Skydiver Dies During Record Group-Jump Attempt in Arizona

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The previous record, involving 110 skydivers, was set last year in Florida.
Image: Largest Freefall Formation world record attempt in Arizona USA
Two hundred twenty-two skydivers from World Team attempt to break the world record for the Federation Aeronautique Internationale Largest Sequential Freefall Formation attempt at Skydive Arizona in Eloy, Ariz., USA, on April 1, 2014.ROY DABNER / EPA

An experienced skydiver was killed while taking part in a 222-person group-formation jump trying to set a world record on Thursday when the victim's main parachute malfunctioned, a spokeswoman for the Arizona skydiving facility said.

The skydiver, Diana Paris, 46, from Berlin, Germany, was declared dead at the scene at SkyDive Arizona, about 65 miles south of Phoenix.

"The malfunctioning parachute was released too low to allow the reserve parachute to fully open," said Jocelyn Bernatchez, a SkyDive spokeswoman. Bernatchez said the airplane involved was functioning properly, and that weather conditions in Eloy, Ariz., were good at the time of the accident, which occurred at about 7:30 a.m. local time.

Image: Largest Freefall Formation world record attempt in Arizona USA
Two hundred twenty-two skydivers from World Team attempt to break the world record for the Federation Aeronautique Internationale Largest Sequential Freefall Formation attempt at Skydive Arizona in Eloy, Ariz., USA, on April 1, 2014.ROY DABNER / EPA

The skydivers were on their first attempt to break the record when the mishap occurred, said Gulcin Gilbert, a spokeswoman for the World Team group that organized the jump.

The team of 222 veteran skydivers from 28 countries had come to the popular U.S. facility to try to break the record for the largest number of people to complete two aerial formations before deploying their parachutes.

The previous record, involving 110 skydivers, was set last year in Florida.

Organizers said safety was foremost in their minds in their planning and execution of the complicated maneuver, an effort that had been 18 months in the making. Under the plan, skydivers in multi-colored jumpsuits are taken aloft by 10 planes and have 80 seconds to complete the kaleidoscope-like formations before opening their chutes.

Skydivers were to be at an altitude of about 19,500 feet during the record-breaking attempt, with an average free-fall speed of about 120 miles per hour.

In the same facility last December, two skydivers were killed after colliding at a height of 200 to 300 feet and falling to the ground in what authorities ruled an accident. Briton Keiron O'Rourke, 40, and Bernd Schmehl, 51, of Germany, were part of a group of 200 skydivers from another organization trying to break the double-formation record.

—Reuters
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