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Vail Resorts officials arrive to assess the damage and support firefighting efforts. The financial impact is preliminarily estimated to be around $12 million. Approximately 8:00 AM – 10:00 AM. Investigators from local law enforcement and the FBI arrive on the scene. Evidence of incendiary devices is discovered, confirming suspicions of arson.
19 October 1998, Vail, Colorado: The ELF claims responsibility for burning five buildings and four chair lifts at the Vail Mountain ski resort in Vail, Colorado, causing in excess of $12 million in damages. The action came only five days after a court had ruled that Vail could proceed with its planned Category III expansion into the Two Elks ...
Vail Resorts stock tanked this week, falling around 6.18% as angry vacationers dealt with hours-long lines to hit the slopes. The waits were caused by a lack of ski patrollers on the mountain ...
The FBI indicated that some of the charges relate to a 1998 arson attack, claimed by the ELF, on the Vail Ski Resort in Colorado. Other charges were related to another attack on the botany labs at the University of Washington in 2001. [11] The combined cost of the damage from the attacks is estimated at approaching $80 million.
Vail Resorts was in the hot seat this month when a Park City ski patrol strike disrupted holidays. For years, Vail's rapid acquisitions and high costs have sparked criticism from skiers and locals ...
The rebuilt Two Elk Lodge in the Vail ski area at Vail, Colorado, in October 1999. It was built to replace the original building, destroyed in an arson attack by an eco-terrorist group known as ...
Vail Resorts was founded as Vail Associates Ltd. by Pete Seibert and Earl Eaton in the early 1960s. Eaton, a lifelong resident, led Siebert (a former WWII 10th Mountain Division ski trooper) to the area in March 1957.
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