US recovers bodies of nine skiers killed in California avalanche

Victims include six close friends and 3 professional guides as authorities launch investigations into deadly avalanche in Lake Tahoe.

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Victims include six close friends and 3 professional guides. / AP

The bodies of nine backcountry skiers killed earlier this week were recovered Saturday after an avalanche struck the California side of Lake Tahoe, according to officials.

Authorities said the group was on a day-trip skiing expedition on Tuesday when the avalanche struck.

Six of those killed were close friends described as “passionate, skilled skiers", along with three professional guides.

Relatives identified the victims as Carrie Atkin, Liz Clabaugh, Danielle Keatley, Kate Morse, Caroline Sekar and Kate Vitt.

The Nevada County Sheriff’s Office confirmed that three employees from the Blackbird Mountain Guides, Michael Henry, 30, Andrew Alissandratos, 34, and Nicole Choo, 42, also died in the avalanche.

“We are grateful that we can bring them home,” said Shannan Moon, the sheriff of Nevada County, California, as reported by NBC News.

Five of the victims were recovered and airlifted on Friday by helicopter.

Fifteen skiers were caught in the avalanche. Six survived, including two who sustained non-life-threatening injuries.

Multiple agencies have launched investigations into the avalanche.

The Sierra Avalanche Centre will prepare an incident report and is examining possible workplace safety violations, and the sheriff’s office is conducting its own inquiry.

The storm has dumped 1.7 metres of snow in the past week alone, with wind gusts reaching 90 kilometres per hour.

The Colorado Avalanche Information Centre noted that this season has already seen six other avalanche fatalities in the US.