Archive for the ‘Civil Lawsuits’ Category

Massey uses SLAPP suits to silence mountaintop removal critics

Thursday, July 29th, 2010
posted by charles
Activists approach the dragline on the Twilight strip mine complex, June 18, 2009

Activists approach the dragline on the Twilight strip mine complex, June 18, 2009.

Rock Creek, W. Va. — Massey Energy has filed a politically motivated civil suit, also known as a Strategic Lawsuit against Public Participation (SLAPP) suit, against fourteen activists arrested last year in relation to a protest on a mountaintop removal mining site. The suit seems to be part of a larger strategy on the part of the mining company to intimidate and silence critics of the company’s safety record and controversial mining practices, particularly mountaintop removal coal mining.

Since the spring of 2008, Massey has filed at least four SLAPP suits against activists in West Virginia working to end mountaintop removal, none of which have yet been resolved. Commonly used to exhaust critics by burdening them with the cost of a massive legal defense, SLAPP suits have been banned by at least 26 states and one territory has protections against SLAPP suits. West Virginia does not have a ban, but its courts have adopted some protections against them (1).

(more…)

Bookmark and Share

Activists Appeal To WV Supreme Court

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010
posted by antrim

March 2, 2010

PRESS RELEASE

Contact:

Charles Suggs 304 854 1937   Antrim Caskey 917 349 0422   Roger Forman  304 346 6300

ACTIVISTS APPEAL TO WV SUPREME COURT

ROCK CREEK, WV —  Attorneys for four Climate Ground Zero activists and independent photojournalist Antrim Caskey are to file a Petition for Appeal to the West Virginia Supreme Court over civil disobedience activities in Raleigh County in the Circuit Court this morning.

“We are petitioning the West Virginia Supreme Court to review rulings which we consider erroneous and look forward to presenting the petition to the Supreme Court,” said attorney Roger Forman, partner at Forman and Rist, from his office in Charleston, WV.

Attorneys for the plaintiff, Alex Energy, Inc, a subsidiary of Massey Energy, will have thirty days to file a response, after which time the West Virginia State Supreme Court will then decide  to hear the case or not.

Activists William Wickham, Madeline Gardner, Charles Suggs IV and Jordan Freeman are named on the appeal in conjunction with an April 16, 2009 protest on Massey Energy-owned Goals Coal Company.  The activists hung a banner over a highwall at an active blast site on the Edwight mountaintop removal site just above Clays Branch. The homes of Naoma were clearly in view.

“The coal companies are blasting just above the homes of Coal River Valley residents, like the Webbs in Peachtree.  It’s unbelievable what the coal companies get away with.  Everyone I know down here is determined to stop them,” said photojournalist Antrim Caskey, who moved from New York City to Rock Creek to cover mountaintop removal.

From February 3, 2009, more than one hundred activists have been arrested for trespass or obstruction on Massey Energy mountaintop removal mines in dozens of actions of non violent civil disobedience.


Will Wickham and Glen Collins and Willie Dodson used U-Locks to attach themselves to a massive dump truck on the Patriot Coal mountaintop removal site at Kayford Mountain. Eight activists were arrested on the site in total. Interestingly, the authorites recognized Caskey's standing as a journalist in this May 23, 2009 protest; Caskey was not arrested while documenting this protest. photograph by Antrim Caskey


####

Bookmark and Share

Judge Berger Grants Federal Injunction

Friday, February 26th, 2010
posted by mat
Activists Amber Nitchman and Isabelle Rozendaal, center and right, with friend EmmaKate Martin, left, walk out of the United States District Court for the Southern District of West Virginia on Wednesday, February 24, followed by Samuel Brock and the Marfork Coal Company counsel.

