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01
AUG
2011

Another Yosemite Tragedy: Fatal Slip and Fall From Half-Dome

Yosemite Accident Lawyers
A San Ramon woman slipped and fell to her death while descending Half-Dome in Yosemite.

Yosemite’s second fatal accident in two weeks took the life of a 26-year-old San Ramon woman who slipped and fell from the Half Dome cables at the national park on Sunday.

•   A hiker and three friends who had a permit to climb Half Dome were among about 20 hikers who made the ascent Sunday morning.

•  At 11 a.m., park officials started sending Twitter messages warning of a thunderstorm. The rains made the granite peak especially slippery.

•   The San Ramon woman successfully climbed Half Dome but slipped and fell 600 feet down from the park-installed cables on her way down. She died at the scene.

The accident occurred shortly before noon, according to a report in the San Ramon Express.

Yosemite Park Ranger Kari Cobb said Hayley LaFlamme had had a permit to climb Half Dome. She made the ascent with three friends. They were among a group of about 20 hikers who climbed the mountain that morning despite the possibility of rain, which can make the granite peak extremely slippery.

At about 11 a.m., park officials started sending messages on Twitter about a thunder storm, according to an Associated Press report. But LaFlamme and her friends were already on the mountain.

The San Ramon hiker successfully made the 8.5-mile climb to the top of Half Dome. She was on her way back down, using cables installed by park officials, when she somehow slipped and fell 600 feet down from the shoulder of the dome where the cables end, Cobb said.

The park’s emergency communications center received a 911 call reporting that a hiker had fallen from the cables. Park rangers responded to the scene but LaFlamme already had died.

The fatal accident was the second in two weeks. On July 19, three hikers were swept over the rushing Vernal Fall after they climbed over a metal railing and entered the Merced River. (Read more: Presumed Dead: Three Hikers Swept Over Raging Yosemite Waterfall)

“A lot of people who visit Yosemite aren’t necessarily familiar with nature,” Cobb said. “They are really out of their element and may not understand the force of nature and what they may encounter in nature.”

But Fresno State psychology professor Paul Price doesn’t blame the park visitors, especially when trails are kept open under dangerous conditions.

“If the trail isn’t closed, people tend to take that as a source of information: Wouldn’t they tell us not to do it if it were dangerous?” Price said.

The last person to fall and die on Half Dome was Majoj Kumar, also of San Ramon. He died in June 2009. The hikers who witnessed the fall were so frightened that 40 of them refused to move and had to be rescued, Cobb said.

Yosemite Injury Lawyers

The trial attorneys at Blackman Legal Group, a California-based law firm founded by renowned trial attorney Clifford Blackman, have successfully represented injured travelers and their families for more than 35 years.  The nationwide toll-free number to call for a free consultation is 1-866-692-8126.

20
JUL
2011

Presumed Dead: Three Hikers Swept Over Raging Yosemite Waterfall

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Three hikers are presumed dead after they plunged over the edge of Yosemite’s rushing Vernal Fall.  (AP Photo) Click on photo to see full size.

Three hikers slipped and fell and were swept over the edge of a raging waterfall in Yosemite National Park on Tuesday.

•   Members of a church group visiting Yosemite hiked up a steep trail and climbed over a metal rail to step into the rushing Merced River for photographs.

•   Two of them slipped and fell and another who tried to save them also slipped and fell.

•   Within a few seconds, all three of them were swept over the precipice of Vernal Fall and plunged more than 300 feet to the rocky river below.

•   All three are presumed dead.

The hikers — 22-year-old Hormiz David of Modesto, 27-year-old Ninos Yacoub of Turlock, and 21-year-old Ramina Badal of Modesto — were visiting Yosemite with members of the St. George’s Church in Ceres, according to an Associated Press report.

The group, including pastor Genard Lazar, arrived at the national park at about 10:30 a.m. and hiked the steep Mist Trail to the top of Vernal Falls, where the treacherous Merced River rushes over the precipice and plummets 317 feet to the rocky river below.

Yosemite Accident Lawyers
High runoff from the Sierra snowpack makes Vernal Fall a spectacular sight — but extremely dangerous.

Runoff in Yosemite has been high this summer due to a greater-than-normal snowpack. That makes for spectacular waterfalls, but also creates extremely dangerous conditions in the streams.

Witnesses said the young hikers were posing for photographs when they entered the Merced River about 25 feet above Vernal Fall, according to a National Parks Traveler news report.

The three hikers crossed a metal barricade and tried to get to the middle of the river, where they slipped and fell in. Yacoub, who had been trying to snap a picture of them, tried to save them but he, too, slipped and fell. The rushing water swept all three of them over the edge of the waterfall.

One witness, 28-year-old Jake Bibee, told the Modesto Bee he saw several people from the group who had crossed the metal barricade to get in the river and take photographs.

One of the men was holding a young girl in his arms and she was screaming, Bibee said. Other visitors yelled at the man to get out of the water and he stepped back to shore.

But David and Badal made their way across the slick rocks to the middle of the river. Yaboub was close behind.

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Hormiz David (top), Ramina Badal, Ninos Yacoub

“That’s when the woman started to slip,” Bibee said. “(David) reached for her and fell in. Then another one (Yacoub) tried to help and fell in the water. It was no more than five or six seconds of them bobbing in the water screaming before they went over.”

Bibee said he and others wanted to try to save the hikers but realized there was nothing they could do. Someone who had a cell phone with a signal called 911. But there wasn’t time for a rescue.

“We literally watched (David and Badal) get swept over the edge of Vernal Fall,” he said. “I turned my head away. I wasn’t going to watch the third person go over after watching two.”

Yosemite’s search and rescue unit closed the Mist Trail on Tuesday afternoon and searched for the missing hikers. They were not found. On Wednesday, rescue crews searched the banks of the river below the falls, but still found no one.

The three hikers are presumed dead. Park spokeswoman Kari Cobb said their bodies might not be found until later this year, when the waters recede.

Another park spokesman, Scott Gediman, told the Los Angeles Times rangers were collecting statements and photographs from witnesses to try to figure out what happened. He insisted that the park provides sufficient warnings of the dangers.

Gediman said it would take “some effort” to climb over the guardrail, despite witnesses’ accounts that several people — including children — had done it and were standing in the rushing river.

Park officials said six people have been killed in water-related accidents in Yosemite this year. Two hikers drowned in the Hetch Hetchy Reservoir on June 29, and a hiker slipped and fell into the Merced River on the Mist Trail on May 13.

Other Yosemite news: Yosemite Among Most Dangerous Vacation Spots

Yosemite Injury Lawyers

The trial attorneys at Blackman Legal Group, a California-based law firm founded by renowned trial attorney Clifford Blackman, have successfully represented injured travelers and their families for more than 35 years.  The nationwide toll-free number to call for a free consultation is 1-866-692-8126.