Media Advisory: Climate Ground Zero Gets Day in Court, 9:30am JUNE 1-2

Media Advisory
Contact: Mike Roselle, 304 854 7372

Climate Ground Zero Gets Day in Court

Jordan Freeman, Will Wickham, Charles Livingston Suggs,IV and Joe Gorman in West Virginia's Raleigh County Circuit Court, on May 1, 2009, where they and others were charged with contempt for violating a February 27, 2009 Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) issued by Massey Energy against activists with ClimateGroundZero.
Jordan Freeman, Will Wickham, Mathew Louis-Rosenberg, Charles Livingston Suggs, IV and Joe Gorman in West Virginia's Raleigh County Circuit Court, on May 1, 2009, where they and others were charged with contempt for allegedly violating a February 27, 2009 Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) issued by Richmond, VA-based Massey Energy against activists with ClimateGroundZero and Mountain Justice. photograph (c) antrim caskey, 2009

At 9:30 am, Monday, June 1st, in the Raleigh County Circuit Court of West Virginia, Judge Robert Burnside will hear motions to vacate a Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) issued by Richmond, Va.-based coal company Massey Energy in February, 2009, barring members of Climate Ground Zero from taking part in anti-mountaintop removal protests that have been held in Raleigh County, WV since the beginning of the year. So far, the TRO has failed to stop the protests at Massey’s mine sites and over twenty additional protesters have been arrested in six separate actions since the TRO was issued.

“On Monday, we will put Massey Energy on trial for crimes against the State of West Virginia,” said Climate Ground Zero campaign director Mike Roselle, of Rock Creek, WV.

“The scope of their illegal operations, the damage it has done to the mountain communities of Appalachia and the threat it poses to all of the people who live down stream and down wind will be exposed in court. For too long, Massey has been getting away with what amounts to murder. They are killing Appalachia with their blasting and draglines and they are breaking the law. We hope Judge Burnside will hear our arguments that our actions were necessary in order to prevent a far more serious crime.”

Climate Ground Zero is calling for its supporters to attend the two day hearing, and to wear a red railroad bandana to show solidarity with the demonstrators who are named in the Massey lawsuit.

Breaking News: Final Four Released

Jessica Eley joyfully reunites with her beloved pup Penny when she was released from West Virginia's Southern Regional Jail, May 26, 2009 at 1:08pm. Eley and three others were released from confinement today after participating in acts of non violent civil disobedience on active coal mining sites in southern West Virginia operated by Massey Energy and Patriot Coal.  The activists were confined over the Memorial Day weekend--their bail was set at an uprecedented and illegal, according to West Virginia code, $2000 cash only per person.   In total, 17 people were arrested on Saturday, May 23, while engaging in three separate acts of non violent civil disobedience on Kayford Mountain, where six people locked down to a giant dump truck; at Brushy Fork Sludge Dump, where two were arrested while deploying a banner on the pond; and seven who crossed the line at the gates of Massey Energy's Marfork complex. All have now been released.  photograph (c) antrim caskey, 2009
Jessica Eley joyfully reunites with her beloved pup Penny when she was released from West Virginia's Southern Regional Jail, May 26, 2009 at 1:08pm. Eley and three others were released from confinement today after participating in acts of non violent civil disobedience on active coal mining sites in southern West Virginia operated by Massey Energy and Patriot Coal. The activists were confined over the Memorial Day weekend--their bail was set at an uprecedented and illegal, according to West Virginia code, $2000 cash only per person. In total, 17 people were arrested on Saturday, May 23, while engaging in three separate acts of non violent civil disobedience on Kayford Mountain, where six people locked down to a giant dump truck; at Brushy Fork Sludge Dump, where two were arrested while deploying a banner on the pond; and seven who crossed the line at the gates of Massey Energy's Marfork complex. All have now been released. photograph (c) antrim caskey, 2009

Press Conference for Mountain Justice and Climate Ground Zero’s Anti-Mountaintop Removal Actions on May 23rd, 2009

Will Wickham, Glenn Collins, Jared Story, Willie Dodson, Kim Kirkbride, Ash-Lee Henderson, Tanya Turner and Mathew Louis-Rosenberg, activists with Mountain Justice and Climate Ground Zero, are taken into custody after a 5 hour lock down to machinery on Patriot Coal's mountaintop removal coal operation on Kayford Mountain. Three state authorities arrived on the scene: 6 Kanawha Sheriffs, 2 Boone County sheriffs and 2 WV state troopers.  The protestors were taken to the Boone County seat at Madison and released on their own recognizances.
Will Wickham, Glenn Collins, Jared Story, Willie Dodson, Kim Kirkbride, Ash-Lee Henderson, Tanya Turner and Mathew Louis-Rosenberg, activists with Mountain Justice and Climate Ground Zero, are taken into custody after a 5 hour lock down to machinery on Patriot Coal's mountaintop removal coal operation on Kayford Mountain. Three state authorities arrived on the scene: 6 Kanawha Sheriffs, 2 Boone County sheriffs and 2 WV state troopers. The protestors were taken to the Boone County seat at Madison and released on their own recognizances. photograph (c) antrim caskey, 2009

Press Conference for Mountain Justice and Climate Ground Zero’s Anti-Mountaintop Removal Actions on May 23rd, 2009

Contact:   Mike Roselle 304 854-7372

BECKLEY, W.Va.— Mountain Justice will be holding a press conference Tuesday, May 26, about last Saturday’s 17 arrests, which occurred in three separate actions. Residents of West Virginia, Tennessee, Kentucky and Virginia – four Appalachian states affected by mountaintop removal – were among the arrestees. All are charged with trespassing. Two of them floated a banner reading “No More Sludge” in seven billion gallons of toxic coal slurry at the Brushy Fork sludge impoundment. They are also charged with littering. Four remain incarcerated, unable to meet the $2000 cash-only bail. It is anticipated that they will be released on Tuesday.

The West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection has approved permits, submitted by Massey Energy, for the 6,450-acre surface mine around the impoundment. This plan includes blasting on top of one of the ridges of the dam, which sits above a honeycomb of abandoned underground mines. The emergency evacuation plan for the Brushy Fork sludge dam states that should it fail, a wall of water 50 feet high would hit Whitesville and result in the deaths of at least 998 people. An alternative to the surface mine is the installation of a wind farm on Coal River Mountain, which will provide jobs and energy without increasing the risk of catastrophe associated with the Brushy Fork dam.

Who:    Mountain Justice and Climate Ground Zero

What:    Press Conference where recently released activists and their supporters will speak

When:  Tuesday, May 26th, 12 pm.

Where:     Raleigh County Courthouse Steps on Prince Street.
Rain Location:  Gazebo at Raleigh County Courthouse on Prince Street.