One dead, 23 rescued from inside Colorado tourist mine after equipment malfunction

One dead, 23 rescued from inside Colorado tourist mine after equipment malfunction

At least one person is dead and four others are injured after an equipment malfunction temporarily trapped two dozen people underground in a Colorado tourist mine, Teller County sheriff’s officials said Thursday.

Twenty-three people who were trapped Thursday in the Mollie Kathleen Mine have been rescued, the sheriff’s office said.

It is unclear how the one person died, officials said. At an evening news conference, Teller County Sheriff Jason Mikesell said the death was a “tragic accident” that was a result of the elevator malfunction.

It is going to take a full investigation to find out what happened, he said.

“Accidents happen when dealing with this kind of machinery,” Mikesell said.

At around noon Thursday, a problem was reported with the elevator, which prompted the rescue attempt, officials said.

Initially, 11 people, including two children, were on the elevator, according to the sheriff’s office.

“As a result, one individual lost their life, and four other people received minor injuries,” the sheriff’s office said in a Friday morning update. “The elevator was able to return those 11 people back to the surface.”

The four people who were injured received medical attention, officials said, adding that the children were not injured.

Another group of “12 tourists and a highly experienced guide” were on the tour at the 1,000 foot level. They had water and blankets and were in communication with responders, officials said.

The group was brought back to the surface via the elevator over two trips that started shortly after 6 p.m. and ended an hour later, according to the sheriff’s office.

The sheriff’s office said those in the group of 11 rescued reported neck and back pain, and others said they were traumatized. None of the 12 people in the second round of rescue efforts was injured, Mikesell said.

Officials are working to contact the family of the person who died who was recovered in the initial rescue, Mikesell said.

The group of 12 — all adults from out of state — had been stuck in the mine for about six hours. They “came up very safely,” four at a time, Mikesell said, adding that they are all in “good spirits.” –

Mikesell said the owner of the mine was “instrumental” in making sure the equipment was able to bring everyone back up above ground.

The first group of people was stuck in an elevator that stopped halfway down the shaft, Mikesell said. When it finally reached the surface, engineers inspected it to ensure there were no other issues.

Once cleared, they were able to lower the elevator down and bring it back up with no one in it, Mikesell said, and made the decision to use the elevator to rescue the remaining people.

Mikesell said rescue crews only told the people there was an issue with the elevator, and, once rescued, people said they were thankful they didn’t know more.

Sheriff’s officials earlier made it clear that the mine did not collapse and that the incident occurred as a result of an equipment malfunction.

The last time an incident occurred at the mine was in 1986, officials said. Nobody died in that incident, but people were trapped in the elevator then, too, Mikesell said.

Teller County is just over 100 miles south of Denver.

Gov. Jared Polis said he is “relieved” the 12 people trapped were safely rescued and offered condolences to the friends and family of the one person who died.

Polis also thanked Mikesell and the rest of the rescue team for their “swift response and tireless efforts.”

“Thanks to this collaborative effort, each of these individuals will return home safely,” Polis said.

Mikesell said Polis sent “as much needed personnel as we could get” to help with the rescue effort, including inspectors to make sure the malfunctioning elevator was working properly and mine safety crews. He added that together with first responders, “we were able to put together a plan that worked, and that plan was to bring them up through the elevator system.”

The mine was set to close Sunday for the season, according to its website. Mikesell said the mine had closed for the night Thursday and the business hopes to be up and running again next season.

It offers one-hour tours in which visitors can “vertically descend 100 stories into the earth” to “witness the evolution of overground mining,” the website says.

This article was originally published on NBCNews.com

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