Investigation into death of 10 year-old girl in mudslide on North York Moors underway
All activities at the centre in Carlton Bank have been suspended
Police and health and safety investigators are investigating the death of a 10-year-old girl killed in a mudslide while on a school trip.
Leah Harrison, from Darlington, died following an incident at Carlton Bank on the edge of the North York Moors on Wednesday.
The Year Six pupil was on an instructor-led walk at the council-run Carlton Adventure centre, which has suspended all its activities while an investigation is carried out.
The Health and Safety Executive (HSE) will be carrying out a joint investigation with North Yorkshire Police into the incident, a spokesperson confirmed.
A major operation involving 30 mountain rescuers was launched to save Leah, in weather conditions they described as āvery poorā, but she died at the scene.
Denise McGuckin, managing director of Hartlepool Borough Council, which operates Carlton Adventure said: āāWe can confirm that a tragic incident occurred during one of the Centreās instructor-led outdoor education forest walks near to Carlton-in-Cleveland yesterday.
āWe are utterly devastated and heartbroken and our thoughts are with Leahās family and friends and all those affected.
āWe are working closely with our partner agencies to carry out a full investigation and we are temporarily suspending all outdoor activities and residential breaks managed by the Council.
āWhilst the investigation is being carried out it would be inappropriate for us to comment further.ā
In a statement, Leahās family said on Thursday: āLeah Harrison, the happy, bubbly, go-lucky little girl.
āThe beautiful smile, the giddy laugh, the silly jokes.
āYou will never ever be forgotten baby girl.
āYou will achieve your dream and become a player for the Lionesses.
āSpread those wings. May you rest in paradise.ā
Leah was a pupil at Mount Pleasant Primary School, which is part of Lingfield Education Trust.
Its chief executive Nick Blackburn said: āThe full details are still emerging but this is clearly a heartbreaking tragedy.
āLeah was a much-loved part of our school and our thoughts and prayers are with her family, friends, and the school staff.
āCounselling is being arranged within the school for pupils and staff.
āWe are all in a state of shock and we would ask that the privacy of the family and the school community is respected while we try to come to terms with what has happened.ā
The emergency services were called at around 1.15pm on Wednesday.
Gary Clarke, callout officer for Cleveland Mountain Rescue, said conditions were āvery poorā.
He said: āIt was very wet all day, quite foggy and misty up there and very cold and it made the conditions very hardgoing for the rescue.ā
He said 19 rescuers initially turned out, increasing to 30 as the severity of the operation became apparent.
They used a ātechnical rope rescue systemā to recover her body from the dangerous landslip, Mr Clarke said.
He said the incident happened on a path off the Cleveland Way.
āAs far as we are aware, they were part of a school party, where exactly they started and where they were going, weāre not sure, we donāt get to see that side of things,ā he said.
āWe were acting on behalf of the police service.
āBut there was just a school party out for a walk on the North York Moors which many schools do quite often, all year round.
āItās really a matter for the police investigating now, weāre not exactly sure what happened, but from what we can gather what we saw in that scene, it was just something of a freak force of nature accident.
āItās something that weāve never seen or experienced before.ā
The area was cordoned off throughout the afternoon and members of the public were asked to avoid the area.
North Yorkshire Police said Leahās family were being supported by specially trained officers and the force asked for them to be given space to grieve.