Murray Energy Loses Appeal Over Miner Intimidation Case

Coal mining executive Bob Murray has lost an appeal in a yearslong case regarding coal miner intimidation.

 

In an opinion issued Tuesday, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit agreed with a previous decision that Murray Energy’s president and CEO intimidated workers and interfered with miners’ rights to report unsafe working conditions. The appeals court denied Murray’s petition to revist the earlier ruling.

 

In late 2013, Murray told miners at five West Virginia mines they were making too many complaints to federal mine safety regulators. He said employees must raise safety concerns with management too.
 

Under federal mine safety law, miners have the right to anonymously report safety concerns to federal regulators.

Following complaints from miners, the Labor Department sued Murray Energy. The independent Federal Mine Safety Health and Review Commission found the company violated the law and ordered Murray to pay $20,000 per violation. The commission also ordered Murray to hold a meeting at each mine and personally read a statement about the incidents.

In its ruling, the court denied Murray’s petition to review the commission’s decision and declined to reverse its decision that Murray must personally apologize.

A spokesperson for the company did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Judge Declines to Dismiss Murray Defamation Lawsuit

A federal judge has refused to dismiss a defamation suit against The New York Times by Murray Energy Corp. over an April editorial that described the coal mining company as “a serial violator” of federal health and safety rules.

The suit also alleges defamation for saying owner Bob Murray “earned infamy when he falsely insisted that the 2007 collapse of his Crandall Canyon mine, which killed six miners, was due to an earthquake, not dodgy mining practices.”

Judge John Preston Bailey writes the claims are sufficiently plausible for the case to proceed, though both sides agree “that the serial violator statement is, to an extent, a true statement.”

Separately, Baily sent a Murray defamation suit against HBO “Last Week Tonight” host John Oliver back to a West Virginia state court.

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