Avalanche deaths: Teacher suspected of involuntary manslaughter

Prosecutor says group including school pupils deliberately ignored closure signage

A banner with the warning message, “Risk of Avalanche - Proceed at your own risk and peril” stretches across a ski trail in this picture taken on December 12th, 2012 in Courcheval, France. Similar signage warned the piste involved in Wednesday’s avalanche was dangerous.  File photograph: Emmanuel Foudrot/Reuters
A banner with the warning message, “Risk of Avalanche - Proceed at your own risk and peril” stretches across a ski trail in this picture taken on December 12th, 2012 in Courcheval, France. Similar signage warned the piste involved in Wednesday’s avalanche was dangerous. File photograph: Emmanuel Foudrot/Reuters

The teacher who accompanied school pupils swept away by a deadly avalanche in the French Alps on Wednesday is suspected of involuntary manslaughter, a French prosecutor has said.

Prosecutor Jean-Yves Coquillat in the eastern city of Grenoble, near the Alps, said the teacher is being questioned by police at a local hospital, where he is being treated for injuries from the avalanche.

According to initial reports by witnesses, the students were skiing on a slope that had been closed since the beginning of the season due to lack of snow.

The ski slope was closed by a 50m long and 1m high net with advisory signs in different languages, and the group deliberately stepped over it to access the slope, Mr Coquillat said.

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“This is not inattention,” the prosecutor said. “It is in full knowledge that the group moved into this place and this closed slope.”

Three people were killed at the Deux-Alpes ski resort on Wednesday. Two were among the group of 10 French school pupils who were skiing with their sports teacher,while the third was believed to be a Ukrainian skier.

According to the first questioning, some of the pupils on Wednesday morning had asked to ski on this specific slope, but another teacher leading the school trip had refused because the slope was closed.

Further investigations

It is unclear why the teacher who accompanied the group went on the closed slope with the pupils. The prosecutor said further investigations and expertise “will also seek to determine the mental state of the teacher and his ability to supervise a group”.

Mr Coquillat noted a large amount of snow had fallen on the resort on the previous days and that many skiers, “probably several hundred”, had skied on the closed slope on Wednesday.

Some witnesses quoted by the prosecutor said the avalanche could have been triggered by another group of skiers, tourists from Hungary and Romania, who were skiing higher up on the slope.

Earlier on Thursday, another French official suggested the pupils may have skied ahead of their teacher.

Jean-Paul Bonnetain, the top administrative official for the Isere region, urged all skiers to heed avalanche warnings. Speaking on i-Tele television on Thursday, Mr Bonnetain said “initial witness accounts describe pupils passing ahead of the leader”.

Another regional official said the group had no guide. Gendarmes returned to the scene on Thursday to investigate, according to the official.

Reuters