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Tag: Castle Peak avalanche

  • Bodies of all 9 avalanche victims safely recovered, CA authorities say

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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.

    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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  • Officials work to lower risk of deadly slides to recover bodies of California avalanche victims

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    TRUCKEE, Calif. — Officials worked to lower the risks of more deadly slides Friday in the area where an avalanche struck in California’s Sierra Nevada so crews could safely recover the bodies of the people killed.

    Rescue crews loaded up a snow vehicle with skis and other supplies and headed toward the area near Castle Peak, northwest of Lake Tahoe, while helicopters circled overhead. Avalanche mitigation work is designed to intentionally release unstable snowpack to reduce the risk when rescue crews go in.

    The Nevada County Sheriff’s office previously said the mitigation work would include controlled explosions, but later said Friday’s efforts only involved using water to break up snow. The work was done in partnership with Pacific Gas & Electric.

    Brutal weather and the threat of more avalanches have kept crews from safely recovering the bodies of the eight people killed and another still missing from Tuesday’s avalanche, which was roughly the size of a football field.

    Authorities are investigating the avalanche, including whether criminal negligence played a role in the tragedy, a sheriff’s office leading one of several investigations said Friday.

    Why the tour company that organized the backcountry ski trip didn’t cancel in the face of a powerful storm and what their guides knew as the weather worsened are the questions being considered.

    Both the Nevada County Sheriff’s office and a state agency that regulates workplace safety have opened investigations. Ashley Quadros, a spokesperson with the sheriff’s office, declined on Friday to share more information, saying it is an open investigation.

    Six of the people who died were part of a close-knit group of friends who were experienced backcountry skiers and knew how to navigate the alpine wilderness, their families said. The three others who are dead or presumed dead were guides.

    “We are devastated beyond words,” the families said in a statement released Thursday through a spokesperson. The women were mothers, wives and friends who “connected through the love of the outdoors,” they said, and were carrying avalanche safety equipment and prepared for backcountry travel.

    Victims were loved by their neighbors

    The six were identified as Carrie Atkin, Liz Clabaugh, Danielle Keatley, Kate Morse, Caroline Sekar and Kate Vitt, and they lived in the San Francisco Bay Area, in Idaho and in the Lake Tahoe area. The families asked for privacy while they grieve.

    Just north of San Francisco, where Keatley lived with her family in the city of Larkspur, resident Rob Bramble was shocked to learn that the friendly woman he would say hello to in passing was among the victims.

    “She was just a great mom. I’d always see her with the kids, picking them up, just seemed like a great mom and a great family,” said Bramble, whose daughter babysat for the family a few times.

    Keatley and her husband owned a wine business and often shared their namesake wines at community events, Larkspur Mayor Stephanie Andre said.

    “She was warm, kind and exuded a special quality that drew people to her,” Andre said in a statement.

    Morse also lived with her husband and three children north of San Francisco, and worked in the biotech industry, according to her LinkedIn profile. Vitt previously worked at SiriusXM and Pandora, according to her online profile, and lived north of the city with her two sons and husband.

    Atkin was a former corporate executive who lived in Lake Tahoe with her husband and two children, according to her leadership coaching website. She’s a talented student who could “run like the wind” and made it to state finals for hurdling two years in a row, recalled Jerome Bearden, her high school hurdling coach. She later had a track and field scholarship to Harvard.

    “Everybody liked Carrie,” said Bearden, who heard about her death from a former student on Friday. “She was a good person.”

    Sekar and Clabaugh were sisters, their brother, McAlister Clabaugh, told The New York Times. Sekar was a mother of two who lived in San Francisco.

    Liz Clabaugh was a nurse who oversaw a new graduate nursing residency program at St. Luke’s Health System in Boise, Idaho. She was also a mom and ran a Facebook page featuring encouragement and advice for new nurses. Photos showed that her family were frequent adventurers outdoors.

    Clabaugh also had served as a health volunteer in Zambia with the Peace Corps, according to a Facebook page for Peace Corps alumni.

    The names of the other victims have not been released.

    The 15 skiers began their three-day trip Sunday, just as warnings about the storm were intensifying. By early Tuesday, officials cautioned that avalanches were expected.

    Avalanche safety experts say it is not uncommon for backcountry skiers to go out when there is an avalanche watch or even a warning.

    Blackbird Mountain Guides, which was leading the expedition, said the guides who were on the trek were trained or certified in backcountry skiing and were instructors with the American Institute for Avalanche Research and Education.

