Here is a breakdown of the alleged law violations, the consequences for the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (PCSWA) board members, and the penalties associated with the Sherman Antitrust Act:
Violations by PCSWA Board Members and Associated Consequences
- Evasion of Competitive Bidding (No-Bid Contracts): The board allegedly bypassed W.Va. Code §20-14-10 and §5-22-1 by approving a $4.12 million lease-to-own agreement with Allegheny Disposal without soliciting competitive bids.
- Consequences for Board Members: The board's actions have sparked intense public backlash, leading citizens to threaten grand jury investigations into their conduct. If successfully challenged in court, the contract itself could be invalidated or voided.
- Open Meetings and Transparency Violations: The board held an exclusionary executive session allowing private contractors to attend while barring public officials, and later restricted public hearings to only allow comments on fees, suppressing discussion on the underlying contracts.
- Consequences for Board Members: This lack of transparency resulted in a highly contentious atmosphere, public protests, and the immediate resignations of board members Ed Riley and Greg Hamons. It also fueled the public's threats of legal action and grand jury probes.
- Unauthorized Escalation of Civil Penalties: The board drafted regulations attempting to impose a $150 per day civil penalty for waste violations, which directly violates W.Va. Code §22C-4-10(a) limiting penalties to $150 per year.
- Consequences for Board Members: By attempting to levy fines beyond their statutory limits, the board is acting ultra vires (beyond its legal power). A circuit court would almost certainly invalidate these penalties as unauthorized and confiscatory.
- Operating with Expired Oaths and Statutory Vacancies: The board conducted binding votes while operating with vacancies exceeding the 60-day legal limit, and Chairman Dave Henderson allegedly voted under an oath of office that expired in 2015.
- Consequences for Board Members: While the "De Facto Officer Doctrine" shields their past votes from being voided in civil suits (protecting the board's administrative actions from collateral attack), board members operating with expired oaths remain vulnerable to being formally removed from their positions via a quo warranto legal proceeding.
- Unconstitutional "Flow Control" and Export Bans: The board's proposed regulations mandate that all waste must go to their designated transfer station and explicitly prohibit taking waste out of the county.
- Consequences for Board Members: This represents a facial violation of the Dormant Commerce Clause and conflicts with the state's commitment to the "free flow" of solid waste. If litigated, the courts could strike down these ordinances as unconstitutional economic protectionism.
Penalties for Violators of the Federal Sherman Antitrust Act
The Sherman Antitrust Act targets anticompetitive behavior, including conspiracies to restrain trade or establish monopolies:
- Conspiracies in Restraint of Trade (Section 1): Prohibits multi-party conduct, making every contract, combination, or conspiracy in restraint of trade or commerce illegal.
- Conspiracies to Monopolize (Section 2): Prohibits unilateral conduct and conspiracies to monopolize, specifically targeting the use of monopoly power to entrench a market position or block rivals from entry.
- Penalties: The use of monopoly power to block rivals or entrench a market position constitutes a felony. However, the sources note that today, violations of Section 2 are primarily enforced through civil litigation.
- Note on SWA Liability: The PCSWA may be shielded from federal antitrust penalties under the "State Action" immunity doctrine (Parker v. Brown), which exempts local government entities from the Sherman Act if their conduct is pursuant to a "clearly articulated" state policy to displace competition and is actively supervised by the state.
Conspiracy to Violate Citizens' Civil Rights
- The provided sources do not contain information regarding specific law violations, charges, or penalties for individuals who "conspire to violate citizens' civil rights." While the texts discuss civil suits, civil penalties, and public protests over heavy-handed regulations, they do not reference federal or state civil rights conspiracy statutes (such as 18 U.S.C. § 241).
Here is a breakdown of the alleged law violations, the consequences for the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (PCSWA) board members, and the penalties associated with the Sherman Antitrust Act:
Violations by PCSWA Board Members and Associated Consequences
- Evasion of Competitive Bidding (No-Bid Contracts): The board allegedly bypassed W.Va. Code §20-14-10 and §5-22-1 by approving a $4.12 million lease-to-own agreement with Allegheny Disposal without soliciting competitive bids.
- Consequences for Board Members: The board's actions have sparked intense public backlash, leading citizens to threaten grand jury investigations into their conduct. If successfully challenged in court, the contract itself could be invalidated or voided.
- Open Meetings and Transparency Violations: The board held an exclusionary executive session allowing private contractors to attend while barring public officials, and later restricted public hearings to only allow comments on fees, suppressing discussion on the underlying contracts.
- Consequences for Board Members: This lack of transparency resulted in a highly contentious atmosphere, public protests, and the immediate resignations of board members Ed Riley and Greg Hamonds. It also fueled the public's threats of legal action and grand jury probes.
- Unauthorized Escalation of Civil Penalties: The board drafted regulations attempting to impose a $150 per day civil penalty for waste violations, which directly violates W.Va. Code §22C-4-10(a) limiting penalties to $150 per year.
- Consequences for Board Members: By attempting to levy fines beyond their statutory limits, the board is acting ultra vires (beyond its legal power). A circuit court would almost certainly invalidate these penalties as unauthorized and confiscatory.
- Operating with Expired Oaths and Statutory Vacancies: The board conducted binding votes while operating with vacancies exceeding the 60-day legal limit, and Chairman Dave Henderson allegedly voted under an oath of office that expired in 2015.
- Consequences for Board Members: While the "De Facto Officer Doctrine" shields their past votes from being voided in civil suits (protecting the board's administrative actions from collateral attack), board members operating with expired oaths remain vulnerable to being formally removed from their positions via a quo warranto legal proceeding.
- Unconstitutional "Flow Control" and Export Bans: The board's proposed regulations mandate that all waste must go to their designated transfer station and explicitly prohibit taking waste out of the county.
- Consequences for Board Members: This represents a facial violation of the Dormant Commerce Clause and conflicts with the state's commitment to the "free flow" of solid waste. If litigated, the courts could strike down these ordinances as unconstitutional economic protectionism.
Penalties for Violators of the Federal Sherman Antitrust Act
The Sherman Antitrust Act targets anticompetitive behavior, including conspiracies to restrain trade or establish monopolies:
- Conspiracies in Restraint of Trade (Section 1): Prohibits multi-party conduct, making every contract, combination, or conspiracy in restraint of trade or commerce illegal.
- Conspiracies to Monopolize (Section 2): Prohibits unilateral conduct and conspiracies to monopolize, specifically targeting the use of monopoly power to entrench a market position or block rivals from entry.
- Penalties: The use of monopoly power to block rivals or entrench a market position constitutes a felony. However, the sources note that today, violations of Section 2 are primarily enforced through civil litigation.
- Note on SWA Liability: The PCSWA may be shielded from federal antitrust penalties under the "State Action" immunity doctrine (Parker v. Brown), which exempts local government entities from the Sherman Act if their conduct is pursuant to a "clearly articulated" state policy to displace competition and is actively supervised by the state.
Conspiracy to Violate Citizens' Civil Rights
- The provided sources do not contain information regarding specific law violations, charges, or penalties for individuals who "conspire to violate citizens' civil rights." While the texts discuss civil suits, civil penalties, and public protests over heavy-handed regulations, they do not reference federal or state civil rights conspiracy statutes (such as 18 U.S.C. § 241).



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