National Post (National Edition)

Canadian skydiver killed was on last jump of day

Crashed into roof in Southern California

- SIDHARTHA BANERJEE The Canadian Press The Canadian Press

MONTREAL • The family of Canadian skydiver AimeJean St. Hilaire Adam says it is dealing with a deep loss after his sudden death this week in California.

“We knew it was a sport that had its risks and we were worried when we’d find out he was jumping, but we weren’t prepared for this,” said Marie-Anne Adam, the 27-year-old’s cousin.

But the family can take some solace knowing he died doing what he loved, she added.

St. Hilaire Adam died Monday after coming into contact with a fellow jumper mid-air while wearing a wingsuit. He lost consciousn­ess and slammed into the roof of a home southwest of Perris Valley Airport, a popular spot for skydivers about 112 kilometres from Los Angeles.

He did land under a parachute but was pronounced dead by authoritie­s.

A witness told KTLA that the skydiver’s main parachute was never deployed and did not open.

By the time Ali Muhassen observed the solo skydiver, he appeared to be unconsciou­s.

“No movement at all, his head was down, neck down, arms just flailing around,” Muhassen recalled.

“I guess his emergency chute deployed, and it kind of picked him up a little bit and it took him to the house behind us,” Muhassen said. “He hit the house hard,” he told KCBS. “He was definitely unconsciou­s before he hit the house.”

Christina Blanco, who was inside the home when the skydiver crashed onto the roof, told KABC she was in “complete shock.”

She added, “I was like, no, this can’t be happening ... and then it took so long for us to find out if he was OK or not, just waiting. My heart just dropped when they were like, ‘No, he’s not OK.’ ”

At least one man who lives near the home where St. Hilaire-Adam landed said he has seen skydivers land near his home — but never on the street.

“Three houses away,” Adam Gaylor, who has lived in the neighbourh­ood three years, told the San Bernardino Sun. “Way too close.”

Gaylor was working a few miles away when the skydiver crashed into the roof.

He said it would be difficult to stay in a home after learning someone died on the roof. “I don’t know if I could still live here,” he said.

St. Hilaire Adam, who is survived by his parents and a younger sister, was well loved by friends and family and had a penchant for pushing the limits, his cousin said.

“Ever since he was young, he always needed adrenalin: snowboardi­ng, surfing,” she said, adding he worked as a lineman all over Western Canada, Newfoundla­nd and the United States.

“The job (lineman) involved helicopter­s on towers that were ultra-high,” she added. “He always liked the adrenalin.”

The native of Ripon, Que., had most recently lived in Calgary but also maintained an apartment in Quebec.

St. Hilaire Adam was taking part in the Wide Open Wingsuit Series, a three-day racing contest in which competitor­s wear high-performanc­e wingsuits and race each other through the air.

Dan Brodsky-Chensfeld of Skydive Perris, a recreation­al skydiving centre that hosted the event, said it’s the first death at the facility in the last 500,000 jumps.

Brodsky-Chensfeld added it came at the end of the event.

“That was the last jump,” he said. “It’s terrible, everyone is really devastated.”

Brodsky-Chensfeld, an accomplish­ed skydiver himself with 27,000 jumps under his belt, didn’t know the young Canadian personally, but was told he was well loved in the tight-knit skydiving community and was a respected wingsuit pilot.

He said the U.S. Federal Aviation Administra­tion is looking into the equipment, but it appeared in good order and operated normally.

Brodsky-Chensfeld said there is occasional­ly contact when exiting a plane in a wingsuit. In this case, the other pilot hurt his leg but was otherwise unscathed.

“It’s one of those things where if the guys had been a foot (apart) one way or the other, they would have completely missed each other,” Brodsky-Chensfeld said. “Had there been a tenth of a second difference, they would have missed each other.”

He said safety is taken seriously in such a dangerous sport. “As much as the public might believe that skydivers are a bunch of adrenalin junkies who are just trying to push the limits, the opposite is largely true,” he said. “We try to really mitigate the risk and keep it as safe as possible.”

Marie-Anne Adam said her cousin will always be remembered.

“He’ll remain a legend to us, he was someone exceptiona­l who left us in circumstan­ces where he was practising his passion,” she said. “We don’t think he had regrets — he always followed his dreams.” shoes to fill in following Dr. Kendall.”

Making good health care more equitable among Indigenous communitie­s as well as children and youth will underline her work, Henry said.

Focusing on building support for people struggling with substance use and mental health issues will be the crux of her work on the overdose epidemic, she said.

Providing safe drugs to people with the chronic relapsing disease of addiction is key, Henry said.

“Right now the drug supply on the street is toxic and it’s killing people.”

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