W. Virginia Justice Tied to Massey Coal Executive

Here’s a sweet little story about the CEO of Massey Energy meeting with a West Virginia Justice for meals in Monte Carlo while Massey is appealing a $50 million verdict in the justice’s court.

Ya gotta love the way the article characterizes mountaintop removal: “what environmentalists call a highly destructive form of mining called mountaintop removal that involves using explosives to blow off the tops of mountains to reach coal seams.”

Motion Ties W. Virginia Justice to Coal Executive
By ADAM LIPTAK
A justice of the West Virginia Supreme Court and a powerful coal-company executive met in Monte Carlo in the summer of 2006, sharing several meals even as the executive’s companies were appealing a $50 million jury verdict against them to the court.


A little more than a year later, the justice, Elliott E. Maynard, voted with the majority in a 3-to-2 decision in favor of the coal companies.

Justice Maynard, who is now West Virginia’s chief justice, and Don L. Blankenship, the chief executive of Massey Energy, were “vacationing together,” according to a motion seeking Justice Maynard’s disqualification, which was filed on Monday.

A spokesman for Massey Energy disputed that characterization.

“Both Blankenship and Justice Maynard were separately vacationing in the Monte Carlo area,” said the spokesman, Jeff Gillenwater. “They were not vacationing together. They did meet occasionally for meals — lunches and dinners.”

The motion included photographs showing the men together. The time stamps on the photographs, apparently taken by someone who had joined the men during their time together, indicated that they met on July 3, 4 and 5, 2006.

Asked whether it was a coincidence that the two men found themselves in Monte Carlo at the same time, Mr. Gillenwater said, “That is a coincidence, I think, and it’s my understanding they were not staying in the same location.” Justice Maynard stayed in Nice, France, Mr. Gillenwater said, and Mr. Blankenship in nearby Monte Carlo.

The motion asked Chief Justice Maynard to disqualify himself from the case and to withdraw his vote in favor of the coal companies. The state’s canons of judicial ethics say that judges must disqualify themselves when their “impartiality might reasonably be questioned.”

They add that judges should disclose any information they believe the parties or their lawyers “might consider relevant to the question of their disqualification.”

Chief Justice Maynard did not disclose the meetings in Monte Carlo, and he did not respond to requests for comment Monday.

Ten of the photographs attached to the motion were filed under seal. They showed, the motion said, “two females apparently traveling with them as companions.” The men are single.

The case itself was brought by mining companies that said they had been driven out of business by fraud committed by Massey. “Make no mistake,” Justice Larry V. Starcher wrote in his dissent in November. “A West Virginia jury heard from all the witnesses for both sides, and decided that Mr. Don Blankenship directed an illegal scheme to break” the companies.

Mr. Blankenship and his companies have attracted attention for labor disputes, workplace injuries and what environmentalists call a highly destructive form of mining called mountaintop removal that involves using explosives to blow off the tops of mountains to reach coal seams.

Hugh M. Caperton, the owner and president of Harman Development Corporation, a mining company that Massey was said to have driven out of business, said he was angry when he learned about the photographs, and doubly so when he saw the dates time-stamped on them.

“That’s when all the miners take their families to Myrtle Beach and Pigeon Forge, if they can, if they can afford to,” Mr. Caperton said, referring to vacation spots in South Carolina and Tennessee. “They go camping at the river while the chief justice and Don Blankenship are smiling and frolicking on the French Riviera.”

Stephen Gillers, who teaches legal ethics at New York University School of Law, said Chief Justice Maynard should not have socialized with Mr. Blankenship and should now disqualify himself from the case. Federal judges in Manhattan, Professor Gillers said, will not even have lunch with old friends while they have cases pending in their court.

In 2004, Justice Antonin Scalia of the United States Supreme Court refused to disqualify himself from a case involving Vice President Dick Cheney, although the two had gone on a duck hunting trip together. Justice Scalia reasoned that disqualification was not required because Mr. Cheney had been sued in his official capacity. On the other hand, Justice Scalia wrote, “friendship is a ground for recusal of a justice where the personal fortune or the personal freedom of the friend is at issue.”