Activists Amber Nitchman and Isabelle Rozendaal, center and right, with friend EmmaKate Martin, left, walk out of the United States District Court for the Southern District of West Virginia on Wednesday, February 24, followed by Samuel Brock and the Marfork Coal Company counsel. Judge Irene C. Berger ruled to grant Marfork Coal a preliminary injunction against David Smith, Amber Nitchman, and Eric Blevins, the three treesitters who stopped work on the Bee Tree Mine Site in January, as well as Isabelle Rozendaal and Josh Graupera, who supported the sitters. Photo by Cheshire/Climate Ground Zero

In a decision and order issued today, Federal Judge Irene Berger of the Southern District granted Marfork Coal Co. a preliminary injunction against David Smith, Eric Blevins, Amber Nitchman, Isabelle Rozendaal, and Josh Graupera barring them from further trespasses on Marfork property.   An evidentiary hearing on the injunction was held Tuesday of this week at the Federal Courthouse in Beckeley, WV, but Judge Berger declined to issue a ruling at that time.

The form of the injunction is almost identical to the existing Raleigh County injunction.   The injunction applies to the named defendants and those “acting in concert with them” and only bars them from trespass on Marfork property.  Massey’s lawyers had sought a broader injunction that would have barred them from all mining properties in the Southern District of West Virginia and specifically named Climate Ground Zero and Mountain Justice.

You can read the opinion here.

According to the testimony of Marfork President Chris Blanchard, coal removal operations were halted in the area and equipment was idled for four days of the nine-day treesit leading Judge Berger to conclude, “Defendants efforts to thwart coal production were successful in this instance.”  Congratulations again to the sitters and their supporters for standing up against Massey Energy.   The defendants still face a federal civil suit for trespass, civil conspiracy, and tortious interference with business relationships and claims of over $100,000 in damages.

As Massey’s lawyers declare so loudly in their court filings, we will not be deterred.  Thanks for your continued support.


Bookmark and Share

CGZ to Meet Marfork Coal Co. in Federal Court

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010
posted by Dea

At 10:00 a.m. tomorrow morning (Feb. 23), four of the seven protesters arrested during the recent tree-sit on Coal River Mountain will be defending themselves in a Federal preliminary injunction hearing at the Raleigh County Courthouse in Beckley. Marfork Coal Co., a Massey subsidiary, is claiming $75,000 in damages and is seeking a permanent restraining order on the activists. The defendants have filed a motion to dismiss the lawsuit, on grounds that the injunction employs overly broad language and that the charge of $75,000 is excessive. This claim contradicts Marfork Coal’s previous statement that the tree-sit did not stop mining operations.

Anyone who wishes to attend the hearing is welcome to come and watch. A valid photo identification is required for entry.

Bookmark and Share

Judge Issues Massey’s Preliminary Injunction on Dragline Activists

Monday, July 13th, 2009
posted by deaexmachina

A Boone County court gave Massey a preliminary injunction on 14 activists who participated in a June 18th action at the Twilight Mine Site. At the hearing, Massey lawyers Sam Brock and Tim Houston claimed that the action, which involved climbing a drag line to unfurl a banner, shut down the mine for four hours and idled 170 to 180 workers.

The Massey lawyers asked that the fourteen activists arrested on the 18th, anyone acting in concert with them or affiliated with them be prohibited from participating in civil disobedience on Massey property or the property of any of its subsidiaries. Recent actions have caused Massey to police their own property and follow heightened safety procedures (a bad thing?). Judge Thompson pointedly asked the Massey representatives if they believed an injunction would stop the protestors, who had few qualms about breaking the law in the first place.

In the end, the defense chose not to present, asking instead for a summary judgment. The injunction was granted by presiding judge William Thompson, who stipulated that it only applied to Massey and subsidiary property within Boone County, W.Va.. The judge predicated his ruling with a speech in which he referred to civil disobedience as the back bone of this country, citing the Boston Tea Party as an example, and then emphasized the importance of following the law.

Thompson arrived in court two hours late and seemed disinterested in the proceedings.

Bookmark and Share

Sign the court petition: a TRO against the world is NO TRO

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009
posted by whiskers


graphic courtesy of WVNS-TV

graphic courtesy of WVNS-TV


Say no to Massey intimidation, sign the petition.

