W.Va. mine boss charged with fraud in deadly blast

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CHARLESTON, W.Va. – The superintendent of the West Virginia coal mine where an explosion killed 29 men was charged today with conspiracy to defraud the federal government, becoming the highest-ranking Massey Energy employee to face criminal prosecution so far over the deadly blast.

Former Upper Big Branch mine boss Gary May, 43, of Bloomingrose, W.Va., is named in a federal information, a document that signals a defendant is cooperating with prosecutors. He is the second Massey employee to face prosecution in the case.

Reached at his home this morning, May declined comment.

U.S. Attorney Booth Goodwin said his investigation of the worst U.S. mine disaster in four decades is "absolutely not" finished but did not immediately comment further.

Although other mine disasters have led to criminal charges, they've typically targeted low-ranking employees and largely have been misdemeanor offenses. A conviction on the federal fraud charge could result in fines and up to five years in prison. It's a rare, if not unprecedented legal strategy that appears to be moving up the corporate ladder.

"I hope they can go up, and I think they will," said Gary Quarles, whose son Gary Wayne died in the explosion. Quarles said he's surprised the charge reached so high into the ranks.

"Usually, they get the mine foreman because that's the person that signs the books," he said. Superintendents typically don't and are therefore shielded.

But Quarles said the charges suggest prosecutors are looking at May's bosses, too.

"It's about time," he said. "It's a good start."

Last week, Goodwin urged a federal judge in Beckley to make an example of the only other person charged so far, former security chief Hughie Elbert Stover. Goodwin is demanding the maximum possible sentence of 25 years in prison for actions he says contributed to the April 2010 disaster near Montcoal.

Stover is to be sentenced Feb. 29 for lying to federal investigators and attempting to destroy documents.

May began working at Upper Big Branch in February 2008 as a mine foreman and was promoted in October 2009 to superintendent. He held that post, overseeing three room-and-pillar mining sections and a longwall operation, until the day the mine exploded on April 5, 2010.

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