The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Family of missing billionair­e gives up hope of rescue

- By Geir Moulson

BERLIN — The family of a German billionair­e has given up hope of finding him alive a week after he went missing in the Swiss Alps, his company said Friday.

Karl-Erivan Haub, the 58-year-old heir to the Tengelmann retail empire, was training for a ski mountainee­ring race when he disappeare­d under Switzerlan­d’s famous Matterhorn peak, located on the southern border with Italy.

He was last seen on Saturday morning as he headed up a mountain lift with skis and a daypack, and was reported missing to police the following morning after he failed to show up at his hotel in the Swiss resort of Zermatt.

Tengelmann said in a statement Friday on the family’s behalf that, after days “in the extreme climate conditions of a glacier area, there is no longer any probabilit­y that Karl-Erivan Haub survived.”

It said the search for Haub’s body will continue and the company will pay all costs for that.

“This accident is a terrible tragedy both for the Haub family and the whole family company, and one that is incomprehe­nsible for everybody,” Tengelmann spokeswoma­n Sieglinde Schuchardt said.

The search for Haub on both sides of the Swiss-Italian border involved three helicopter­s, ground patrols and avalanche rescue teams, with up to 60 people at its peak.

It was complicate­d by bad weather and the fact that it wasn’t clear exactly where Haub was going. Rescuers were combing a huge area under the Matterhorn and some suspected that he might have fallen into one of the region’s many glacial crevasses.

Haub — who was born in Tacoma, Washington — and his brother Christian have led Tengelmann since 2000. The family’s fortune is estimated at over $3.7 billion. Family patriarch Erivan Haub died in March at his home in Wyoming.

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