
Exclusive: Empire State Building tour guide sues over ‘career-ending PTSD' after getting stuck in elevator 67 floors up
'Maxine Malcolm was entrapped, dangling high up – fearing for her very life and not knowing if the swinging elevator would drop at any time,' reads a civil complaint obtained by The Independent.
'As a result of the incident,' Malcolm, 55, 'found that she could no longer enter an elevator as an unnatural fear would overcome her,' the complaint contends. 'A gripping fear for which she had to seek treatment. As a result of the incident Maxine Malcolm could no longer work in her job and had to leave employment.'
The elevators in the 94-year-old Empire State Building 'often' get stuck, Malcolm says in her complaint. In 2008, five of the building's elevators all got stuck at the same time, forcing passengers to pry open the doors and jump down to the nearest landing. In 2016, members of a high school choir were trapped in an Empire State Building elevator some 40 stories in the air, and had to be rescued by firefighters. Last year, seven people were stranded in a stuck elevator on the tower's 16th floor, finally getting out after 90 minutes when rescue crews led them through a hatch in the car's ceiling.
Reached by phone on Tuesday, Malcolm, a Brooklyn resident, declined to answer any questions about her experience and referred The Independent to her attorney, Manuel Moses, who declined to comment.
Malcolm's complaint, which was filed July 18 in Kings County Supreme Court, says was 'a trusted employee and highly respected in her job, having served millions of tourists' during her 30 years as an Empire State Building tour guide.
Her duties involved 'ferry[ing] passengers on elevators' up to the observation deck, according to the complaint, which claims Malcolm 'observed that these elevators would often get stuck.'
'Maxine Malcolm would observe how on those occasions management at The Empire State Building would make every effort to ameliorate the anxiety and fear this would cause by offering free admission and words of assurance,' the complaint continues. 'Maxine Malcolm noticed that before this incident… occurred there was an elevator that was getting stuck going up to the observation deck and remaining in disrepair.'
According to Malcolm's complaint, cars 5, 6, 8, and 10 'broke down often.'
Around 3 p.m. on September 10, 2023, Malcolm was alone in car 6, heading upstairs for her lunch break, the complaint goes on. When it reached the 67th floor, the elevator suddenly stopped and began swinging back and forth, according to the complaint. Amid the turbulence, Malcolm 'was badly shaken to and fro in this elevator and was knocked to the floor… seriously injur[ing] her shoulder,' the complaint states.
'[I]t should be noted that this was the day before September 11th and in her mind this heightened her fear of possible impending death,' the complaint contends.
Eventually, Malcolm managed to get out, although the complaint does not specify how long she was stuck, and whether the elevator simply started up again or if she had to be rescued.
'Maxine Malcolm remains in psychological treatment related to the elevator incident, as she still suffers from PTSD[,] also known as post-traumatic stress disorder[,] and has a phobia for getting in an elevator by herself that causes severe emotional distress,' the complaint states.
Before Malcolm developed her elevator phobia, she was earning roughly $90,000 annually, with overtime and benefits, according to her complaint. Now, it says, she receives $2,182 per month from workers' comp, or, a little under $550 a week.
Malcolm's lawsuit blames the Otis Elevator Company for her troubles, including personal injury, emotional distress and economic damages. (The Empire State Building and its management are not named as defendants in the suit.)
It claims Otis Elevator breached a 'heightened duty of care as these elevators and more specifically the one involved is specifically used for income-earning purposes and intended to lift very high loads up very far for millions of people annually who have paid a fee to go up to the observation deck.'
'This incident was foreseeable,' Malcolm's complaint alleges. 'There was a history of problems with the elevators in The Empire State Building is that they have a tendency to break down and the employees from the Otis Elevator Company would take those elevators out of rotation, fix them, and sometimes they fix it or put it out for the entire day[,] depending on the issue.'
Yet, Malcolm accuses Otis Elevator of 'allowing' the elevator's condition to deteriorate by failing to – among other things – keep 'all the components of the elevator car, assembly, associated mechanicals and cables, lift electric motors, indicators, [and] sensors… in working order for the safety of the public.'
As a result, Malcolm's complaint says she experienced severe pain and suffering, emotional distress, and anguish. Malcolm wanted to continue working at the Empire State Building 'into her later years,' but is now unable to, according to the complaint.
She is suing on multiple causes of action, including negligence, elevator phobia and loss of employment, and is seeking monetary damages to be determined in court.
