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‘The Price of Justice: A True Story of Greed and Corruption’ by Laurence Leamer [View all]
The Price of Justice: A True Story of Greed and Corruption by Laurence Leamer
http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/the-price-of-justice-a-true-story-of-greed-and-corruption-by-laurence-leamer/2013/09/06/5d50dcbe-f929-11e2-b018-5b8251f0c56e_story.html
By Greg Schneider,
Hugh Caperton had a pretty sweet life in 1997 when he ruined it by cutting a deal with the devil. Or not the devil, exactly, but a businessman named Don Blankenship, who might as well be Beelzebub for the way hes characterized in The Price of Justice, a new book about epic legal battles in the coal country of West Virginia. It all started, in simplified form, something like this:
Caperton, the second cousin of former West Virginia governor Gaston Caperton, had bought a small coal-mining company and was trying to build it up. The company was dependent on a single industrial customer, which used the coal to run coke furnaces for making steel. But then Blankenships Massey Coal bought that customer and decided to shut down the coke furnaces. Blankenship told Caperton he wouldnt need the coal anymore. Left without a customer, Caperton decided that the only option was to sell his company to Blankenship. ... Blankenship bargained him down, down, down on the price, to a fraction of what the hapless Caperton thought the value was. Then, with his foot basically on Capertons throat, Blankenship walked away. No deal. Caperton had to declare bankruptcy, and Blankenship had the chance to get his company after all for basically nothing and fire the union miners.
His life tumbling into physical and financial ruin, Caperton summoned the courage to sue his powerful opponent, claiming Blankenship had manufactured the crisis that led to his bankruptcy. His conflict with Blankenship culminated in a case that has become an icon of damaged justice. John Grisham based his novel The Appeal on the case, and the matter wound up before the U.S. Supreme Court.
....
A few years after most of the action in the book, Blankenship and Massey Coal achieved a new level of notoriety when the Upper Big Branch mine disaster claimed the lives of 29 men who worked for them. The Price of Justice makes that calamity seem infuriatingly predictable.
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