Emotions High for Mine Victim Families in Ex-coal CEO Trial

Sitting in court since early October, spectator Judy Jones Petersen has heard plenty from the defense about a former coal CEO’s safety concerns but not much about how 29 men died
Emotions High for Mine Victim Families in Ex-coal CEO Trial
Chairman and CEO of Massey Energy Company Don Blankenship prepares to testify for a hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, on May 20, 2010. Alex Wong/Getty Images
The Associated Press
Updated:

CHARLESTON, W.Va.—Sitting in court since early October, spectator Judy Jones Petersen has heard plenty from the defense about a former coal CEO’s safety concerns but not much about how 29 men died — including her brother — in a fiery mine blast under that executive’s watch.

“That’s been the hardest part for me,” said Petersen, whose brother, Dean Jones, died in the explosion. “We can’t say a word about the loss of life here. My brother’s life doesn’t mean anything here to these jurors.”

Petersen, a physician from Charleston, realizes former Massey Energy CEO Don Blankenship is not on trial for killing those coal miners, or causing the 2010 explosion at Upper Big Branch Mine in southern West Virginia. Judge Irene Berger has emphasized that point to jurors.

Instead, prosecutors say Blankenship imposed a profits-trump-safety corporate mentality that could let a widespread disaster occur. He is charged with conspiring to break safety laws at the mine and lying about company safety efforts to investors and financial regulators.

While prosecutors pressed rare criminal charges against a top executive of a large, publicly traded company, the case has effectively kept details about the deadly explosion muzzled, obscured and mostly unmentioned to jurors.

The deadliest U.S. mine disaster in four decades has been fleetingly referred to as “the explosion,” used as a reference point in time, then mentioned no further.

Blankenship’s attorneys, meanwhile, used hundreds of documents to suggest he prioritized safety, but the company was hampered by spiteful federal regulators and hard-headed coal miners who wouldn’t follow instructions. They used a key government witness who headed a Massey subsidiary that oversaw Upper Big Branch, Christopher Blanchard, to say safety was important to Blankenship.

“They’ve released the upper management and put coal miners on trial, and made them out to be the reasons why their safety programs didn’t work. To me, that’s a travesty,” Petersen said. “No family member should have to have their family members put on trial here.”

Since Oct. 1, Peterson and a few other relatives of victims have walked through the same Charleston courthouse doors as the man they want imprisoned — sometimes right beside him — without picketing or confrontations.

It’s a starkly different scene from the fourth anniversary of the April 2010 blast, when some Upper Big Branch families circled outside the same courthouse, many with Blankenship’s photo on wild-west style signs that blared, “WANTED for Murder.”

Now, the family members are a consistent, quiet presence in court. Sometimes, just a handful attend, other times a dozen or more. It’s been a test of patience, occasionally prompting a tear or trip out of the courtroom to cool down.

Almost immediately after Blankenship was indicted in November 2014, the judge ordered family members and everyone else linked to the case not to discuss it with the media. A higher court overturned the ruling after news outlets challenged it.

Blankenship’s multimillion-dollar defense argued he could never draw a fair jury without going to West Virginia’s Washington, D.C., suburbs or leaving the state. The families say they have taken extra care not to bring attention to themselves in the proceedings, even watching their facial expressions.

“You don’t want to do anything to jeopardize this,” said Shirley Whitt, whose brother Boone Payne died in the explosion.

Blankenship’s top attorney, William Taylor, told jurors in his opening statement “there’s no secret that the Upper Big Branch mine had a terrible tragedy and 29 men lost their lives.” Weeks later, the jury has heard essentially nothing about how those miners died.

Petersen said she was in disbelief when the defense rested Monday without calling a single witness. But she was hopeful about the upcoming verdict.

“I just trust the jury to go back and do the exactly right thing and come back with judgment that we all are expecting, and that is that Mr. Blankenship is guilty on all counts, and that he absolutely should spend at least 30 years (in prison),” Petersen said. “He took away the freedom of our loved ones. They don’t get to see this beautiful sunshine today, and he should not be able to appreciate it either.”