Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Out of prison, ex-Massey chief blasts critics

Blankenshi­p takes to Twitter, cable

- By Steven Mufson

The Washington Post

Don Blankenshi­p, the unrepentan­t former Massey Energy chief executive, completed a one-year prison sentence this week and immediatel­y took to Twitter and cable television to lambaste the people he says unfairly blamed him for the accident that killed 29 West Virginia miners in April 2010.

Mr. Blankenshi­p was convicted of conspiring to violate mine safety and health standards at Massey’s Upper Big Branch Mine, where the accident took place. He received the maximum jail sentence andwas fined $250,000.

But Mr. Blankenshi­p’s tweet storm since his release on Wednesday illustrate­s that even in the coal patch, bitter disputes and personal enmitiesca­n last a long time.

Though he was not charged with directly causing the disaster, Mr. Blankenshi­p was accused of violating a long list of safety standards, including mine ventilatio­n, roof support and dust control, measures that have been effective in preventing mine explosions.

And while a jury acquitted Mr. Blankenshi­p of felony charges, several investigat­ions into Upper Big Branch —including one by the Mining Safety and Health Administra­tionand one by an independen­t panel set up by the governor — concluded thatMassey’s pattern of safety lapsesled to the accident.

Mr. Blankenshi­p, however, blames the regulators. “Again one or the other lied. MSHA or prosecutio­n witnesses. Which one is it?” he tweeted Thursday. MSHA was formerly headed by former mining union chief Joe Main.

And Mr. Blankenshi­p has aimed several tweets at Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va. , who told ABC News in 2014 that Mr. Blankenshi­p “has blood on his hands.”

On Thursday, Mr. Blankenshi­p tweeted that Mr. Manchin “said I conspired to commit safety violations that caused the death of 29 miners. Not true. He needs to apologize now.”

“I challenge Sen. Manchin to debate UBB truth. A U.S. Senator who says I have ‘blood on my hands’ should be manenough to face me in public.”

In another missive, he added, “Chemistry and forensic science make the UBB truth clear. Political science made it necessary that the Joes — Manchin and Main— hide truth.”

The feud with Mr. Manchin goes back 15 years. Mr. Blankenshi­p opposed a bond offering that Mr. Manchin backed when he was governor. They also tangled over a film Mr. Blankenshi­p produced about the mine disaster after he left the company.

“Don hasn’t changed one bit in his explanatio­n of what actually happened or in the bias that went into this investigat­ion and prosecutio­n from the beginning,” said William Taylor, a partner at the law firmZucker­man Spaeder who represente­d Mr. Blankenshi­p. “Andhe’s right.”

“I think to Don’s credit he has not been cowed and he continues to believe that the truth has not really been told or if it has been it’s been obscured by the constant chorus that Massey was a dangerous place to work,” Mr. Taylor added.

Mr. Taylor noted that President Barack Obama called the disaster a failure of management before investigat­ors could even get inside the mine.

Mr. Blankenshi­p has also responded to critics by saying that MSHA rules led to the mine explosion.

But the independen­t investigat­ive panel blamed both the company and MSHA. It said that Massey “did not live up to that charge” to run a mine safely and the mine safety administra­tion failed to crack down on violations.

In March 2010, one month before the accident, the Upper Big Branch mine received 50 citations — for poor ventilatio­n of dust and methane, failure to maintain proper escape ways, and the accumulati­on of combustibl­e materials.

MSHA cited the mine for 1,342 safety violations from 2005 through the accident for a total of $1.89 million in proposed fines, according to federal records.

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