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An unidentified member of the Nevada County Sheriff Search and Rescue team returns to the sheriff’s office during the search for avalanche victims in the Castle Peak area on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026.
hamezcua@sacbee.com
The bodies of all nine people who died in Tuesday’s avalanche in the Lake Tahoe area have been safely recovered from the slide area near Castle Peak in Nevada County, local authorities announced Saturday.
Fifteen backcountry skiers in total were caught in the avalanche reported in the Castle Peak area near Donner Pass — a group of tight-knit mothers with connections to Sugar Bowl Academy, an elite ski and snowboarding prep school, along with four experienced guides from Blackbird Mountain Guides.
Six of those skiers — one of the guides and five of the clients — survived the avalanche and were rescued. Authorities on Wednesday confirmed eight of the remaining skiers had died, with the ninth missing and presumed dead.
Nevada County Sheriff Shannan Moon identified all nine victims in a Saturday news conference in Truckee:
- Carrie Atkin, 42, of South Lake Tahoe
- Liz Clabaugh, 52, of Boise, Idaho
- Kate Morse, 45, of Soda Springs and Tiburon
- Caroline Sekar, 45, of Soda Springs and San Francisco
- Kate Vitt, 43, of Greenbrae
- Andrew Alissandratos, 34, Verdi, Nevada
- Michael Henry, 30, of Tampa, Florida
- Danielle Keatley, 44, of Soda Springs and Larkspur
- Nicole Choo, 42, of South Lake Tahoe
Alissandratos, Henry and Choo were guides with Blackbird. Family members identified the six other victims in a statement Friday.
The avalanche was reported at approximately 11:30 a.m. Tuesday, when dispatchers received a call that multiple skiers had been buried. Family members and officials with Blackbird Mountain Guides said the group was on the final day of a three-day trip to the Frog Lake huts and were returning to the trailhead when the avalanche struck.
More than 46 personnel from the Nevada County Sheriff’s Office and regional search-and-rescue teams responded, including volunteers from Nevada County, Placer County, Tahoe Nordic Search and Rescue and Washoe County.
Authorities said survivors initially recovered three deceased members of their own group before rescue teams arrived. Ski teams accessed the area using two separate routes and made contact with survivors at 5:36 p.m. Tuesday.
Rescuers located five additional victims that night, but worsening weather and avalanche danger forced crews to suspend recovery operations until mitigation efforts could be completed.
Nevada County Sheriff’s Office Lt. Dennis Haack, the incident commander, said officials determined it was unsafe to insert personnel without first reducing avalanche risk. Crews remained on standby Wednesday and Thursday as storms moved through the region.
On Friday, authorities worked with Pacific Gas & Electric Co. and the California Highway Patrol to conduct avalanche mitigation using helicopters. PG&E deployed water drops using what officials described as a “bamboo bucket” system to reduce instability in the snowpack.
After aerial reconnaissance flights and mitigation work, search-and-rescue members were flown into the site by CHP helicopter. The California National Guard later assisted with hoist operations using a Black Hawk helicopter.
Each victim was hoisted from the field by helicopter and transported to Sno-Cats staged at the Frog Lake huts before being taken to the sheriff’s staging area, where the chief deputy coroner was waiting.
Officials said 42 search-and-rescue volunteers were assigned to the operation on the final day alone.
The last person was recovered at 10:58 a.m. Saturday, authorities said. Four were recovered Friday and five on Saturday morning, after snow conditions made recovery efforts too dangerous earlier in the week.
Two of the six who survived the avalanche were taken to hospitals. One was released Tuesday night. The other’s condition was not clear Saturday but their injuries were not life-threatening, Moon said.
Authorities described the avalanche as a “D2.5” — on a scale where a D2 can bury or injure a person and a D3 can destroy a house. The slide path was estimated to be roughly the length of a football field.
Moon called the five-day recovery effort one that drew extraordinary cooperation from local, state and federal partners and acknowledged the toll on rescuers and families.
“I want to recognize the strength in the volunteers of all the search and rescue units that our agencies truly rely on,” Moon said. “They are pretty amazing people, and it’s an honor to work with them.”
The Tahoe National Forest temporarily closed the Castle Peak area during recovery operations. Forest Supervisor Chris Carlton said the agency intends to reopen the area once operations are complete, noting that “this is the public’s land, and they love to recreate on it,” while urging visitors to use caution.
This story was originally published February 21, 2026 at 3:41 PM.
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Michael McGough,Nicole Buss
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