Mr. Blankenship was not named individually in Mr. Caperton’s suit. But he was a central figure in it, and his compensation includes shares and stock options. “The monetary effect on Blankenship is potentially enormous,” Professor Gillers said, referring to the November decision.

Bruce E. Stanley, a lawyer with Reed Smith in Pittsburgh who represents Mr. Caperton, said he viewed the filing as “an opportunity for the court to get its house in order.”

D. C. Offutt Jr., a lawyer for Massey in West Virginia, said the only question was whether Chief Justice Maynard could be fair and impartial. “That’s his decision to make,” Mr. Offutt said, “and he has always taken the position that he can.”

6 Responses to “W. Virginia Justice Tied to Massey Coal Executive”


  1. 1 Massey Injury Feb 26th, 2009 at 5:38 pm

    So typical… is it even really a surprise anymore? This kind of behavior has become complete normalcy in today’s legal world. While judges in Manhattan may be apprehensive about nodding, “Hello” to any friends involved in pending case matter, many are not so conscientious. I almost feel as if many of these ridiculously wealthy CEO’s and highly regarded civil servants are almost mocking the less fortunate who actually have to face our justice system in the face. This story will be swept under the rug and as per usual, it will never be heard of again. No consequences, no backlash. It’s unfortunate and they should be ashamed… Thanks.

  2. 2 option guru Mar 2nd, 2009 at 10:20 pm

    i just wanted to say that I love this site

  3. 3 Barbara harris Sep 8th, 2009 at 10:53 am

    I am currently involved in litigation Harris v. Sunoco, Inc. where Past President Judge Kenneth Clouse who served on the Chevron Sunoco Golf League for over twenty-five years and Judge James Proud have granted six years of continuances preventing the case from going to arbitration and trial as recent as December of 2008, without requiring Sunoco provide proof they honor 2001 Access agreements to conduct Act II clean up of the spill site and provide a release from PADEP and that the homes are safe for occupancy. Sunoco agent admitted May 26, 2005 their release was fraudulent failing to have conducted any investigation into the scope of the spill and failing to conduct any test of soil under the homes the oil migrated.
    Why didn’t admitted fraud in 2005 end the continuances and this case? Why didn’t Sunoco relocate the then sick spill site resident/homeowner left to die when agreements calling for a release from PA DEP, but was provide a fraudulent release without testing and remediation of the toxic soil under her floors?
    Defendant Sunoco has been granted access six times in eight years and tested four times failing/refusing to test the soil under homes the oil migrated despite judges Orders requiring reentry in 2006 and 2007 when soil was found to be “hot”.
    I am no longer able financially to continue flying back and forth from SC to PA, to paying taxes and up keep on a vacant building for eight years as the courts fail to require the ridiculously rich CEO’s at Sunoco to participate. Sunoco’s CEO will finalized their plan to walk away leaving a toxic/cancer causing soil under residential homes in a low income neighbor hood in Chester Township , PA turning them into toxic death traps where future residents will being saying “cancer runs in our family” when it actually is running under their floors. No one cares and one wants to offend the “highly regarded and generous predators” that are killing families for fear of losing the money they are spreading in communities as government officials and legislators keep all eyes shut. Cancer is a horrible death. Justice is equally a horrific lost. How many other victims have been left with cancer running under their floors?
    Please help!
    bj.harris@yahoo

  1. 1 The Understory » Bad News Day for Massey Trackback on Jan 18th, 2008 at 3:33 pm
  2. 2 “Clean” Coal and “Healthy” Cigarettes - Coal Industry Huckster Won’t Admit Burning Coal Causes Climate Change « It’s Getting Hot In Here Trackback on Mar 5th, 2009 at 7:41 pm
  3. 3 "Clean" Coal and "Healthy" Cigarettes - Coal Industry Huckster Won’t Admit Burning Coal Causes Climate Change | Eco Friendly Mag Trackback on Mar 11th, 2009 at 3:10 pm

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About


Scott Parkin is a Senior Organizer with Rainforest Action Network and organizes with Rising Tide North America. He has worked on a variety of campaigns around climate change, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, mountaintop removal, labor issues and anti-corporate globalization. Originally from Texas, he now lives in San Francisco.

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