Two snowmobilers die in freak accidents just days apart in Wyoming hotspot enjoyed by A-listers

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Two snowmobilers died in freak accidents just days apart at a Wyoming ski resort enjoyed by some of Hollywood’s A-list celebrities.

Edith Linares Pike, 32, was killed after smashing into a tree on Jan. 23, three days before Joshua Escamilla, 31, died after going into cardiac arrest following a near-identical crash, according to Cowboy State Daily.

The tragedies unfolded on the Togwotee Mountain Pass, near Jackson Hole, Wyo. – a billionaire’s playground where the likes of Kanye West and Sandra Bullock have all bought homes, Business Insider reported.

Edith Linares Pike smiling.Edith Pike was killed in a freak snowmobile accident in Wyoming. Anthony Funeral and Cremation

Pike, who was born in China before moving to New York at nine months, died from head and neck trauma and her death was ruled accidental. The accounting graduate was killed around three years after tying the knot to husband, Jonny, according to a family obituary.

She met her husband just two weeks after starting work with the New York accounting company “The Bonadio Group.”

“Emmy taught everyone around her how to love selflessly, with an open heart and unwavering kindness,” her family said. 

“Her way in the world is a guiding light that will help to navigate this devastating loss.”

Escamilla and a woman, who has not been named, smashed into a tree when they veered off trail on a 7-mile trail that connects the Togwotee Mountain Lodge and Turpin Meadows Ranch around 1:13 p.m. on Jan. 26, Teton County search and rescue officials said.

He rolled 30 feet down an embankment and suffered a severe leg injury.

The impact of the smash left the woman unresponsive, but she was breathing. She was transported to Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center in Idaho Falls.

The trail is described as snow-covered until July with “thick vegetation” on both sides of the trail. Escamilla and his female rider had been part of a “small guided group” before they crashed.

View from a helicopter of a snow-covered landscape, dense forest, and mountains in the distance, showing tracks from snowmobiles in the snow.Joshua Escamilla went into cardiac arrest following a similar accident on Togwotee Mountain Pass three days later. Teton County Search and Rescue / Facebook

Four people have died in accidents already this season, according to officials.

Veteran snowmobiler Will Mook warned of the dangers posed by the machines.

“They’re not toys, they are recreational vehicles,” he told Cowboy State Daily.

“They’re amazing, and better than they’ve ever been, but you have to treat them with respect, because they definitely can be dangerous.”

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