A spokesman for Otis, the world's largest elevator company, told The Independent, 'It would not be appropriate for us to comment on a pending legal matter.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
4 hours ago
- Daily Mail
'Wedding from hell' subjected guests to screaming children, a cash bar charging for WATER and food containing flies - leaving one attendee 'violently sick'
A woman revealed she was invited to 'a disaster of a wedding' where children screamed throughout the entire ceremony and she had to pay for water. Taking to Reddit, the woman, from the US, recounted what she called 'a mess' of a day- one so chaotic she ended up leaving early. From the unclear invitation to a chaotic ceremony, sweltering heat, and even a physical fight between family members, the guest claimed the whole day felt like a 'practical joke'. In the post the guest detailed how they received minimal information ahead of the event, just a time and place, with no wedding website or dress code guidance. They arrived to find the ceremony was outdoors on a blistering 95F (35C) day. However, to make matters worse, the ceremony was interrupted by screaming children whose parents failed to intervene. Things went downhill from there, as she discovered that at the bar even water wasn't free, and the venue was cash-only. It turns out dinner brought no relief as flies had descended on the buffet, and within hours, the guest says she became violently ill. She explained: 'There's FLIES ALL OVER THE FOOD. Seriously, all up in the food. I take the smallest amount possible to be polite. 'I was so hungry and desperate that I did take a few bites. Within hours, I was creating jobs for local plumbers. 'Next, dessert! Can't mess up dessert, right? Wrong. So wrong. Flies on the dessert, as expected by now. But how am I supposed to eat the dessert? 'There are no plates, napkins, forks, nothing. The buffet equipment has been cleared. So I watched as people walked around holding dessert in their hands.' Just when she thought it couldn't get any worse drunken family drama, out-of-control children, and a chaotic round of speeches, including one that triggered a physical altercation between the groom and the bride's brother, capped off the night. She explained: 'At this point, I just start taking notes for this post, six speeches in total, one of them actually good! Sweet, heartfelt, funny. I forgot where I was for a second. 'The rest… roasts, angry bride, brother started a fight with the groom. And I mean a literal fight. 'All I gathered was that it had something to do with the bride. The fight got taken to the lawn, and when people gathered to assist, I slipped out and came home.' She concluded: 'I truly don't feel like this was real life. Like this had to be a practical joke, right?? I may politely decline invitations I have no information about moving forward.' Many rushed to the comments to leave their own thoughts on the 'disastrous' wedding, with some questioning if it was legal to charge for water when selling alcohol. One person wrote: 'Not providing free water when you're selling booze is straight up illegal in my jurisdiction. 'The business and the duty manager could both get a hefty fine for violating the host responsibility conditions of their liquor license if they tried to charge for water here.' Another said: 'It's only required in licensed venues (ie where you can buy alcohol). Although customarily, most cafes and restaurants will provide tap water for free, they don't legally have to if they don't sell alcohol.' Someone else added: 'It doesn't sound like they hired anyone and this wasn't a business at all. 'The couple just chose a spot somewhere and set up their 'wedding'. This would also explain why there wasn't anyone to protect the food from insects or even from the heat which probably also contributed to OP's intestinal distress later on.' Another joked: 'This wasn't a wedding. It was a survival challenge.'


The Independent
5 hours ago
- The Independent
PHOTO COLLECTION: AP Top Photos of the Day, Monday, July 28, 2025
News PHOTO COLLECTION: AP Top Photos of the Day, Monday, July 28, 2025 Show all 13


Telegraph
5 hours ago
- Telegraph
Dear Richard Madeley: My wife and I no longer seem to be able to sleep in the same room
Dear Richard, My wife and I are in our late 50s, and lately we've both started to sleep more lightly, as seems common at this stage of life. Sometimes she or, less commonly, I migrate to the spare room for some portion of the night, where we can read for a bit and hopefully drift off to sleep again. Usually I go to bed an hour or so after my wife, and she's already asleep when I get there. My problem is that I have started to feel really tense when I get into bed, which makes me more fidgety. This often wakes her up, which I feel bad about. I'm not worrying about work, as she says she often does in the night – just about waking her. I sleep more soundly when she's away, though I also miss her presence a great deal. And I've tried forsaking the late-night film and going to bed at the same time as her, but that doesn't seem to work. I told her that I was twitchy in the night because I was worried about waking her and she seemed to appreciate the kindness of the thought but then got quite defensive, as if I was accusing her of being oversensitive. I realise we're lucky to have a spare room – though our bedroom is my favourite room in the house, and I remember how happy it made me to think I'd be sharing it with her every night. Is it just the new normal when you get to our age, or is there something we can do to break these cycles? – S, via email Dear S, I can see the ribbons of nascent guilt rippling through your letter, and I feel rather sorry for you. There's no need for such self-chastisement, S. You should step back from this sleep scenario and see it for what it is – a timely readjustment to your marital arrangements. Let's deal with the elephant in the room straight off. Sex. You don't have to sleep together – as in zizz together – to make love, S. Actually spending time mutually unconscious, pillow-to-pillow, is not a requirement for an active love life. Sex and sleeping can be mutually exclusive. In fact, many couples swear by it. And yes, you are right. Judging purely by the number of letters I receive that are broadly similar to yours, advancing years bring lighter, more fractured sleep patterns. You are not alone in finding sleep in a single bed more restful and refreshing than in twitching, super-conscious coupledom. My advice is to go with the flow and stop beating yourself up about this. You're both getting older and things change, physically and psychologically. If you sleep better apart, and you have the means to do so – then sleep apart! It's not a betrayal or a failure or a calculated insult, and it's certainly not, as I say, a comment on how attractive you find one another. It's simply the next phase, the next chapter, in the long story of your lives together. Don't be frightened to turn the page. Sleep well, the pair of you.