BP
to pay record penalty for Gulf oil spill
BP
will plead guilty to manslaughter charges stemming from the 2010
Deepwater Horizon explosion and oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, and
agreed to pay $4.5 billion in government penalties, Attorney General
Eric Holder announced Thursday.
CNN,
15
November, 2012
Of
the penalties, $4 billion will resolve criminal charges. An
additional $525 million will be paid to resolve claims brought by the
Securities and Exchange Commission that BP lied to investors by
understating the amount of oil flowing into the Gulf.
Separate
from the corporate manslaughter charges, a federal grand jury
returned an indictment charging the two highest-ranking BP
supervisors on board the Deepwater Horizon on the day of the
explosion with 23 criminal counts. The two men were charged with
seaman's manslaughter and involuntary manslaughter for each of the 11
men killed in the blast, as well as a criminal violation of the clean
water act.
The
grand jury also charged BP's second-highest ranking representative at
the company's unified command post with hiding information from
Congress and allegedly lying to law enforcement officials.
The
company also will plead guilty to a felony count of obstruction of
Congress, a misdemeanor count under the Clean Water Act and a
misdemeanor count under the Migratory Bird Treaty.
Holder
said the dollar amount of the penalties and the criminal charges
against both the company and individuals are unprecedented.
"I
hope that this sends a clear message to those who would engage in
this kind of reckless and wanton conduct that there will be a
significant penalty to pay," he said.
The
settlement is subject to federal judicial review.
"All
of us at BP deeply regret the tragic loss of life caused by the
Deepwater Horizon accident as well as the impact of the spill on the
Gulf coast region," Bob Dudley, chief executive of BP (BP), said
in a statement. "From the outset, we stepped up by responding to
the spill, paying legitimate claims and funding restoration efforts
in the Gulf."
"We
apologize for our role in the accident, and as today's resolution
with the U.S. government further reflects, we have accepted
responsibility for our actions," Dudley added.
The
fine comes on top of $20 billion that the company has agreed to pay
into a trust fund to meet damage claims from the millions of gallons
of oil spilled into the Gulf. It said it expects to pay a final $860
million into that fund this quarter.
BP
reported a $17.2 billion loss in the quarter when the explosion took
place. But it has been profitable since then, booking total profits
of $43 billion over the course of the subsequent nine quarters. It
will not be able to use the fines to reduce the amount of taxes it
owes, Holder said.
Family
members of the victims who spoke to CNN Thursday said they were
pleased that BP was being forced to pay for the blast, but said it
doesn't make up for their loss.
"It
doesn't bring my boy back, but it does show everybody that they're
guilty and everybody knows it," said Billy Anderson, whose son
Jason was one of the rig workers killed.
Arlene
Weise lost her 24-year-old son Adam on the rig that day.
"I
knew all along that BP was the devil in that accident," she
said. "Now they're getting their due."
But
Weise said Thursday's announcement offered only a limited sense of
justice.
"It
doesn't matter how much money anyone pays," she said. "It
doesn't nearly amount to what we've lost."
The
well was capped three months after the explosion, but in that time,
the spill caused extensive environmental damage to the Gulf.
Embattled CEO Tony Hayward was forced to resign, and BP shares
plummeted.
BP
has reached a $7.8 billion settlement with lawyers representing
private-sector victims. But in September of this year, the Justice
Department accused BP of gross negligence and a "culture of
corporate recklessness" in a federal court filing, which
expanded the company's liability.
A
major civil trial set to take place in New Orleans has been delayed
until February 2013.
Transocean
(RIG), the owner and operator of the rig, also has unresolved
liability issues. The DOJ, in its September filing, said the company
is also guilty of gross negligence.
"BP
did not act alone, by any means, and its gross negligence and willful
misconduct are inextricably joined with the acts and omissions of
Transocean," the government said in the filing.
Without
naming Transocean, BP said Thursday it is not the only company to
blame for the accident.
"Today's
agreement is consistent with BP's position in the ongoing civil
litigation that this was an accident resulting from multiple causes,
involving multiple parties, as found by other official
investigations," said the company's statement.
BP
will have up to six years to pay the money it agreed to as part of
the settlement. Most of that money -- $2.4 billion -- will go to the
National Fish & Wildlife Foundation, an independent
not-for-profit conservation group chartered by Congress in 1984. It
is a windfall for the group, whose total contributions and
commitments since its founding are just above $2 billion.
Another
$350 million will go to the National Academy of Science.
BP
identified the remaining $1.256 billion of the settlement as a
"criminal fine." More than $1 billion of that fine will go
to the U.S. Coast Guard's Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund, to be
available for cleanup -- and compensation for those affected by --
oil spills in the Gulf .
It
is single largest criminal fine on record. The previous record was
$1.195 billion criminal fine paid by Pfizer (PFE, Fortune 500) as
part of a $2.3 billion settlement in September 2009 over the
fraudulent marketing of anti-inflammatory arthritis drug Bextra
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