Massey’s lawyers are now trying to intimidate folks and squash the rising tide of resistance to MTR. After the first three actions, Massey sought and obtained a Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) barring those already arrested from interfering with Massey’s operations in any way or assisting others to do so. But the order went further declaring that the restrictions applied to “all other persons allied, associated, confederating, conspiring, or acting in concert with them” and indeed anyone who ever finds about the TRO. You can read the TRO here (the good stuff is on page 5). This means you too are restrained! You are now enjoined from interfering with Massey Energy anywhere in the United States.

We have responded by filing a motion to vacate–get rid of–the TRO because it essentially restrains the entire world and we’re pretty sure you can’t do that. Just as the devastating effects of mountaintop removal mining and the global warming caused by the burning of coal effects us all, so do attempts to silence dissent and attack those that stand up for what is right. Please sign this letter to the court asking that the TRO be vacated.

Bookmark and Share

Anti-mountaintop removal activists face contempt for continuing protests

Monday, April 27th, 2009
posted by whiskers

Media Advisory
April 27, 2009
Contact: Charles Suggs, Matt Louis-Rosenberg or Glen Collins: 304-854-7372.


"We won't stop until YOU do"  photograph (c) antrim caskey, 2009

"We won't stop until YOU do" photograph (c) antrim caskey, 2009


Climate Ground Zero activists face contempt charge for violating judge’s order to halt anti-mountaintop removal protests

Eight activists and three journalists are set to appear before Raleigh County District Judge Robert Burnside to show why they should not be held in contempt for violating temporary restraining orders (TRO) brought by four Massey Energy subsidiaries. Massey said the activists and journalists violated the TRO by stopping work again on March 5 and April 16th on the Edwight Surface Mine in Raleigh County. The defendants, who were cited for trespass and released, are awaiting trial on charges of criminal trespass.

The restraining orders were the result of three protests in February that halted Massey mountaintop removal operations on the Edwight mine and on Coal River Mountain.

The activists say the restraining orders are overly broad and should be vacated because they not only bar those that have already trespassed on company property, but “all other persons allied, associated, confederating, conspiring, or acting in concert with them,” and indeed anyone who ever finds about the restraining orders, from trespassing on Massey property or interfering with the company in any way. The defendants are also barred from aiding or assisting in any way, others in doing the same. Nine of those charged with contempt of court were not named on the restraining orders and activist Mike Roselle is charged with contempt only for allegedly recruiting participants for the March 5 protest.

Lawyers for Massey have requested that defendants be ordered to pay compensatory damages or a maximum of $5,000 per person (whichever is greater) and compensate Massey for all court costs. Massey has also requested that all photographs and videos of the protests be turned over to them, that any and all publication of the same be barred, and that all proceeds from the use of the media be turned over to them.

Finally, Massey is requesting that all the defendants be jailed until they swear in open court never to violate the restraining orders again. According to West Virginia State Code Section 48-1-304, the maximum sentence for civil contempt of court is a 6-month jail sentence.

“Massey Energy cannot silence us” said Mike Roselle of Climate Ground Zero. “Massey Energy is a corrupt and criminal syndicate and we will prove this in court. It is Massey that is trespassing on the public domain by irreparably altering the landscape and poisoning the air and water of this community.”

The contempt hearing is scheduled for May 1, at 10 a.m. in Beckley, W.Va.

###

Bookmark and Share

Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press: Journalist Claims TRO Bars Her Reporting

Tuesday, March 24th, 2009
posted by antrim

NEWS MEDIA UPDATE West Virginia · March 23, 2009 · Newsgathering

Journalist claims restraining order bars her reporting

A photojournalist working in West Virginia claims a restraining order issued at the request of a mining company there is infringing on her right to report on a brewing local controversy.

Antrim Caskey, a photographer based in New York, and five environmental activists were hit with the restraining order last month after trespassing on property owned by Massey Energy Co.

Caskey told the Reporters Committee she had been reporting on the controversial mountain removal activity there since 2005 and started covering Climate Ground Zero, a group that includes some of the cited activists, in 2008.

According to the complaint that led to the restraining order, Caskey was photographing protesters James McGuiness and Michael Roselle on Feb. 3 as they formed a human roadblock on Massey property. Security officials informed the three that they were trespassing on private grounds, but they refused to leave, leading state police to issue misdemeanor trespassing citations, the complaint said. Massey says this is the third such trespassing incident for the trio in less than a month.

