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They suffered nightmarish deaths, trapped in giant freezers. So why isn’t anything done about it?

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Deaths inside walk-in freezers could be minimised by the installation of emergency buttons or by the provision of simple emergency tools, like axes, experts say. Photo: SCMP Picture
Associated Press

Trapped in a walk-in hotel freezer with subzero temperatures, Carolyn Robinson Mangham hammered so desperately on the door that the skin on her knuckles had worn away, her husband said in a lawsuit.

When the door finally opened 13 hours later, the coroner said, the 61-year-old kitchen worker was lying on the metal floor, dead. Her head and eyes were frozen solid.

Mangham, who died in March in Atlanta, was among a handful of US workers who, in the last 15 years, were found dead in freezers, federal records show. Some were trapped by broken doors and either froze to death or were overcome by lethal fumes.

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Experts say the deaths are preventable, but it’s not likely the federal government will draw up any specific regulations dealing with freezers. One reason: They’re more inclined to enforce broad rules for employers, such as making clear exits available.

“This should never happen. It’s tragic, and the families are left with devastation,” said Kim Bartels, whose brother Jay Luther died in a walk-in freezer in 2012.
IAaron Rabinowitz poses for a picture in front of the freezer where his father died in 2007, at the family's Gelato Vero Caffe in San Diego. Photo: AP
IAaron Rabinowitz poses for a picture in front of the freezer where his father died in 2007, at the family's Gelato Vero Caffe in San Diego. Photo: AP
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Luther, a 47-year-old chef and co-owner of a cafe in Nashville, Tennessee, went into his restaurant’s freezer and the door shut behind him. For reasons not explained, there was no release mechanism to open the door, the US Occupational Safety and Health Administration concluded in its report. Luther suffocated from breathing carbon dioxide vapour that came off dry ice inside the freezer, a medical examiner found.

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