Posts Tagged ‘civil disobedience’

Funds Needed for Combined $17,500 Cash-Only Bail

Thursday, February 18th, 2010
posted by ambernitch

Joe Hamsher, Mike Roselle, and Tom Smyth locked down this morning to Marfork Coal Company, Inc.’s office in order to deliver a citizen’s arrest warrant to Christopher Blanchard, president of Marfork, and Don Blankenship, CEO of Massey Energy. Currently they are being held for a combined cash-only bail of $17,500. Though all received the same charges of conspiracy, trespass asked to leave, and obstruction, Roselle received a bail amount of $7,500 cash-only while Hamsher and Smyth both received a bail amount of $5,000 cash-only.

Please allow us to continue opposing Massey and Marfork by donating to our legal fund. Donate online through paypal or another method of your choosing.

Thank you to everyone who has already donated or loaned money, but as the campaign continues, the need for legal funds increases. Many who risk arrest in this campaign are not able to pay all the fines that they may be sentenced to after trial and some loans need to be repaid.

As Massey accuses Hamsher, Roselle, and Smyth of terrorism and endangerment, we need to remember who the real criminals are: those who endanger thousands of lives by allowing the Brushy Fork impoundment to remain in violation of over 100 documented permit infringements. Help us stop the blasting, donate now to Climate Ground Zero.

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Roland Micklem’s Statement on Peaceful Civil Disobedience

Monday, September 14th, 2009
posted by andrewmunn

81 year-old Roland Micklem released the following statement after his non-violent civil disobedience at Massey Energy’s Regional Headquarters on Wednesday, September 9.

The action went well.  Police arrived on the scene shortly after we had formed our human chain across the road, cut us loose, and hauled us to the courthouse in Madison to be indicted.  We appeared before the magistrate a few hours later and we were charged with trespass, conspiracy to commit a crime, and damage to private property.  Bail was set at $5,000 apiece. As I write the rest of my fellow activists are being released on bail.

The language of the indictments may have made us sound like seasoned criminals, but as we are quick to point out, the real criminals are those in charge of the demolition operations that are wiping out such mammoth sections of Appalachia’s mountains.  Among our charges was conspiracy. There’s is an ongoing conspiracy with their political hacks in Charleston and Washington which legalizes MTR (mountaintop removal), and they damage more property on any one of their sites than the combined efforts of all of the vandals in all of the major cities of the nation.

Many of us do not think of this campaign in terms of winning or losing. I, as many of my companions are here to make a statement with our lives; we are announcing to the world that we will no longer tolerate the business-as-usual policies of a power structure that are largely responsible for our economic, health, and environmental crises. The forces arrayed against us are powerful and perhaps overwhelming. But when I am called upon for an accounting of what I have done with my life, I want to be able to say that I have done everything humanly possible to implement my convictions.

This is the reason I’m prepared to carry on, regardless of the outcome.

In the below video and this open letter, he announced his intent to lead a 25 mile march of senior citizens in a protest against mountaintop removal. More information is available at this webpage.

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Breaking News: 32 people arrested at anti-MTR protest

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009
posted by antrim

Hundreds of anti-mountaintop removal activists gathered today at the Marsh Fork Elementary in Sundial, WV, deep in the Appalachian mountains. Hundreds of pro-coal counter protesters also turned out, resulting in constant interruption of speakers and musical performers and culminating in charges of battery against local woman Ruth Tucker, who struck Goldman Environmental Prize winner Judy Bonds in the face. Bonds has reported pain akin to whiplash when I spoke with her this evening.

Marsh Fork Protest, May 23, 2009 - Images by antrim caskey

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Mountaintop Removal Protest

Monday, June 22nd, 2009
posted by cgz-news

Dramatic footage refutes Masseys claim that protesters battered miners.Mountain Action and Climate Ground Zero have now released dramatic video footage that documents the June 18th protest at Massey Energy’s Twilight mine site.“By releasing this footage we can clearly demonstrate that protesters were not involved in any violence, did not assault anyone and were even allowed by the operator to climb the stairway leading up the boom,” said Climate Ground Zero director Mike Roselle.“People can look at this footage and judge for themselves, but we think it proves that Massey’s claims that the protestors were violent are not supported by the facts. It was a non violent demonstration, and like the other peaceful protest that have been held to stop mountain top removal since early February no one was threatened or harmed in any way.”“These drag lines are destroying the Appalachians and endangering our future.” said Roselle.“They endanger local communities by exposing them to toxic materials and flooding. They need to be shut down and that needs to happen sooner rather than later. The purpose of the protest was to call attention to the true cost of mining and burning coal.”

more about "Mountaintop Removal Protest", posted with vodpod

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Seventeen Arrested Saturday; Six Remain in Jail for Opposition to Mountaintop Removal Coal Mining and Coal Sludge Impoundments; $2000 Cash Bail ‘Unprecedented”

Sunday, May 24th, 2009
posted by deaexmachina

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE       MAY 24, 2009
CONTACT: Sludge Watch Collective 304-854-7372

Rep. Hechler: Keep Hellraising!

