Mon, May 28, 2012, 6:24 PM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

Shareholders sue Hecla Mining Co. after deaths

Shareholders sue Hecla Mining Co. after Lucky Friday Mine shut down

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COEUR D'ALENE, Idaho (AP) -- Some shareholders have sued Hecla Mining Co. for stock losses they endured after the federal government shut down the Lucky Friday Mine for safety violations.

The Bricklayers of Western Pennsylvania Pension Plan this week filed the lawsuit in federal court in Idaho against Hecla, which is based in Coeur d'Alene.

Hecla announced on Jan. 11 that the mine will be closed for a year to make the changes ordered by federal regulators after two miners died in separate accidents last year.

The lawsuit contends the closure caused Hecla's stock price to fall 21 percent to $4.61 per share on Jan. 11 and that the company prior to that had made false and misleading statements that artificially inflated the price of its stock.

"Defendants lacked a reasonable basis for their positive statements about the company's operations and its expected silver production," the lawsuit said, accusing the company of fraud.

Officials for Hecla said the company's comments on its financial prospects were appropriate and the company will defend itself.

"This lawsuit has no merit," said spokeswoman Melanie Hennessey, adding such lawsuits were common when a stock price dropped.

The company's stock has since rebounded to more than $5.30 per share.

In January, Hecla announced that the Mine Safety and Health Administration had ordered it to remove sand and concrete material that had built up in the main elevator shaft of the Lucky Friday, one of the nation's deepest underground mines. The company said the work would take up to a year, and the mine would be closed during that time.

The closure prompted Hecla to reduce its estimated silver production for 2012 from more than 9 million ounces to about 7 million ounces, all from its remaining Green's Creek mine in Alaska.

Production is expected to resume in early 2013.

The mine has been shuttered since mid-December, when a rock burst injured seven miners.

Federal regulators have been conducting a close inspection of the mine because of the series of 2011 accidents. They decided they wanted the sand and concrete material removed because it can break off and fall down the shaft, injuring people or damaging the elevators.

The silver mine is located about 50 miles east of Coeur d'Alene in a region called the Silver Valley.

Miner Brandon Lloyd Gray, 26, was buried in rubble while trying to dislodge jammed rock last Nov. 17, and died two days later.

On April 15, miner Larry "Pete" Marek was crushed when his work area collapsed.

Federal inspectors found company safety failures led to his death.

 

10 comments

  • R.T.  •  3 months ago
    How many sue when the stock goes up?
    • CHRIS 3 months ago
      Depends if it doesn't go up enough!
    • brent 3 months ago
      there are no damages when the stock goes up. How does your mind work?
    • Tom Bl 3 months ago
      Brent, there is if you shorted the stock :-P
  • Daniel  •  Estero, Florida  •  3 months ago
    The lawyers love it. Enron was $7.00 a share when the employees
    sued theselves - their own pension plan. A week later the stock was
    less than $1.00. Union bosses haven't got a clue.
  • DJ  •  3 months ago
    Mining is one of the most dangerous jobs there is. Miners face enough danger during the course of the job, that they need not face added danger from a company cutting corners in safety trying to increase profit. This is the same as fracking or running a pipeline. I have no feelings against the processes, but make them safe so people are not affected by the byproducts.
  • robert b  •  West Palm Beach, Florida  •  3 months ago
    Of course, 2 dead miners doesnt matter.
    • Hamms Purcell 3 months ago
      Heck, the US government has killed millions in Asia and Africa. So what's the big deal? Anyway, this world is over-populated.
    • A Yahoo! User 3 months ago
      Of course it matters, but American and Canadian miners are in a rush because of the increase in the price of gold and silver. Their competitors in Africa could not care less if 200 miners got killed. They don't have the safety standards of our mines. And Hamms if the world is so overpopulated, can we eliminate your family?
  • Say it like you see it  •  3 months ago
    They should not be suing the company, they should be suing the officers of the company who were not doing their jobs, and take back the wages paid to those officers to be put back into the company fund. The officers should be fired and new officers put into their place. In other words, shareholders should hold those responsible liable for the losses incurred. The boards of these companies should be held responsible for their actions or inactions. They are the ones in charge of running the company. Not just this company, but all companies!
  • Glenn  •  Washington, District of Columbia  •  3 months ago
    Are you kidding me? People invest in stock (most call it gambling) and try to sue when the stock goes down. Amazing what have the lawyers done to this country.
    • Harry Kneecaps 3 months ago
      I agree. The worst thing is our government is full of lawyers. The president, most of congress, and most state, county and city elected officials are lawyers. When I have a choice I vote for non-lawyer candidates.

