In West Virginia, about 125 people gathered Wednesday night for a candlelight vigil in the town of Sago to mourn the 12 coal miners who died in what was the country’s deadliest mining accident in four years. One miner survived and remains hospitalized. The town has been in a state of shock since Tuesday night when residents were initially informed that 12 of the 13 trapped miners had been found alive. But the report turned out to be false. The owner of the mine–the International Coal Group — is coming under increasing criticism for its handling of the tragedy and its safety record. The company’s president Ben Hatfield said he sincerely regretted the manner in which the families were falsely notified. The company waited over two hours to tell the celebrating family members that their loved ones were not in fact alive. The editors of the Charleston Gazette in West Virginia have published an editorial in today’s paper titled “Preventable Deaths.” The editorial reads “this tragedy was not a surprise–both because the mine had a disturbing safety record, and because the Bush administration in Washington has been undercutting mine safety.” Last year, the U.S. Mine Safety and Health Administration filed 200 alleged violations against the Sago mine. 46 citations were issued in the past three months–18 of them were considered “serious and substantial” We’ll go to West Virginia later in the show.