Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Trio describe ‘terrible’ mine experience

- By John Raby

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Their faces covered in black soot, three adults safely rescued after several days in an inactive West Virginia coal mine were mobbed by loved ones in a teary reunion, then they thanked the crews that got them out.

The three walked out of an ambulance at a fire hall in Whitesvill­e to screams of relatives for a brief reunion Wednesday night before being taken to a hospital.

Cody Beverly, 21, told news outlets that the fourday experience inside Elk Run Coal’s Rock House Powellton mine near Clear Creek “was terrible.”

“I’m with my family now. I’m fine,” he said.

Beverly later told NBC News, “Anybody who was involved in searching for us, I just want to thank you with everything inside of me,” he said.

“This is the biggest lesson I’ve ever learned in my life,” he said. “This is a life-changing experience for me.”

“We appreciate every one of you guys,” said Kayla Williams, 25, who also was among those rescued.

Williams’ father, Randall Williams, said she had gone into the mine in search of copper. People in the region do “whatever they can do to make money if they ain’t got a job,” Randall Williams told CBS News.

Erica Treadway, 31, was the third person rescued.

Raleigh County Prosecutor Kristen Keller said Thursday that the sheriff’s office is conducting a criminal investigat­ion latest incident.

Reports of people entering inactive mines in search of copper to sell are not uncommon.

Late last month crews abandoned their search at another West Virginia mine for a missing man suspected of stealing copper.

Two others who were arrested indicated the third man had gone inside a mine, but the search was called off after a team encountere­d unsafe conditions. into the

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CRAIG HUDSON/THE CHARLESTON GAZETTE-MAIL

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