    “We don’t have all the answers yet, and it may be some time before we do,” founder Zeb Blais said in a statement. “In the meantime, please keep those impacted in your hearts.”

    The slide was the deadliest in the U.S. since 1981, when 11 climbers were killed on Mount Rainier in Washington state.
    ___

    Watson reported from San Diego and Har from Marin County, California. Associated Press writers Olga Rodriguez in San Francisco; John Seewer in Toledo, Ohio; Hallie Golden in Seattle; Jessica Hill in Las Vegas; and Matthew Brown in Billings, Montana, contributed.

    Copyright © 2026 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

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  • 6 skiers swept up in California avalanche rescued; 9 unaccounted for near Tahoe

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    Authorities announced late Tuesday night that six people who survived a backcountry avalanche had been rescued, though the search remained for nine others who had been swept up in the slide near Truckee.

    Search and rescue teams worked through a record-breaking storm after the slide was reported about 11:30 a.m. near Castle Peak in Nevada County. The severity of injuries for those who had been plucked out of the snow varied, and two people were taken to a hospital, according to a 10:45 p.m. update from the Nevada County Sheriff’s Office.

    “Due to extreme weather conditions, it took several hours for rescue personnel to safely reach the skiers and transport them to safety where they were medically evaluated by Truckee Fire,” the statement said.

    The Moonshine Ink, a Tahoe-area newspaper, first reported the authorities successfully reached the six people and hauled them to safety.

    Nevada County Sheriff's Office personnel work from a mobile command center at the site of an avalanche near Truckee as teams worked Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026, to rescue people from the slide at happened near Castle Peak. Late Tuesday, authorities said six people had been plucked from the snow, two of which were hospitalized. Nine people remain unaccounted for.
    Nevada County Sheriff’s Office personnel work from a mobile command center at the site of an avalanche near Truckee as teams worked Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026, to rescue people from the slide at happened near Castle Peak. Late Tuesday, authorities said six people had been plucked from the snow, two of which were hospitalized. Nine people remain unaccounted for. Nevada County Sheriff’s Office

    After more than 12 hours, the search for the remaining victims was continuing Tuesday night. The Sheriff’s Office also revised the total number of people still missing from the slide to nine, one less than rescuers’ initial report.

    “That number has been updated to reflect 15 people who actually went on the trip,” the Sheriff’s Office said.

    A news conference on the rescue and continued search efforts was expected to take place at 11 a.m. Wednesday in Grass Valley.

    Nevada County sheriff’s officials initially said “several” skiers were reported missing after the avalanche Tuesday morning in the Sierra Nevada’s Castle Peak area, north of Soda Springs and northwest of Truckee. The Nevada County Sheriff’s Office, the sheriff’s search and rescue team and other agencies responded around 11:30 a.m.

    The reported avalanche came amid a powerful winter storm that has dumped multiple feet of snow in the mountains and prompted warnings of high avalanche danger in the Lake Tahoe backcountry into Wednesday. A backcountry avalanche warning for the greater Lake Tahoe area is in place until at least 5 a.m. Wednesday, according to the Sierra Avalanche Center.

    The National Weather Service has a winter storm warning in place through 10 p.m. Thursday for the entire Sierra Nevada range, warning that elevations above 3,500 feet could get 4 to 8 feet of snow by the end of the storm.

    Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office in a statement Tuesday evening said Newsom has been briefed on the incident.

    “The state is coordinating an all-hands search and rescue effort with local partners and deploying resources to support the active response,” the Governor’s Office wrote.

    The Sheriff’s Office planned a news conference Wednesday morning to provide an update.

    According to a database of avalanche fatalities from around the country compiled by the Colorado Avalanche Information Center, if the 10 missing people are not found alive, it will be the deadliest avalanche in state history and among the deadliest nationwide.

    The deadliest California avalanche appears to have occurred in 1982 at Alpine Meadows Ski Resort, when seven people were killed, according to the database.

    Backcountry skiing popular near avalanche site

    The terrain around Castle Peak is one of the Tahoe area’s more popular zones for backcountry skiers of varying abilities and experience. Skiers can access both low-angled terrain that is considered safer during increased avalanche risks, and also steep slopes.

