Gov. Jim Justice s business failures and unmet obligations have drawn grievances from banks and foreign companies. But they ve also affected members of some of West Virginia s most vulnerable communities, including company Justice company retirees like Pinkey Mullens enduring company drug coverage interruptions and southern coalfields suffering environmental and property tax revenue losses.
A Virginia federal court has set up seizure of a helicopter belonging to one of Gov. Jim Justice s coal companies, Bluestone Resources Inc., to enforce a $13 million judgment against the firm awarded to British Virgin Islands-based Caroleng Investments Limited. District Judge Robert Ballou provides a week for a joint proposal for sale of the 2009 Bell helicopter.
The District Court for the Western District of Virginia ruling came 365 days after DH-Dhekelia filed a motion for default judgment because Justice’s company, Bluestone Coal Sales Corp., failed to plead or otherwise defend itself. The clerk of court then filed an entry of default since the time Bluestone had to defend itself had expired.
A British Virgin Islands firm has accused one of Gov. Jim Justice’s coal companies of moving a helicopter the firm aims to seize to collect on a roughly $13 million
A British Virgin Islands firm has accused one of Gov. Jim Justice’s coal companies of moving a helicopter the firm aims to seize to collect on a roughly $13 million