December 14, 2012
Upper Big Branch obstruction conviction is upheld
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- A federal appeals court on Friday upheld the conviction of a former Massey Energy security director who was found guilty of lying to investigators and trying to destroy evidence following the deaths of 29 miners at Massey's Upper Big Branch Mine in April 2010.

Hughie Elbert Stover had appealed to the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals after he was sentenced to three years in prison for his conviction during a jury trial in October 2011.

A three-judge panel of the Richmond, Va.-based court unanimously rejected Stover's appeal, which had argued the security director's own statements to UBB investigators should not have been allowed to be used at trial because he had not been read his rights.

"The undisputed record indicates that when Stover was deposed in November 2010, he appeared under a state-issued subpoena, he was represented by counsel, no law enforcement officers were present, the deposition was conducted at a mining academy and not a police station, and that nothing prevented him from simply leaving the deposition," wrote U.S. District Judge Max Cogburn of North Carolina, who took part in the case.

Cogburn was appointed by President Obama. Other judges on the panel were J. Harvie Wilkinson, a Reagan appointee, and Andre Davis, who was appointed to district court during the Clinton administration and to the appeals court by Obama.

Last year, U.S. District Judge Irene Berger sentenced Stover to 36 months in jail, two years of probation and a $20,000 fine after he was convicted of two felonies: making a false statement and obstructing a government probe of the Upper Big Branch Mine Disaster.

Stover was found guilty of lying to investigators about Massey's practice of warning underground workers when government safety inspectors arrive at its mines. A federal jury also concluded that Stover later tried to have one of his guards get rid of company documents about security procedures at Upper Big Branch.

Allegations about "advanced warning" by Massey of federal Mine Safety and Health Administration inspections have become central to the ongoing federal criminal investigation of the worst U.S. coal-mining disaster in nearly 40 years.

Former Upper Big Branch superintendent Gary May is awaiting sentencing after he pleaded guilty to plotting "with others known and unknown" to put coal production ahead of worker safety and to conceal the resulting hazards by warning miners underground in advance of government inspections.

And former longtime Massey official David C. Hughart has agreed to plead guilty to two criminal charges, including taking part in a decade-long scheme involving advance notice of MSHA inspections.

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