Ex-Magistrate Admonished

The state Judicial Investigation Commission has publicly admonished a Putnam County magistrate who resigned earlier this month, calling his handling of a Hurricane man’s case “a travesty of justice.” 

Media outlets report that the admonishment stems from Scot Lawrence’s handling of an August court proceeding in which he was recorded taunting Hurricane resident Troy Sexton and challenging him to a fight. Lawrence said Sexton had called him a “piggy” in a previous motion and had said “oink, oink” when passing a police trooper before proceedings began.

According to the admonishment from the commission made public on Dec. 18, Lawrence will not face disciplinary action since he agreed to resign as magistrate and never again seek judicial office in West Virginia.

Lawrence left a letter of resignation on his desk Dec. 6.
 

Landfill, Hurricane and County Settle Chemical Suit

A landfill, the city of Hurricane and the Putnam County Commission have agreed to settle a lawsuit over the facility’s acceptance of waste from a chemical spill site.

The Charleston Daily Mail reports that the County Commission approved the settlement agreement on Tuesday.

The county and the city sued Disposal Service Inc. and Waste Management of West Virginia in May 2014 after they learned the landfill had accepted liquid and solid waste from a Freedom Industries site in Charleston. A January 2014 spill at the site prompted a ban on tap water use for 300,000 residents for days.

The agreement includes monitoring the landfill in Hurricane for the coal-cleaning chemical MCHM for five years. The landfill would shut down its aeration process and leachate discharge if MCHM is detected.

Federal Judge Sets Trial in Landfill Suit

A federal judge has set a June 2015 trial date for a lawsuit filed against a Hurricane landfill that accepted wastewater from Freedom Industries in the wake of the January chemical leak.
The city of Hurricane and the Putnam County Commission filed a lawsuit in May asking that Waste Management of West Virginia be required to remove the wastewater mixed with sawdust from its landfill.

The material contains traces of the crude MCHM that spilled Jan. 9, contaminating 300,000 people’s drinking water for days.

 
The Charleston Gazette reports that the city and county want the company to pay for the removal.

 
Attorneys for the landfill argue the EPA doesn’t consider the crude MCHM a hazardous waste when spilled or discarded under the federal Resource Conservation and Recovery Act.
 

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