Families and friends of the women, many from the Bay Area, confirmed their identities. The women went on regular trips to the Tahoe region and were experienced skiers, the families said.

The trail to Castle Peak in the Lake Tahoe region on Wednesday.Credit…Max Whittaker for The New York Times
![]()
![]()
![]()
Sabrina TaverniseHeather Knightย andย Soumya Karlamangla
Heather Knight reported from San Francisco, and Soumya Karlamangla from Marin County, Calif.
The families of six friends and mothers who were killed in a Sierra Nevada avalanche this week identified the victims on Thursday and said they were โdevastated beyond words.โ
In a statement, the families said that the women who died were Carrie Atkin, Liz Clabaugh, Danielle Keatley, Kate Morse, Caroline Sekar and Kate Vitt. The women bonded as most of them raised their families in the Bay Area and enjoyed regular trips to the Tahoe region.
โThey were all mothers, wives and friends, all of whom connected through the love of the outdoors,โ the families said. โThey were passionate, skilled skiers who cherished time together in the mountains.โ
The women embarked on a guided, two-night trip to the Frog Lake Backcountry Huts outside Truckee, Calif., that was planned well in advance, according to the statement. They were experienced skiers who were โfully equipped with avalanche safety equipment.โ
The families said they had many unanswered questions and requested privacy as they grieved.
Ms. Sekar, 45, lived in San Francisco, and her sister, Ms. Clabaugh, 52, lived in Boise, Idaho.
Ms. Sekarโs husband, Kiren Sekar, 46, provided a separate statement to The New York Times recalling his wife as โauthentic and unabashedly unfiltered,โ a woman who spread joy and enthusiasm to her circle of friends, her childrenโs school and her neighborhood.
He said he and his wife were together for more than 20 years and that she raised their two children to love hiking, bicycling and skiing in the mountains.
Image

Sisters Caroline Sekar, left, and Liz Clabaugh, two victims of a deadly avalanche in California.Credit…The Clabaugh family, via JVP Communications
โCaroline spent her final days doing what she loved best, with the people who loved her most, in her favorite place,โ Mr. Sekar wrote. โShe was with me, her children and our puppy, and then on one last adventure with her sister and close friends, who she now rests with.โ
The brother of Ms. Sekar and Ms. Clabaugh, McAlister Clabaugh, said he was devastated to have lost them both.
โThese are two of the best people Iโve ever known,โ he said. โThey were incredible sisters, mothers, wives and friends. And the idea that they are both gone is, I donโt even know how to put it into words.โ
Many in the group had been friends for years, Mr. Clabaugh said, and would meet up for ski trips regularly.
โA lot of the people on that trip were Carolineโs friends who used to do this together,โ he said. โThereโs a whole community of people, a lot of whom just lost their wives.โ
Ms. Sekar had worked in tech, her brother said, but her two children were her passion.
The avalanche was the deadliest in modern California history, and one of the deadliest in the United States.
The families said on Thursday that eight women had been on the friendsโ ski trip, which indicates that two of the friends survived. Three of the four guides died in the avalanche, according to their employer, Blackbird Mountain Guides. All of the information provided so far, from sources including the Nevada County Sheriffโs Office, suggests that three other ski clients, all men, survived and were not part of the friend group.
Many of the mothers were connected through Sugar Bowl Academy, a private, ski-focused school thatย said on Wednesdayย that multiple victims had ties to its community in Norden, Calif., several miles from where the avalanche occurred.
Image

Carrie AtkinCredit…The Atkin Family, via JVP Communications
Ms. Atkin, 46, a leadership coach, had lived in the Bay Area before moving to Soda Springs in the Sierra Nevada. Her husband, Pete Atkin, 45, provided a statement to The New York Times saying that their life together in the mountains โwas exactly what she dreamed of.โ
The family skied and mountain-biked, and Ms. Atkin volunteered in their daughterโs fourth- grade classroom and coached their sonโs middle school cross-country and track teams, he said.
โThe kids and I are shattered by this tragedy,โ he said. โBut even in our grief, we are committed to living a life that would make her proud โ a life filled with the adventure, kindness and dedication to others that defined her.โ
Apart from the sisters and Ms. Atkin, the other avalanche victims were from Marin County, Calif., just north of San Francisco, according to officials there.
Image

