<From the Seattle PI>
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NELSON, British Columbia -- An emergency beacon failed to work after a man was caught in an avalanche and died, and Royal Canadian Mounted Police want to know why.
The beacon was found strapped to the torso of Michael Duffy, 36, of San Francisco, who died Jan. 30 when he and 14 other skiers and snowboarders were hit by a slide in the Valhalla Mountains west of this southcentral British Columbia town.
Searchers, hampered by the lack of a locator signal, found Duffy's body Thursday in about four feet of debris, police Constable Heather Macdonald said.
A female companion was buried about as deep but was located quickly because her beacon worked, and she was dug out by a guide a few minutes after the accident.
Police said an autopsy would be conducted to determine whether Duffy suffocated or died of injuries from the slide.
Duffy's device was turned on, had a properly charged battery and had been checked by guides, "but it looks like there was some kind of equipment failure because it was not transmitting," she said. "We'll be looking into the reasons why."
The beacon will be sent to an electronics laboratory for testing, police said.
Macdonald said two guides and a party of 13 skiers and boarders had just finished their first run of the day when the slide began high above them in an area known as Russell Bowl. The slide traveled about a mile and measured 3.5 out of 5 on the avalanche scale.
Duffy's body was found about 265 feet from where he is believed to have been caught by the slide.
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