CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Former coal company executive Don Blankenship's expression of sorrow before a federal judge stung for the families who lost loved ones in the Upper Big Branch Mine explosion, the deadliest U.S. mining disaster in four decades.
Some of them on hand yelled at him on Wednesday as he exited the courthouse into a swarm of TV cameras.
Tommy Davis, who lost three family members in the 2010 tragedy and worked at the mine that day himself, started talking over the reporters and lawyers.
"Hey, Don. This is Tom," Davis said, his voice cracking. "It's been six years — six years I missed my son, my brother, my nephew. How come you never came to apologize to me personally? How come you never asked to see me?"
"He ain't apologized to none of us," added Robert Atkins, whose son Jason died in the explosion.
"We buried our kid because of you. ... That's all I got is a goddamn tombstone," Atkins said.
About a half-dozen law enforcement officers swarmed around Blankenship and ushered him into a van that drove him away.
Twenty nine men were killed in the former Massey Energy CEO's coal mine six years ago, but he contended in court Wednesday that he committed no crime.