Kate MorseCredit…The Morse Family, via JVP Communications
Ms. Morse, 45, lived in Tiburon and worked in biotechnology, according to public records and LinkedIn. Ms. Keatley, 44, lived in Larkspur, worked in biotech and opened a winery with her husband.
The Kentfield School District, which runs two schools in Marin County, sent an email to families on Wednesday announcing that Ms. Vitt, the mother of two elementary school students, had died in the avalanche.
โKateโs two sons,โ the letter reads, โare safe and are with their father, Geoff, as they navigate this profound loss. The Vitt family is a cherished part of our community.โ
Image

Kate VittCredit…The Vitt family, via JVP Communications
The letter was provided to The New York Times by Brian Colbert, a member of the Marin County Board of Supervisors who represents an area that includes the school and the town of Greenbrae, where the Vitt family lives.
The school district did not return a request for comment, but said in its letter that it would offer counseling for staff members and students when they return next week from their midwinter break, which local families informally refer to as โski week.โ
According to her LinkedIn profile, Ms. Vitt, 43, was a graduate of Boston College and worked as a vice president of product operations and customer success at SiriusXM. Before that, she worked at Pandora, the music app.
Image

Danielle KeatleyCredit…The Keatley family, via JVP Communications
Marin County residents were reeling Thursday.
โFrankly, weโre in shock,โ Mr. Colbert said. โEverybody knows everybody. Itโs gut wrenching because so many people knew these moms.โ
Marin County is a constellation of affluent, family-oriented towns where childrenโs sports and ski vacations in the Tahoe region are a regular part of the culture.
โTahoe is in some ways our Shangri-La,โ Mr. Colbert said. โYouโre there in the winter. Youโre there in the summer. For many people, itโs the place to recharge and reconnect with folks away from the hectic pace of regular daily life.โ
Michael Natenshon, the chief executive of the clothing company Marine Layer and a resident of Mill Valley, said he had gone to high school in Massachusetts with Ms. Keatley, recalling her as a warm, kind person. He had recently met Ms. Vitt at a school fund-raiser, and laughed that their families had played a rousing game of beer pong.
โThereโs been a crater blown into the community,โ Mr. Natenshon said in an interview. โIt feels like a game of one degree of separation to everybody I talk to.โ
He said the victimsโ families often stayed in the Serene Lakes area near Sugar Bowl as their children skied on the resortโs team. That area is โaffectionately known as Mill Valley North,โ he said.
โItโs particularly hard because everybody knew the kids,โ Mr. Natenshon said. โThatโs the part that stings so much.โ
Image

Snow falling on cabins along Donner Lake near Truckee, Calif., on Thursday.Credit…Godofredo A. Vรกsquez/Associated Press
Rescue workers have not yet been able to retrieve the eight people who were found dead on the mountain because of severe storm conditions, which were expected to continue at least through Thursday, according to officials with Nevada County, which includes the area where the avalanche struck. They said they would not be releasing the names or any other information about the victims until the bodies had been recovered. A ninth person remains missing but is presumed to be dead, according to officials.
The U.S. Forest Service announced on Thursday that it would close the Castle Peak area, including the avalanche zone, until March 15 because of unstable snowpack conditions and the need for search and rescue crews to recover the bodies.
At an unrelated news conference about funding for the Bay Area Rapid Transit system on Thursday, Gov. Gavin Newsom said that he and his wife, Jennifer Siebel Newsom, have โa lot of mutual friendsโ with some of the victims and their families.
The Newsoms grew up in Marin County, and they are raising their four children in Kentfield. Mr. Newsom said he stayed at the same Frog Lake huts about a year ago.
โOur hearts go out to those who lost their lives, and a community of skiers and a community of families from the Bay Area, so many of them so attached to the Sugar Bowl region,โ Mr. Newsom said while on a BART train in San Mateo County.
Image

