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Former West Virginia mine foreman indicted

A former Sago Mine foreman has been named in a 116-count federal indictment charging him with falsifying his credentials and inspection reports in 2004.
/ Source: The Associated Press

A former Sago Mine foreman was indicted Tuesday on federal charges that he falsified inspection reports at the mine in 2004 and was never certified as a miner or mining foreman.

The 116-count indictment against Robert L. Dennison, 35, is not related to the Jan. 2 explosion that led to the deaths of 12 miners.

Dennison was hired in May 2004 by the mine’s former owner, Anker Energy, and was fired in August of that year after the company learned he was not certified to do safety inspections, according to the indictment.

“This type of allegedly fraudulent activity has no place in the mining environment, especially when the safety of miners is placed at risk,” U.S. Attorney Thomas E. Johnston said.

If convicted, Dennison could face up to five years in prison and $10,000 in fines for each of 113 counts. He could receive up to five years and $250,000 in fines for each of the remaining counts.

Dennison has never been issued an underground miner’s card. His only certification is as a mining truck driver, according to the West Virginia Office of Miners’ Health, Safety and Training.

On his first inspection form, Dennison allegedly failed to include his foreman’s certification number. On subsequent inspections, the indictment says, he listed a number that belongs to a foreman who does not know Dennison.

The indictment, issued by a grand jury in Elkins, also alleges that Dennison lied to an investigator with the federal Mine Safety and Health Administration who questioned him.

The cause of the blast at the mine about 100 miles north of Charleston has not been determined but is believed to have occurred in an abandoned section of the mine that had been sealed off.

The Sago Mine was cited for 208 alleged safety violations during 2005, at least 17 of which were considered serious. The mine’s current owner has said it inherited many of the safety problems and had been working to correct them.

The mine was purchased last year by Ashland, Ky.-based International Coal Group. ICG formally took control of the mine in November, but started work there as management consultants in June.