Charges Filed Against a Mingo County Bank

Charges have been filed against a Mingo County bank after its involvement in a money laundering scheme centered on an Alpha Coal mining operation in southern West Virginia.

U.S. Prosecuting Attorney Booth Goodwin announced the charges Monday against the Williamson-based Bank of Mingo. The bank is charged with violating the Bank Secrecy Act for failing to implement and maintain internal controls that would have detected a more than two million dollar money laundering scheme.

In the filing Monday, the bank admits that it failed to detect the scheme conducted from January 2009 to April 2012. Aracoma Contracting used the bank to structure $10,000 individual cash withdraws to meet payroll, avoid paying employment taxes and to bribe the manager of an Alpha Mine operation in Logan County. Because the amount was just below federal reporting requirements and the bank had no detection system in place, the scheme went unnoticed for more than three years. Aracoma was ordered to pay more than $4 million dollars in restitution in the case.

Goodwin’s filing asks the federal District Court to delay proceedings in the case for a year, giving the bank time to take remedial measures. The bank has agreed to cooperate with Goodwin’s office and pay $2.2 million dollars in the case. 

Prosecutors Set Up Website for Victims in W.Va. Spill Case

Federal prosecutors have set up a website offering updates to victims about the criminal cases over last year’s massive chemical spill.

On Wednesday, U.S. Attorney Booth Goodwin announced the new website about the Freedom Industries cases.

In January 2014, coal-cleaning chemicals leaked from a Freedom Industries tank in Charleston. The spill spurred a ban on tap water for 300,000 people for days.

Four former Freedom officials and the company itself have already pleaded guilty to federal pollution charges.

Ex-Freedom officials Gary Southern and Dennis Farrell pleaded not guilty. Southern also faces bankruptcy fraud charges.

Their trials are slated for Oct. 6.

Man at Center of Arch Coal Kickback Scheme to Plea

A Delbarton man at the center of an alleged kickback scheme at an Arch Coal mine in southern West Virginia is expected to plead guilty Thursday.

David Runyon faces up to 25 years in prison and $500,000 in fines if convicted of extortion and tax evasion.

Federal prosecutors say companies had to pay kickbacks to Arch employees for business at the Mountain Laurel mining complex. Kickbacks totaled nearly $2 million from 2007 to 2012 at the Logan County complex.

Runyon was the general manager at Mountain Laurel.

Ten men face various charges related to the kickback scheme. Four are former Arch employees. The rest were contractors and vendors. Several have already pleaded guilty.

Ten Charged in Logan County Extortion Scheme

Federal charges have been filed against ten southern West Virginia men in connection with a pay-to-play scheme at a Logan County mine.

U.S. Prosecuting Attorney Booth Goodwin announced the filings in Charleston Friday which involved an elaborate extortion scheme surrounding the Mountain Laurel Mining Complex owned by Arch Coal.

The site’s former General Manager David Runyon of Delbarton was said to be at the center of that scheme, charged with extorting vendors for cash kickbacks in order to ensure the vendors’ contracts for work at the mine site. Court documents show Runyon and other Arch Coal employees received nearly $2 million between 2007 and 2012.

“[Vendors] were able to guarantee that they got and kept these contracts and many of them, as you can appreciate, are very, very lucrative contracts,” Goodwin said.

“I mean, if they’re willing to upwards of $2 million in total to keep them, you can imagine how big these contracts are.”

Goodwin said Arch Coal cooperated fully with his office during the investigation.

The company released a written statement Friday saying:

“When we raised concerns about certain irregularities at one of our West Virginia operations, federal authorities responded quickly and with the utmost professionalism. While it was extremely disappointing to find that former employees had failed to live up to our trust in them, we are pleased and relieved to have this behind us.”

Aside from Runyon, Gary Griffith of Oceana was charged with making false statements to the FBI and State Police about receiving cash kickbacks of at least $250,000 for himself and Runyon. Griffith is the former maintenance manager of Mountain Laurel.

Stephen Herndon and Scott Ellis, both of Holden were both charged with structuring cash withdrawals from a local bank, taking out money to pay nearly $425,000 over five years to secure rebuild work at the mine site for their company, Tri-State Mine Services.

Alvis Porter of Holden was charged with failing to collect, account for and pay over trust fund taxes for an employee. His company Quality Oil, Inc., operating at the time as Southern Construction of Logan, was providing construction services for Mountain Laurel.

David Herndon of Chauncey was charged with engaging in an unlawful monetary transaction of criminally derived property of a value greater than $10,000. Herndon’s company MAC Mine Service, Inc., provided contract labor to Mountain Laurel. Herndon paid kickbacks of approximately $340,000 to ensure his contract would be renewed each year.

Ronald Barnette of Holden was charged with lying to the FBI and State Police about paying kickbacks for his company to receive work rebuilding miners and bolters at the site. Barnette’s payments totaled about $300,000.

Gary Roeher of Holden was charged with filing a false tax return after he deducted about $43,000 as a business expense for his company CM Supply. Charges say Roeher used the money to install an in-ground swimming pool at his home.

Chadwick Lusk of Davin was charged with mail fraud after charges say he defrauded Arch Coal of its right to honest services. Lusk received cash kickbacks from Roeher for crib blocks Arch Coal had purchased for roof support in underground mining areas of Moutain Laurel.

James Evans II of Verdunville was charged with conspiracy to omit honest service fraud. His company, Baisden Recycling recycled scrap metal from the mine complex. Evans paid Arch’s $30,000 commission on some scrap cable to Runyon through Stephen Herndon rather than to Arch.

All charging documents were filed as informations, which typically means the accused have agreed to cooperate in the investigation.
 

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