Here’s much of the info from the cited article :
?The team?s rappel [dl : [i]previously by another member, & presumed (re-)done prior accident[/i]]consisted of a twin rope rappel which entailed tying the ends of [i]two identical ropes[/i] together with [b]a backed up figure eight knot[/b]. One of the ropes is then threaded through the anchor and a full-length double rope rappel is achieved,? Brown said in the press release. ?This provides a much faster descent as they end up rappelling a full rope length of 70 meters per rappel station.?
Erps became fatigued from leading many of the pitches and then managing ropes on the rappel, Brown said. At the second-to-last anchor, Kautz took over and rigged the rappel at about 3:30 p.m., Brown said.
[dl : But why should this entail RE-tying the ARJoint knot?
–vs. just re-threading/-clipping the already-joined-as-just-used
abseil line(s) into the new, lower anchor!? ]
Jackson and Erps told sheriff?s deputies they trusted Kautz to rig the rappel because he had ?instructed this sort of thing with Outward Bound.?
A spokesperson for Outward Bound, however, said there is no record that Kautz worked for the organization.
[…]
Jackson was in position to see Kautz put himself on belay then pull down and check the function of the rappel device with a personal arrest system still in place, Brown?s release said.
Jackson watched as Kautz began his rappel. He had rappelled about 5 meters when Jackson and Erps said they heard a loud snap and Kautz and the rope fell. Jackson told deputies that Kautz struck two ledges before he fell into a gully out of sight of Jackson and Erps, Brown said. It was estimated that the fall was more than 100 feet.
I’ve highlighted key points, and interjected some notes
& questions (i.p., why should ropes be repeatedly tied
vs. just at the start, and then re-used on subsequent
pitches?!).
“a loud snap” isn’t what I’d expect of a knot failing,
but it could be the consequence of a suddenly freed
pair of tails smacking rock AFTER the knot spilled!?
The ARJ knot of two nearly identical ropes (i.p., in length)
should be up with the waiting-to-abseil members, right
at the anchor. They should’ve heard that snap, if from
this knot somehow spilling, close by --and so remark.
FYI, I just checked (eyeballing threads listing, then Searching
“rappel”) supertopo.com’s forum and found no hint of this.
Rockclimbing,com is similarly silent --though more so in being
now of challenged relevance (on account of the new owner
wanting to AVOID the too-common, abusive exchanges
–a sad commentary on the outlaw nature of climbers, alas!).
RC.com has just the sub-forum for this sort of thing, too.
Now, IMO w/o further knowledge, I’m baffled.
As previously noted, I’m puzzled at there even being some
need to RE-TIE the ropes together!? And the cited knot
being not only one w/o known risk (if indeed it is the regular
and not “offset” fig.8 end-2-end knot) AND was backed up!?
Granted, the victim was to have re-set the abseil pitch on
which thing went tragic, but … !?
Btw, there could/should be a remaining fig.8 single-strand
knot if the specified knot was used, and possibly also if the
offset one was.
–dl*