      Thomas Jefferson said long ago "If the present Congress errs in too much talking, how can it be otherwise in a body to which the people send 150 lawyers, whose trade it is to question everything, yield nothing, and talk by the hour? That 150 lawyers should do business together ought not to be expected."
    • CHRIS 3 months ago
      You must be a pathetic 99%er! What a joke and an insult your comment is! Go get a job! THIS COUNTRY WAS BUILT ON THE BACK OF THE POOR FOR US, THE WEALTHY DECISION MAKERS!
    • Claudia 3 months ago
      Amen! to all.
  • ryu  •  New York, New York  •  3 months ago
    randolph is correct.
    hl share price is up because of lawsuits? seems unreasonable. Its likely naked and regular short covering rather than not.

    if people did not know there is a large short position on hl so maybe they are finishing up their shorts and leaving it at that.

    slv and gld have no silver and gold as many have said.

    you can try to redeem 50k shares in slv for 50k oz of silver and so forth if you can afford it. but this is why people are going with pslv instead ahem premiums.

    NO one trusts the market anymore especially since JON corzine got off scott free and jpm got the silver contracts loot.

    its all a scam perpetuated by the government in bed with the too big to fails.
    • A Yahoo! User 3 months ago
      It's up because the entire market is up and silver is in greater demand than gold.
  • Randolph  •  3 months ago
    This is the sixth +/- type of action against HL I have seen in the last 2 days. Suing HL is going to make the value of HL go up? It won't so this makes me wonder what's up with this sue HL bandwagon. There have been documented accounts of continual deliberate selling of SLV & GLD with naked shorts for the 25 years I've been curious about precious metals. MFGlobal is alleged to have given customer claims on metals to another company and the price of metals crashed at about the same time. All this makes me wonder if those who have made a science of keeping the price of metals down are up to another tact, attacking miners. But the thought suing HL will make one's investment go up can't ring true, so the next logical thought is coordinated dirty tricks.
    • Work Horse 3 months ago
      It's not about making the price of the stock move up or down. It's not even about the continued existence of Hecla Mining Company. It's about the continued existence of the people who work in the USA and produce everything we have. Good luck rolling back mine safety laws. I know the GOP and Ron Paul would like to eradicate OSHA so more American workers could die just to pad the wallets of the 1%. GLWT. (Maybe in Iran, or N. Korea. Why don't you move there if you like their workplace safety laws so much?)
    • brent 3 months ago
      its purpose is not to make the price of the stock go up but to compensate those damaged unfairly by its fall. Do you really not know that?
    • A Yahoo! User 3 months ago
      JP Morgan and that hideous Jamie Dimon had millions or billions in naked shorts with silver. A whole bunch of physical silver disappeared from the Nova Scotia bank right before they were to deliver on those shorts. They also had contracts with Jon Corzine and more than one poster on more than just Yahoo has indicated that the money Corzine lost is sitting in the pockets of JP Morgan. It had something to do with silver. I don't follow metals much but do your own research and perhaps you will find out. JP Morgan is one of the most underhanded and corrupt organizations in America. They are like the banking mafia.
  • zack  •  New York, New York  •  3 months ago
    The company wins and defendant loses!!! What you think the stock market is??? You think AMR people will get anything...? Keep dreaming....Company wins people get nothing!! It is another Government ponzi game and scheme!!!!
  • Work Horse  •  3 months ago
    People invest based on the information they have. In case you hadn't noticed, "false and misleading statements that artificially inflated the price of its stock" is a no-no and may even rise to the level of fraud. Then they send workers to their deaths which could have been avoided if they had obeyed the OSHA laws. Give me a break. I guess you have to be a Tea Partier or GOP to allow that as business as usual. IMO, those Hecla managers sound like foul-ups, and are probably good-ole-buds and clueless hacks rather than educated managers with a degree in management. The Board of Directors should remove the good-ole-buds and put in some actual experts.
 
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