I haven't read everything on this thread yet but I wanted to add...I am a caver (not too much recently tho), I have been involved on some cave rescues. Being trapped or injured in a cave is much like being trapped in a mine (without the dangerous fumes). I do understand how the miscommunication may have occured. Please realize that the rescuers worked many long hours without sleep or food. I am sure many of them were on the point of exhaustion when the false news broke out. Even in this day of cell phones, it is not easy to get communications to the ground level from underground without some complications, they have to basically run a line from where the incident occured to ground level...this involves several hundred feet to several thousand feet of obstacles in the way....especially during a mine collapse. In my opinion, the news media was too news hungry to wait for clear, concise facts. They simply overheard bits and pieces on the ground level that was coming in bits and pieces from underground (much like the old game of telephone we used to play...First person relays a sentence and by the time it gets to the last person it is totally way off base of the original). In their hurry to get the news out FIRST, they didn't stop to confirm. In the media's defense...by the time the real news came out...many newspapers were already printed and in route to being delivered...no time for a retraction. I do agree it is/was a bad situation for all involved and it's very heartbreaking. The company didn't race into give the good news, nor did it race to deny it. They simply didn't know. I do think there are some safety issues at stake with this property/company. To be honest when I first heard the news of the miners being stranded I didn't think any would come out alive. I do hope the survivor makes it. It is surely a lesson to be learned. In any cave rescue I have been involved with or heard of, there are always mistakes made and lessons learned. I do not think any intentionally sets out for these things to happen, but until you have been there and lived through something like this...do not judge those who truly had best intentions...the rescuers. My husband went on a cave rescue once and had to recover a body...those involved in such a tragedy will never forget it and always wish they could have done something different.