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BP to pay record $4.5 billion criminal penalty in Deepwater Horizon spill

 

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About the charges:

BP is charged with 11 counts of felony manslaughter, one count of felony obstruction of Congress, and violations of the Clean Water and Migratory Bird Treaty acts.


McClatchy Newspapers

Oil giant BP will plead guilty to misconduct and felony criminal manslaughter for the Deepwater Horizon disaster that killed 11 workers and led to the biggest environmental disaster in U.S. history.

The company agreed to pay a record $4.5 billion penalty in a settlement the Justice Department announced Thursday. Its costs could soar by several billions more as the federal government now pursues a civil claim against the company for violations of the Clean Water Act.

Assistant Attorney General Lanny Breuer said the 2010 rig explosion that led to the release of more than 4 million barrels of oil into the Gulf of Mexico resulted from BP’s culture of “profit over prudence.”

Three individual BP employees face criminal charges, two of them for manslaughter. BP also admitted to obstructing Congress and giving shareholders wrong information.

“As the oil spill continued, BP made a tragic situation worse,” Breuer said. “It began misleading Congress and the American people about how much oil was pouring out of the Macondo well. As BP now admits, in responding to Congress, the company lied and withheld documents, in order to make it seem as though less damage was being done to the environment than was actually occurring.”

A Louisiana grand jury charged the two top BP supervisors on the Deepwater Horizon rig with manslaughter in connection with the rig explosion. The Justice Department said Robert M. Kaluza, 62, of Henderson, Nev., and Donald J. Vidrine, 65, of Lafayette, La., negligently caused the explosion.

“In the face of glaring red flags indicating that the well was not secure, both men allegedly failed to take appropriate action to prevent the blowout,” Breuer said.

A former BP executive who was the company’s second-highest official on the scene for the spill response also is being charged. David Rainey, 58, of Houston, was indicted for obstruction of Congress and lying to law enforcement officials. The indictment alleges he withheld information to make it seem the spill was less catastrophic than it was.

The Justice Department said it was continuing the criminal investigation and pursuing its civil lawsuit alleging BP committed “gross negligence.” The civil suit is scheduled for trial in January, although the government and BP are in settlement talks. BP also could be liable for state claims of natural resource damage and private civil claims.

“This is just one aspect,” Trudy Fisher, executive director of the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality, said of the criminal penalty. “This is not everything.”

BP chairman Carl-Henric Svanberg pledged on Thursday to “vigorously defend the company against the remaining civil claims.”

The Justice Department emphasized the historic size of the $4.5 billion penalty. But Sierra Club executive director Michael Brune called it a “slap on the wrist” compared to the damage done.

So far, the penalties don’t threaten BP’s fiscal health, said Pavel Molchanov, an energy analyst with Raymond James, a financial services company. BP sold its stake in a Russian energy company for $30 billion in cash.

"BP has no problem paying $4 billion," Molchanov said.

About $2.4 billion of the money will go to environmental restoration and conservation efforts on the Gulf Coast. More than $1 billion will go to the Coast Guard’s cleanup fund and $350 million to development of spill prevention and response efforts.

Email: scockerham@mcclatchydc.com; Twitter: @seancockerham

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