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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Owner says he’ll shut down Utah coal mine

Karl Vick Washington Post

The Utah coal mine where three rescuers were killed and six men remained trapped will cease operations when the flagging effort to locate the missing is finally called off, mine operator Robert Murray said Wednesday. The statement by the combative chief executive of Murray Energy reversed earlier company statements that held the possibility of continued mining in a mountain that is coming to be regarded as a tomb.

In a lengthy telephone interview after several days away from the public eye, Murray both accepted personal responsibility “for what I’ve done to these miners and these families” and said he was unaware of key details about the risks of mining in the area of the huge Aug. 6 cave-in.

Despite statements by a company vice president over the weekend, Murray said he made the decision to shutter the entire Crandall Canyon mine last Friday, the morning after helping to pull dead and injured rescuers from the shaft that exploded onto them as they burrowed through the earlier collapse.

Murray, 67, was by turns unapologetic and remorseful in the interview. He said he was under a doctor’s care for a day and a half after helping to carry the dead and injured from Thursday’s catastrophic cave-in.

“I will see their faces and the blood for the rest of my life,” he said from the mine office outside Huntington, Utah.

Murray added that the magnitude of the cave-in that buried the rescuers persuaded him that, despite his initial statements that the much larger Aug. 6 collapse had been survivable, the missing six miners were certainly doomed. Company engineers, he said, told him the earlier collapse was 10,000 times as powerful.

“I saw the devastation in there, and I told the families privately that there was no way their loved ones could have survived the shock 10,000 times stronger than what we saw Thursday night, as we recovered the heroes,” Murray said. “They didn’t like to hear it. I tried to say it with as much compassion as I can.”

The families condemned the mine owners and federal overseers for abandoning the rescue effort. Murray said workers will continue drilling bore holes toward the area the miners were working, but that hope remained very faint.

Murray insisted that there was “no inkling” of trouble in the mine before the Aug. 6 collapse.

Yet an April 18 letter from Agapito Associates, the consulting engineers hired by Murray’s company, states plainly that a “large bump” or disturbance prompted mine operators to “abandon” work in the north area of the mine in March. Work then shifted to the south, where miners were removing coal from a “barrier” when the collapse occurred.

“I have no knowledge of it, no recollection,” Murray said.