Another attempt
to smash a skydiving world record has ended in tragedy. One of 222
skydivers from 28 countries died as the team attempted to free-fall from
18,000 feet and come together in two formations before pulling their
parachutes
.
The woman, a 46-year-old from Germany, died because of a malfunctioning
parachute that was released too low to the ground for a reserve
parachute to open, according to Skydive Arizona. She was declared dead
at the scene after a motorist who spotted the fall called police.
The
accident "had nothing to do with the size of the group," says a
spokeswoman for the team, which failed to complete the formations but
will try again—with 221 skydivers. "Our dear friend cannot and will not
be replaced," the team spokeswoman says.
"You can die crossing the
street," another team member tells the
AP. "It's sad, but also it happens. You know, it just happens." Two other skydivers were
killed during a world record attempt at the same Eloy, Arizona, facility in December when they collided midair.