Sheryl Longman, a neighbor of Kate Vitt, who died in the avalanche, holds a holiday card she received from the Vitt family.Credit…Lea Suzuki/San Francisco Chronicle, via Associated Press
In the town of Greenbrae, Sheryl Longman, 80, said that she appreciated the four years she lived next door to Ms. Vitt, calling her โa lovely person.โ She did not mind the Vitt boys accidentally hitting balls into her garden.
Ms. Vitt, she recalled, had visited her garden just a few weeks ago to see her new crop of red amaryllis flowers.
โThey were particularly beautiful, and she noted how pretty they were,โ Ms. Longman said.
She gave Ms. Vitt a bulb to plant. It came in a special wax case.
โShe took it home and watched it grow,โ Ms. Longman said. โShe was very delighted to have it.โ
Georgia Geeย andย Sheelagh McNeillย contributed research.ย Laurel Rosenhallย contributed reporting.
Sabrina Taverniseย is a writer-at-large for The Times, focused on political life in America and how Americans see the changes in Washington.
Heather Knightย is a reporter in San Francisco, leading The Timesโs coverage of the Bay Area and Northern California.
Soumya Karlamanglaย is a Times reporter who covers California. She is based in the Bay Area.
News
Video vs. testimony: investigators are lining up truck surveillance with earlier statements โ and the differences are raising unsettling new questionsโฆ ๐
A critical piece of evidence has emerged in the case involving Athena Strand, as prosecutors present surveillance footage from inside a FedEx truckโfootage they say directly contradicts the suspectโs initial account. What the Footage Shows According to prosecutors, the video captures a moment where Athena appears: Alive and conscious Positioned in the back area behind […]
VIDEO EVIDENCE: What the surveillance cameras recorded inside the truck is now being compared with previous testimonies, with the events themselves proving far more disturbing than anticipated…๐๐
A pivotal moment has emerged in the case involving Athena Strand, as investigators and prosecutors closely compare surveillance footage from inside the truck with earlier testimonies. What they are finding is not just inconsistencyโ โฆbut a sequence of events that appears far more complexโand more troublingโthan initially described. Footage vs. Testimony: A Direct Comparison The […]
CCTV REVEAL: Footage from the FedEx truck shows Athena Strand alive in the back seat โ and prosecutors say it challenges the initial account… ๐๐
A critical piece of evidence has emerged in the case involving Athena Strand, as prosecutors present surveillance footage from inside a FedEx truckโfootage they say directly contradicts the suspectโs initial account. What the Footage Shows According to prosecutors, the video captures a moment where Athena appears: Alive and conscious Positioned in the back area behind […]
Outrageous: Will Camp Mystic be allowed to reopen? Can you send your children there? The family of a missing eight-year-old girl is seeking a court order to prevent Camp Mystic from reopening this summer after devastating floods killed 27 people and revealed significant gaps in the facility’s emergency preparedness, but the final conclusion is heartbreaking… ๐๐
The future of Camp Mystic is now hanging in the balance after catastrophic floods claimed 27 livesโa tragedy that has shaken families and raised urgent questions about safety, responsibility, and whether the camp should ever reopen. At the center of the controversy is a grieving familyโstill searching for their missing eight-year-old daughterโwho has now taken […]
LATEST NEWS: The autopsy results in the Lynette Hooker case are now being thoroughly analyzed and raising serious concerns. How did Brian Hooker commit the crime?… ๐๐
The investigation into the death of Lynette Hooker is entering a critical stage as autopsy findings are being closely analyzed by forensic experts. While early indications suggest complex injuries and unanswered questions, authorities have not publicly confirmed a definitive sequence of eventsโincluding how the crime may have occurred. What the Autopsy Is Focusing On Medical […]
DAY 7 OF THE SEARCH: A body believed to be connected to Lynette Hooker has been found โ and autopsy results are currently being reviewed revealing a serious head injury… ๐๐
On the seventh day of the search, investigators in the case of Lynette Hooker have confirmed the recovery of a body believed to be connected to her disappearanceโmarking a major and somber turning point. Authorities are now reviewing autopsy findings, with early focus on a serious head injury that could play a critical role in […]
End of content
No more pages to load