Seventeen Arrested Saturday; Six Remain in Jail for Opposition to Mountaintop Removal Coal Mining and Coal Sludge Impoundments; $2000 Cash Bail ‘Unprecedented”

COAL RIVER VALLEY, W.Va.— Seventeen volunteers were arrested Saturday in a three-part civil disobedience action in the continuing movement to end mountaintop removal. Six are still in the Southern Regional Jail as their supporters try to raise the $2,000 cash-only bail a Raleigh County magistrate says is needed for their release.

“This is an unprecedented and extremely punitive bail situation,” Mountain Justice volunteer Ivan Stiefel said. “We can’t even use a bondsman. We need $18,000 cash, on a holiday weekend, to get everyone out of jail. We are asking everyone to go to mountainjustice.org and respond to this outrage by donating to our legal fund.”

Allies of those arrested plan to hold vigils outside the magistrate’s office until they are all released.

The civil disobedience actions were carried out by community members, Mountain Justice and Climate Ground Zero volunteers, and others. Former Congressman Ken Hechler, 94, was among those protesting at noon yesterday at the gate to the Massey Energy’s Marfork Coal facility, where the massive Brushy Fork coal sludge dam is built. He tried to cross onto Massey Energy property in solidarity, but the West Virginia State Police refused to arrest him. They did, however, arrest seven others who crossed onto Massey property. Four remain in the Southern Regional Jail.

In the week leading up to these actions, many of the same volunteers helped people in Mingo County clear their homes of debris from the recent floods. In one of the first actions Saturday, before dawn, eight people walked onto the Patriot Coal-owned section of the 12,000-acre-plus Kayford Mountain mountaintop removal site. After hanging a banner reading “Never Again!” on the grill of a giant dump truck, they locked themselves to guardrails and the driveshaft of the truck. State Police took the eight to the Madison County Courthouse, where they were charged with trespass and conspiracy and released for future court appearances.

“We locked down at the Kayford mountaintop removal site with mud from the Mingo County floods on our boots, and now, with the dusty remains of Kayford Mountain on our boots, we stand in solidarity with our sisters and brothers still jailed for their actions to oppose mountaintop removal” the Kayford Eight Mountain Justice volunteers said.

Also before dawn Saturday, two women donned hazmat suits and respirators and boated onto the 8-billion-gallon Brushy Fork toxic coal slurry lake to unfurl a 60-foot floating banner reading, “No more toxic sludge!” They were charged with trespass and littering, and both remain in the Southern Regional Jail, with $2000 cash needed for their release.

“This is absurd. How can you litter on a giant toxic waste dump?” asked volunteer Cente Rosa. “Massey Energy has a permit to blast within 100 feet of this impoundment, which sits atop a honeycomb of abandoned deep mines. That’s the criminal activity!”

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11 Removed During Raleigh County, W.Va. Protests of Coal Sludge Dams and Mountaintop Removal Coal Mining; More Protestors Expected This Afternoon

Saturday, May 23rd, 2009
posted by whiskers

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE MAY 23, 2009

CONTACT: Sludge Watch Collective 304-854-7372

Five locked down to equipment on Kayford Mountain mine.

Five locked down to equipment on Kayford Mountain mine.

COAL RIVER VALLEY, W.Va.—This morning, eleven activists in two civil disobedience actions were removed by state police. As part of the continuing campaign to end mountaintop removal, six people locked themselves to mining equipment on a Patriot Coal-owned mountaintop removal mine on Kayford Mountain and another group floated a 20-by-60-foot banner on the surface of Massey Energy’s Brushy Fork coal slurry impoundment near Pettus, W.Va. The activists are part of a coalition that includes Mountain Justice, Climate Ground Zero and concerned individuals.

The two activists on the Brushy Fork slurry lake are being charged with misdemeanor trespass and littering, with bail set at $2,000 each.

At noon today, more protesters are expected to converge at the gate to the Brushy Fork dam with hundreds of pairs of shoes to represent the number of immediate deaths should the dam fail.

“The toxic lake at Brushy Fork dam sits atop a honeycomb of abandoned underground mines,” said Chuck Nelson, from Raleigh County, W.Va. “Massey wants to blast within 100 feet of that dam. The company’s own filings with the state Department of Environmental Protection project a minimum death toll of 998 should the seven-billion-gallon dam break. EPA should override the DEP and revoke this blasting permit for the safety of the community.” Nelson did not participate in the civil disobedience actions this morning, but is expected to speak at the Brushy Fork gate this afternoon.

