Police identify 4 people killed in B.C. mine
Last Updated: Thursday, May 18, 2006 | 7:49 PM PT
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The Early Edition's Rick Cluff speaks with Kimberley Mayor Jim Olgilvie and with B.J. Chute of the Ambulance Paramedics B.C., the union which represents the province's paramedics.
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Police have identified the four people who were killed at a decommissioned mine this week in Kimberley in southeastern British Columbia.
- FROM MAY 17, 2006: B.C. mine tragedy took 2 days to unfold
![]() Ambulance attendants unload one of the victims from the Kimberley mining tragedy at the Cranbrook hospital on Wednesday. (Cranbrook Daily Townsman-Gerry Warner/CP) |
The victims are:
- Douglas Erickson, 48, a contractor from nearby Ha Ha Creek.
- Robert Newcombe, 49, a Teck Cominco employee who lived in Cranbrook, about 30 kilometres south of Kimberley.
- Kim Weitzel, 44, a paramedic from Kimberley.
- Shawn Currier, 21, a paramedic who lived in Cranbrook.
The victims apparently succumbed to fumes in a small building at the decommissioned Sullivan mine, where Erickson had been testing the water.
Firemen 'visibly shaking' over tragedy
![]() The Sullivan mine was shut down in December 2001. (CBC) |
"They were visibly shaking when I talked to them."
The bodies of the four victims were recovered Wednesday.
The shed, which measures just nine square metres, has a hole in its floor through which technicians perform monthly tests on water draining from the former lead, zinc and silver mine owned by Teck Cominco.
Erickson was apparently overcome by fumes when he entered the pump house shed on Monday to perform tests. His spouse sounded the alert when he hadn't been heard from two days later.
Newcombe then went into the shed, saw Erickson's body floating in the well and called 911 for help before collapsing himself.
The two paramedics who rushed to the scene also succumbed to fumes in the shed.
'Oxygen-deficient atmosphere' in shed
All four bodies were recovered by a fire rescue crew equipped with oxygen masks.
"What we're dealing with today is something that's unexpected and unexperienced in our company," Dave Parker, Teck Cominco's director of corporate affairs, said Wednesday.
Fred Hermann, B.C.'s chief mines inspector, wouldn't speculate about the exact cause of the deaths.
"We do know there was an oxygen-deficient atmosphere inside the shed," Hermann said.
Most people in Kimberley, a community of about 6,600, are in shock, said high school teacher Jerry Brennan.
"This is the worst thing that could happen," Brennan said. "An attempt to try to help someone ... just went in a terribly wrong direction."
The Sullivan mine closed in December 2001 after 92 years of operation. At its height, it employed 1,000 people.
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