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Search for 6 Utah Miners Suspended   Send a link to a friend

[September 01, 2007]  SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -- For nearly four weeks a mining community in central Utah held out hope that six men trapped in a coal mine cave-in would be found alive. That hope is gone now that federal mine officials have suspended the search for the men.

"It's just a difficult situation for the families, primarily. It's tough to say to them that we've basically run out of options," said Rich Kulczewski, spokesman for the federal Mine Safety and Health Administration.

The search for the six men was suspended Friday evening after a robotic camera failed to provide any useful new information, Kulczewski said.

Miners Kerry Allred, Don Erickson, Luis Hernandez, Carlos Payan, Brandon Phillips and Manuel Sanchez have not been heard from since Aug. 6, when a thunderous mountain shudder caused ribs in the Crandall Canyon mine to explode, shooting out pieces of coal like bullets and filling underground tunnels in the mine with rubble.

It isn't known whether they survived. Three rescuers working underground were killed in a second collapse Aug. 16, another disaster that foreclosed a separate way to reach the miners.

Colin King, an attorney serving as a spokesman for all six families, said the steadfast families had a difficult time with the news.

"There were tears," he said.

Mining officials told the families that the robotic camera was successfully dropped down the fourth of seven holes bored into the mountain, but that it quickly became stuck in the mud as it moved over piles of debris, Kulczewski said

Officials also could not retrieve the camera and had to leave it stuck about 50 feet from the surface, he said.

Kulczewski said the possibility of an eighth hole isn't being ruled out, but there are no immediate plans to drill one. Kulczewski said the rescue efforts are over.

"We don't really know where we could drill again at this time. That's not to say there might be another hole in the future - you never know. But at this time we're basically suspending the rescue operation," he said.

Federal safety officials have drilled a series of vertical bore holes into the mine in hopes of locating the six, but at each spot have found no signs of life and oxygen levels too low to sustain life.

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Hole No. 7, drilled more than 1,800 feet through the mountain and into the mine Thursday, found nearly seven feet of debris. The drill bit emerged in an area called the "kitchen," where miners are trained to seek refuge during a collapse.

"It was very discouraging to them to hear about the kitchen area being filled with rubble," King said earlier Friday. "I think they're moving closer and closer to accepting the likelihood that they won't find anyone alive."

Families of the missing men and the lost rescue workers gathered on a mountaintop above Huntington on Friday afternoon to release a rehabilitated golden eagle into the wild.

The bird, which had been cared for by the Southwest Wildlife Foundation, was a symbol of healing and hope, Huntington City Councilwoman Julie Jones said.

Representatives from each family touched the bird, offering up prayers, some audible and some whispered, for their loved ones.

Wendy Black, the wife of killed rescuer Dale "Bird" Black, held the eagle at the end of the ceremony and released it, Jones said.

"It was awesome," Jones said. "It was a very emotional thing."

The co-owner of the mine, Cleveland-based Murray Energy Corp., laid off 170 workers at its central Utah mines Monday but said Friday that about 35 of them accepted transfers to the company's mining operations in Illinois and Ohio.

Company chairman Bob Murray said he extended job transfers to all laid-off workers in Utah. It's possible more could join the Illinois and Ohio operations, he said.

Murray Energy has 19 mines in five states.

[Associated Press; By JENNIFER DOBNER]

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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