Santa Cruz Sentinel

Tahoe ski resort faces lawsuits after avalanche killed a skier

- By Scott Sonner

RENO, NEV. >> The widow and a friend of a skier killed in an avalanche at a Lake Tahoe ski resort last year have filed separate lawsuits accusing the resort of negligentl­y rushing to open the slopes in unsafe conditions for a holiday weekend that’s typically one of the season’s busiest.

Cole Comstock, 34, of Blairsden, California, was killed and his close friend, Kaley Bloom, was seriously injured when they were swept up in the avalanche on an Alpine Meadows ski run on Jan. 17, 2020 — the Friday before Martin Luther King Jr. Day. No one else was seriously hurt.

Bloom and Cole’s widow, Caitlin Raymond, recently filed the lawsuits in Placer County Superior Court. They seek unspecifie­d damages from Alpine Meadows on accusation­s of negligence, gross negligence and breach of contract. Raymond’s lawsuit also alleged the resort was to blame for her late husband’s death.

The resort had closed the day before Comstock and Bloom went skiing, after several days of heavy snow plus 11 to 22 inches of snow and high winds that dramatical­ly increased avalanche risks, the lawsuits claimed.

The National Weather Service in Reno reported wind gusts up to 116 mph (186 kph) at the top of Alpine Meadows the night before the avalanche.

Alpine Meadows “premature opening” that Friday “was in response to public and economic pressure to open that particular lift and callous disregard for the dangerous combinatio­n of conditions,” according to Bloom’s lawsuit filed on Feb. 2. He says he suffered severe and ongoing injuries and has suffered.

The avalanche happened at 10:16 a.m. after avalanche mitigation work was performed in the area prior to opening to skiers and snowboarde­rs for the day, the resort said previously in a statement. That work often involves the use of air cannons or other explosive detonation­s to intentiona­lly trigger smaller, less hazardous avalanches.

“While we cannot comment on ongoing litigation, January 17, 2020 was a devastatin­g day for our team at Squaw Valley Alpine Meadows, and we continue to share our deepest sympathies with the family and friends of those affected,” Alex Spychalsky, a spokeswoma­n for both of the neighborin­g resorts, said in an emailed statement.

Raymond’s lawsuit filed on Jan. 29 says Alpine Meadows “should not have opened the ski run under the circumstan­ces.”

Most skiers who buy ski resort passes must sign release forms warning that participat­ing in winter activities “can be dangerous and involve the risk of injury or death.”

But Raymond’s lawsuit said the resort increased the risks beyond those normally assumed by skiers because Cole and Bloom believed they were skiing on a run that was safe because avalanche mitigation efforts had been performed earlier that day.

Reopening the runs Friday after they’d been closed the day before “created a false and reckless illusion of safety,” the lawsuit said. “Inadequate and/or incomplete mitigation measures did not decrease or mitigate the risks, but instead further increased the risk and turned a dangerous area into a deadly one.”

Raymond’s lawsuit notes that most ski fatalities occur outside of ski resort boundaries and that in-bounds avalanche deaths are rare.

Comstock was an experience­d skier who grew up in the Sierra Nevada and skied both in-bounds and out-of-bounds depending on the conditions of the day and informatio­n from the resort and the ski patrol, his widow said in the lawsuit.

Raymond was skiing on the other side of the mountain when she got a phone call from friends telling her there had been an avalanche. She went to wait for her husband beneath a chairlift.

That’s when she saw the ski patrol pulling a stretcher with someone covered with snow and blood. When they stopped and began administer­ing CPR to the victim, she recognized her husband’s maroon ski boots and realized it was her him.

She said blood spewed from his mouth with each push on his chest as the ski patrol team took turns at CPR for 45 minutes.

 ?? PHOTOS BY SCOTT SONNER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Skiers leave the parking lot at Alpine Meadows ski resort in Alpine Meadows, where avalanche killed one skier and seriously injured another.
PHOTOS BY SCOTT SONNER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Skiers leave the parking lot at Alpine Meadows ski resort in Alpine Meadows, where avalanche killed one skier and seriously injured another.
 ??  ?? The chairlift at the bottom of the Subway run at Alpine Meadows Ski Resort in Alpine Meadows, where one person was killed and another seriously injured in an avalanche.
The chairlift at the bottom of the Subway run at Alpine Meadows Ski Resort in Alpine Meadows, where one person was killed and another seriously injured in an avalanche.

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