed Away In Haunted Mansion
The Anaheim police were summoned to Disneyland on Monday, October 6, when “a woman in her 60s” was observed to be unresponsive.
The attendee had just finished the Haunted Mansion ride, which has since been described as a ride for children.
According to a local outlet, KTLA5 park staffers administered CPR until the emergency services arrived, but to no avail.
She was then moved to a nearby hospital, where she was declared deceased.
The Orange County Sheriff’s Sgt. Matt Sutter would later confirm: “There is no indication of any operating issue with the attraction, which reopened soon after.”
If we’re counting every person who died of natural causes while at the park, the numbers are going to go up, especially if you add in hotels. And I don’t for a minute believe the reported numbers. This particular case was 1 of 3 that happened across a 2 week period.
I'm sure employee suicidé is way up there too. I worked at Cedar Point for a season and there was more than one employee death by their own hand that year.
Load More Replies...Perhaps meant to differentiate from the more extreme jump scare/gory haunted house experiences elsewhere
Load More Replies...Javier Cruz - Run Over By A Parade Float
Why is there a picture of a little girl here when the person’s name was Javier?
Seems pretty clear to me without further explanation needed - a person was run over by a parade vehicle at Disney World and was k!lled.
Load More Replies...Regina Young - Hit By A Bobsled
I'm a native Floridian, been to Disney World and the M.K. many many times in my 57 years, But I don't recall them having a bobsled ride. Was this in Disney Land, maybe?
?? Umm, W*F happened? Was the person where they weren't supposed to be? Did the sled jump track and hit them? So vague.
'Fun' fact; legally, no one has ever died on Disney property, because Disney does not allow anyone to declare someone dead on their property. It must be done at an off-property hospital. 'Fun' fact aside, accidents can and do happen everywhere, and Disney has very high safety standards.
Yeah the amount of people who go through that park every year there is always going to be accidents and deaths.
Load More Replies...This is the laziest article I've seen on BP this far. The last entries aren't even finished.
So, you're basically saying that innocent peoples' deaths at Disneyland and Disneyworld are "fake" and "stupid".
Load More Replies...I'm genuinely surprised to have not seen Deborah Gail Stone on this list.
Well, it looks like BP has found a new way to turn off readers. The sad, depressing, gruesome and gory. I don't care if it's 'that time of year', this isn't what I come to BP for.
Nobody was forcing you to read it... If you don't come to BP for these kinds of things, then simply don't interact with them.
Load More Replies...'Fun' fact; legally, no one has ever died on Disney property, because Disney does not allow anyone to declare someone dead on their property. It must be done at an off-property hospital. 'Fun' fact aside, accidents can and do happen everywhere, and Disney has very high safety standards.
Yeah the amount of people who go through that park every year there is always going to be accidents and deaths.
Load More Replies...This is the laziest article I've seen on BP this far. The last entries aren't even finished.
So, you're basically saying that innocent peoples' deaths at Disneyland and Disneyworld are "fake" and "stupid".
Load More Replies...I'm genuinely surprised to have not seen Deborah Gail Stone on this list.
Well, it looks like BP has found a new way to turn off readers. The sad, depressing, gruesome and gory. I don't care if it's 'that time of year', this isn't what I come to BP for.
Nobody was forcing you to read it... If you don't come to BP for these kinds of things, then simply don't interact with them.
Load More Replies...