    But under the avalanche conditions highlighted by the Sierra Avalanche Center on Tuesday, skiing or traveling across any backcountry terrain carried significant risk. Even if a skier is on a slope that is not steep enough to give way to an avalanche itself, avalanches can start on higher, steeper terrain and come down onto the skier.

    The Castle Peak area is also home to the Peter Grubb Hut, a historic hut built in the late 1930s. It was not immediately clear whether the group caught in the avalanche Tuesday was using one of the huts.

    Ski guide company shares statement

    Ski guiding company Blackbird Mountain Guides issued a statement on its website Tuesday evening saying a group of clients and guides had been traveling out of the Frog Lake huts when they were caught in the avalanche.

    “A total of 12 clients and four guides had been staying at the Frog Lake huts since February 15,” the statement read. “The group was in the process of returning to the trailhead at the conclusion of a three-day trip when the incident occurred.”

    The Truckee-based company’s leadership was working with the Nevada County Sheriff’s Office and was also in touch with the emergency contacts of both guides and clients, according to the statement.

    Blackbird’s statement did not explicitly say a Blackbird Mountain Guides trip was involved in the avalanche, or whether the incident may have involved more than one guiding company. But the firm noted that Blackbird “is in direct contact with the emergency contacts of the affected clients and guides.”

    A voicemail seeking comment from the company, left Tuesday afternoon before Blackbird Mountain Guides published its statement, was not returned.

    The Castle Peak area is home to several backcountry cabins used by guide companies and private parties for overnight trips where people ski multiple days and stay in the huts. The Frog Lake huts are made up of three lodging huts with sleeping quarters, plus a communal hut with a kitchen, fireplace and gathering area, according to the website for the Truckee Donner Land Trust, which runs the facilities.

    Blackbird’s website displays an option to book tours for groups of up to eight clients at a time at the Frog Lake huts.

    Sunday, the day the group had apparently gone into the backcountry huts, was a picturesque day in the mountains, with blue skies and warm temperatures throughout the day. The first of a series of winter storms, which had been broadcast by forecasters for days prior to the weekend, began to hit the area early Monday. Snow accumulated rapidly and steadily throughout the day Monday, and authorities closed Interstate 80, which crosses Donner Pass near the Castle Peak area, to traffic several times that day as wind and snow created whiteout conditions.

    The storm continued to intensify on Tuesday, some Tahoe Area ski resorts announced closures throughout the day due to wind and snow intensity. The website OpenSnow, which provides detailed winter weather forecasts for skiers, reported Tuesday evening that as much as 2 feet of snow had fallen in some places by 6 p.m.

    Such heavy and rapidly accumulating snowfall was likely to drive a natural avalanche cycle, the Sierra Avalanche Center reported, when snow slides could start without a human trigger.

    Castle Peak saw earlier fatal avalanche this season

    The Castle Peak area had already experienced one deadly avalanche this winter.

    On Jan. 5, a 42-year-old snowmobiler from Bend, Oregon, was killed after triggering a wind slab avalanche on the backside of Castle Peak, according to the Colorado Avalanche Information Center and previous Bee reporting.

    The man was riding with a group of experienced snowmobilers when he was buried in the slide. His companions located him using avalanche beacons and began CPR, assisted by an off-duty Truckee Fire medic who happened upon the scene, authorities said.

    The man, identified as Chris Scott Thomason, did not survive.

    Authorities said the five riders were equipped with appropriate backcountry safety gear, including beacons, and that two members of the group were local to the area. Two members of the party were CPR certified.

    That incident followed a series of winter storms that dropped several feet of snow across the Sierra and elevated avalanche danger in the region — conditions similar to those in place Tuesday.

    Authorities in Placer County on Tuesday also reported the death of a 53-year-old skier involved in an accident Sunday morning on an advanced run at Northstar California Resort in Truckee. That incident involved two skiers and came before the brunt of this week’s winter storm.

    Also Tuesday, rescuers in El Dorado County were looking for two people who were stranded in the storm along Morman Emigrant Trail, 45 miles from the avalanche site in an unrelated search. Authorities from Amador County who were assisting in the search said crews used tracked vehicles to navigate the extreme weather. Authorities received unconfirmed information that the two adults had been stranded since Monday afternoon.

    This story was originally published February 18, 2026 at 1:04 AM.

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    Ishani Desai

    The Sacramento Bee

    Ishani Desai is a government watchdog reporter for The Sacramento Bee. She previously covered crime and courts for The Bakersfield Californian.

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    Ishani Desai

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