The floating banner unfurled this morning atop Brushy Fork read, “West Virginia Says No More Toxic Sludge.”

20-by-60-foot banner dwarfed by enormity of 7 billion gallons of coal toxin concentrate.

20-by-60-foot banner dwarfed by enormity of 7 billion gallons of coal toxin concentrate.

“If the dam fails, 7.2 billion gallons of toxic coal slurry will flood to 38 feet deep, 26 miles down the Marsh Fork of the Coal River, from Pettus, past Whitesville,” Mike Roselle of Climate Ground Zero said. “These coal companies, the land companies and their corrupt politicians are destroying the headwater streams that supply drinking water to millions of Americans downstream.”

In the Kayford action, independent photojournalist and Rock Creek, W.Va. resident Antrim Caskey was removed by police from the direct action site. She was released, while eight others were still in police custody. Caskey previously had been cited three times for trespassing while embedded with Climate Ground Zero.

A closeup of the banner, which says "NO MORE SLUDGE."

A closeup of the banner, which says "NO MORE SLUDGE."

“About 12,000-acres of Kayford Mountain has been destroyed by mountaintop removal coal mining,” said Maria Gunnoe, Boone County resident and winner of the 2009 Goldman Environmental Prize. “Not another family should be forced to move because a coal company is going to blow up the mountain above them, then bury and poison their streams.” Gunnoe did not participate in the civil disobedience actions.

The people who locked down on Kayford Mountain unveiled a banner reading, “Never Again.”

“The regulatory agencies that are supposed to be the people’s watchdogs are acting instead as the industry’s guard dogs,” said Willie Dodson of Mountain Justice, one of the Kayford protesters. “Neither Governor Manchin, the DEP, President Obama, nor the EPA are enforcing the law, so we have no choice but to come out here and do it ourselves.”

On Feb 3, five people chained themselves to mining equipment and eight others were cited for trespassing while attempting to deliver a letter to Massey Energy insisting that the company cease all mountaintop removal operations on Coal River Mountain. Since then, four related actions have occurred in the Coal River Valley.

“We are forced to take action today because we have exhausted our legislative and litigatory options,” activist Charles Suggs of Raleigh County said. “We have walked the halls and pounded the doors of our state and national capitols, asked the DEP to complete studies, met with the EPA, filed lawsuits, and what happens? Our West Virginia legislature passes bills to let the destruction continue, and opposes bills that would stop poisoning our water and bring permanent, sustainable economic development to the state.”

NOTE: Massey’s filing with the WVDEP that indicate sludge depth and distance are available upon request.

Video, still images and breaking news will be posted continually to www.mountainjustice.org.

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Activists Engaged in Civil Disobedience at Mountaintop Removal Coal Mining Site and on Impoundment at Coal Sludge Dam

Saturday, May 23rd, 2009
posted by whiskers

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE             MAY 23, 2009
CONTACT
: Sludge Watch Collective 304-854-7372

COAL RIVER VALLEY, W.Va.—Activists are engaged in two separate civil disobedience actions this morning as part of the continuing campaign to end mountaintop removal. Nine people have locked themselves to mining equipment on a Patriot Coal-owned mountaintop removal mine on Kayford Mountain and another team of activists has spread a 20-by-60-foot banner on the surface of Massey Energy’s Brushy Fork coal slurry impoundment near Pettus, W.Va. The activists are part of a coalition that includes Mountain Justice, Climate Ground Zero and concerned individuals.

At noon today, more protestors are expected to converge at the gate to the Brushy Fork dam with hundreds of pairs of shoes to represent the number of immediate deaths should the dam fail.

More details to follow. Video, still images and breaking news will be posted continually to www.mountainjustice.org.

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Non Violent Civil Disobedience Stops Work on Cherry Pond Mountain in the Coal River Valley, southern West Virginia

Monday, February 16th, 2009
posted by antrim


“We don’t feel like our trespass is nearly as serious as what they’re doing to West Virginia,” Roselle says. “We want this stopped. And we’re going to do whatever we can.”Mike Roselle and James McGuinness halt the movement of coal off Cherry Pond Mountain.

Mike Roselle and James McGuinness halt the movement of coal off Cherry Pond Mountain in Raleigh County, West Virginia. Very close to this MTR site sits 2.8 billion gallons of toxic coal sludge, precariously perched above the Marsh Fork Elementary School in Sundial, WV. This Massey Energy-owned MTR site puts the lives of Coal River Valley residents at risk. Residents contend that blasting will further destabalize the sludge impoundment, while fly rock and rock dust shower the neighboring hollows of Naoma. photograph by Antrim Caskey


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