AUSTIN (KXAN) — A Buda father is talking with attorneys and may potentially press charges after his 4-year-old son fell through a hole in a bounce house and injured his head.

Jose Campista took his son Jayden to iPlay in south Austin on Sunday, Oct. 15.

“He’s always telling me, ‘take me jumping, take me jumping,'” Campista said.

Campista says his son was toward the back of one of the inflatable castles, when he turned away and then looked back, his son was gone.

“All of a sudden, real fast I just hear him yelling, yelling at the top of his lungs and I realized he’s in the back,” Campista said.

He says Jayden had fallen through a 2-foot hole onto the concrete floor below. Campista says his son was visibly shaken up and couldn’t walk. He then went to the front desk to express concern about the hole.

“I said, ‘Y’all didn’t know there was a big hole in the moon walk?’ and their response to me was, ‘No we don’t know there is a hole until a parent tells us what’s wrong with the equipment,” Campista said.

He then rushed Jayden to Dell Children’s Medical Center where they conducted a CT scan and no internal bleeding was found, but it confirmed he suffered a serious concussion.

Campista says he did sign a waiver at iPlay before getting on the equipment. That waiver states:

agree to WAIVE, RELEASE,INDEMNIFY, HOLD HARMLESS, AND FOREVER DISCHARGE iPlay-Austin, its owners, employees, equipment manufacturers and sponsoring agencies from all liability for any such personal injury, disability, death, proceeding cost, expenses or loss or damage to a person or property during our time at iPlay-Austin to the fullest extent of the law, even if the liability arises from the negligence of iPlay-Austin owners, employees, equipment manufacturers and sponsoring agencies.”

After talking to family and friends, Campista was encouraged to talk to an attorney about what happened.

Brad Bonilla with the Bonilla Law Firm in Austin says despite what the waiver says, it does not spell out that the equipment may not be checked for safety concerns.

“It’s not designed to cover the operator under all scenarios,” Bonilla said. “It’s very important when you look at the waiver that you understand what rights you are signing away and what risks they are trying to tell you that you are losing by signing that waiver.”

Bonilla has since sent iPlay a letter requesting any surveillance video and anticipates a lawsuit filed next week.

KXAN tried reaching out to iPlay with multiple questions. The manager of operations said he was traveling for work and had “no comment at this time.”

Campista hopes his son’s story will raise awareness with parents on the potential dangers of the bounce houses.

“I want to make sure this doesn’t happen again, I want to make sure this doesn’t happen to another child,” Campista said.

More people get hurt in bouncy houses than you might expect. Between 2008 and 2013, 82,203 people were hurt on inflatables. According to the Consumer Product Safety Commission, more than 90 percent of those were in bouncy houses. Two-thirds of those injuries were to legs and arms and 15 percent involved heads and faces.