ORLANDO, Fla. – A North Carolina woman filed a lawsuit Thursday claiming she sustained “severe and permanent injuries” after riding the Stardust Racers roller coaster at Epic Universe.
Debbie Reinelt alleges that she required medical care after experiencing dizziness, headache and nausea following her ride on May 5 during previews of the new theme park, which officially opened about two weeks later.
Reinelt’s lawsuit against Universal Orlando’s parent company was filed days after the Orange County Sheriff’s Office released a report concluding a man died “accidentally” following a ride on the same roller coaster.
Kevin Rodriguez Zavala, who was born with spinal atrophy and used a wheelchair, was found unresponsive on Stardust Racers Sept. 17.
[WATCH: Incident report sheds new light on Stardust Racers death at Epic Universe]
A doctor who was waiting in line for the roller coaster told investigators she believed Rodriguez Zavala’s broken femur played a significant role in the 32-year-old reportedly rising out of his seat and fatally striking his head on a metal bar.
Reinelt, who alleges her head was “violently shaken” on the roller coaster, does not mention Rodriguez Zavala in her lawsuit.
A woman who shares the same first and last names as Reinelt, and who lives in the same small North Carolina county where the plaintiff resides, posted social media photos of herself at Epic Universe the same night the alleged injury occurred, News 6 has learned.
“Very good day full of roller coasters,” states a caption above photos of the smiling woman posing throughout the theme park. The woman later visited other Universal Orlando theme parks, social media posts indicate.
The social media posts make no mention of severe injuries.
Reinelt’s attorney, Nicholas Spetsas, did not immediately respond to emails from News 6 inquiring whether his client is the same woman who appeared in the Facebook photos.
[WATCH: Guest sues Universal over Stardust Racers injuries]
Spetsas represented a different Epic Universe visitor who filed a lawsuit in September claiming she was also injured while riding Stardust Racers.
Sandi Streets alleged her head “shook violently and slammed into her seat’s headrest” while riding the roller coaster on April 30, the lawsuit stated.
Streets and Universal Orlando settled the lawsuit two days after she filed it, court records show. The terms of the settlement were not disclosed.
Although the family of Rodriguez Zavala did not file a lawsuit against Universal Orlando following his death, the family’s attorney said last week they had reached a confidential “resolution” with the company.