Girl, 13, Found Dead In Western United States Mine; 10 Year Old Sister Rescued

A 13-year-old girl who fell into a brush-covered mine shaft while riding an all-terrain vehicle was found dead at the bottom, and her 10-year old sister was rescued with serious injuries, authorities said.The girls, 13-year-old Rikki Howard and 10-year-old Casie Hicks, were out for a holiday weekend ride around 7 p.m. Saturday when their father, who was riding ahead of them on a dirt bike, noticed the girls were missing.

“They were driving along and they went into the mine. It was a total accident,” Mohave County Sheriff’s Department spokeswoman Sandy Edwards said.

Sheriff’s personnel tracked the ATV to the 125-foot (200-kilometer) mine shaft Sunday morning, and one of the girls responded when her father called out, officials said. Crews rappelled into the mine and found the girls and the vehicle at the bottom.

The mine, believed to be inactive, is located in Chloride, in western Arizona. It was next to a dirt road, concealed by brush and had no signs or barriers.

The 10-year-old girl was transported to University Medical Center in Las Vegas, Edwards said. She was in critical condition Sunday afternoon, a hospital spokesman said. The girl’s family declined to comment through the hospital.

Seth Johnson, a neighbor of the girls and their family’s landlord, said the two were half-sisters. “Their parents are very distraught,” he said.

Laurie Swartzbaugh, deputy director of the Arizona State Mine Inspector’s office, said that the mine had not been used for some time, and that the office was investigating. She said abandoned mines are common in the state, and that since Jan. 1, the office has secured 108 of them. It was not immediately clear who owned the mine.

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