Climber Who Died on Denali Identified
The climber was skiing the West Buttress when he fell. A press statement has been released about the accident

The National Park Service has released a press statement about the climber who fell on Denali this past week.
The body of a deceased ski mountaineer was recovered on the morning of Wednesday, June 4. Alex Chui, aged 41 of Seattle, Washington, died as a result of a 3,000-foot fall from the Mt. McKinley West Buttress climbing route on to the Peters Glacier. After recovery, rangers returned to Denali National Park and Preserve headquarters where his body was transferred to the state medical examiner. On Monday, June 2, the other two members of Chui’s expedition reported that the un-roped ski mountaineer fell at a location known as Squirrel Point towards the Peters Glacier, an exposed rocky and serac covered 3000-foot face.
After witnessing the fall, the reporting party lowered over the edge as far as possible but was unable to see or hear Chui. They then descended the West Buttress route for additional help before proceeding to Camp 1. Due to high winds and snow, ground and air search was unable to access the accident site until the early morning hours of June 4. Clearing weather on the north side of the Alaska Range provided the opportunity for two mountaineering rangers to depart Talkeetna for an ariel helicopter search to locate and recover the body. In 2010, an un-roped French mountaineer fell to his death near this same location towards the Peters Glacier. His body was never recovered. There are currently 500 climbers on the mountain. The climbing season typically begins in early May and ends in early July.