Reporters generally are subject to the same laws and guidelines that determine where any member of the public can go. Thus, the court’s order prohibits Caskey, the activists, and “all other persons allied, associated…or acting in concert with them” from mining properties affiliated with A.T. Massey Coal Company, Inc. and Massey Energy Co., the country’s fourth-largest coal company.

While the order does not explicitly prevent Caskey from writing about the protests, Caskey says that it nevertheless has interfered with her ability to cover news from the controversial mining sites – raising the question of whether the court or the mining company should have found a less restrictive alternative to an outright ban.

If Caskey trespasses in violation of the restraining order, she could be held in contempt of court.

Caskey, whose work has been published in The New York Times Magazine and the Columbia Journalism Review, said she had never been arrested prior to covering the mining protests.  For a journalist, the order feels “completely improper,” the photographer said.

Caskey said she is not a member of Climate Ground Zero but considers herself to be “embedded” with it. Her relationship to the group is sometimes misunderstood, she said: “I’m just lumped together with the activists because of my reporting and it’s sympathetic, apparently. . . . But I’m just talking to people.  I’m just pointing my camera.”

Several journalism experts, when told about Caskey’s case, stressed the value of allowing reporters to access the places where news is happening whenever possible –  even where landowners are not legally obligated to do so.

It is important for a judge to distinguish between the demonstrators and the photojournalist covering them, since the coal company’s real dispute seems to be with the activists, said Professor Stephen D. Solomon of New York University’s Arthur Carter Journalism Institute.

Caskey’s presence as a “neutral observer” of the group’s actions should not undermine her claim of being a journalist, said Professor Jay Wright of Syracuse University’s Newhouse School.

But regardless of her intentions to report on the mining controversy, Wright points out that Caskey is still subject to trespassing laws.  The mining companies are within their rights to keep her off their property and “to pursue any legal remedy to keep her from trespassing again,” he said.

Even so, Solomon said, the crucial question should be whether the reporter was being disruptive.

“If not, it seems the trespassing violation is really technical,” he said, explaining that people walk on private property every day without being arrested.

Niall A. Paul of Spilman Thomas & Battle, who is representing the plaintiffs, said it was unclear when the citation was issued that Caskey was a photojournalist. But she was still trespassing, he argued, and was standing in the middle of a road, putting herself and others in an unsafe situation.

“It’s not that she’s been prohibited from taking pictures,” Paul said. “As long as she’s not trespassing.”

The current restraining order, effective until Tuesday, is an extension of a temporary order that had been issued Feb. 27. A hearing on a preliminary injunction is scheduled for tomorrow, Paul said, though Caskey’s lawyer is moving to reschedule.

“We’re seeking a permanent injunction to prohibit those six . . . from trespassing and putting our members’ safety at risk and putting their own safety at risk,” he said.

Caskey has consulted several civil rights and media groups, including the Reporters Committee, to find out what her options are. Her main goal, she said, is to try to get the restraining order against her vacated so that she can resume reporting: “I came in here not knowing anything and after four years [of reporting on mountaintop removal issues], I’m on the side of the facts.”

Ahnalese Rushmann, 5:47 pm

Copyright 2009 The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press.

Bookmark and Share

Breaking News: Massey Slaps Climate Ground Zero with T.R.O.

Friday, February 27th, 2009
posted by antrim

Massey Energy Slaps Climate Ground Zero with Temporary Restraining Order (TRO)

Fist Bump

James McGuinness and Mike Roselle of Climate Ground Zero were arrested today, February 25, 2009, on Performance Coal's Edwight Mountaintop Removal site in southern West Virginia. The protesters chose to focus on the active mountaintop removal site above Marsh Fork Elementary School in Sundial, WV on the eve of the 37th year annivesary of the Buffalo Creek Disaster.

photograph by Antrim Caskey

Temporary Restraining Order

Entire accompanying legal documents  available upon request. Contact Mike Roselle at roselle@lowbagger.org

Bookmark and Share