Don Blankenship, former CEO of Massey Energy, was sentenced Wednesday to one year in federal prison for safety lapses connected to a deadly West Virginia coal mine explosion.
A jury in federal court convicted Blankenship in December of conspiring to willfully violate mine safety standards, connected to an explosion at the Upper Big Branch mine in 2010 that killed 29 men. One year in prison was the maximum sentence for the misdemeanor charge.
U.S. District Judge Irene Berger also imposed the maximum fine, $250,000.
In a brief statement during the sentencing hearing, Blankenship said, “It is important to everyone that you know that I’m not guilty of a crime.” He told families of the miners that they were “great guys, great coal miners.”
Outside the courthouse, a few family members of miners who were killed yelled at Blankenship, according to the Associated Press.
“We buried our kid because of you. I got to go to the grave to see my kid’s casket,” Robert Atkins said.
“This sentence is a victory for workers and workplace safety,” said Carl Castro, the acting U.S. Attorney in Charleston.
“Putting the former chief executive officer of a major corporation in prison sends a message that violating mine safety laws is a serious crime and those who break those laws will be held accountable.”
Blankenship’s lawyers have vowed to appeal his conviction. Blankenship has claimed that the explosion was caused by a buildup of natural gas in the mine. But federal investigators found that faulty equipment created a spark that ignited a mixture of coal dust and methane gas in the poorly ventilated mine.









