Halliburton
pleads guilty to destroying Gulf spill evidence
Halliburton
Co has agreed to plead guilty to destroying evidence related to the
2010 Gulf of Mexico oil spill, the U.S. Department of Justice said on
Thursday.
25
July, 2013
The
government said Halliburton's guilty plea is the third by a company
over the spill and requires the world's second-largest oilfield
services company to pay a maximum $200,000 statutory fine.
Halliburton
also agreed to three years of probation and to continue cooperating
with the criminal probe into the April 20, 2010, explosion of the
Deepwater Horizon drilling rig.
Court
approval is required. Houston-based Halliburton also made a separate,
voluntary $55 million payment to the National Fish and Wildlife
Foundation, the Justice Department said.
Edward
Sherman, a Tulane University law professor, said the plea could
suggest weakness in Halliburton's position in negotiating a
settlement over spill-related liabilities.
"Their
willingness to plead to this may also indicate that they'd like to
settle up with the federal government on the civil penalties,"
he said. "It may indicate a softening of their position."
Halliburton
confirmed in a statement that it pleaded guilty to the misdemeanor
charge and confirmed the plea agreement's terms.
The
disaster caused 11 deaths and triggered the largest U.S. offshore oil
spill following the rupture of the Macondo oil well, which was 65
percent owned by BP Plc. Halliburton had earlier provided cementing
services to help seal the well.
According
to the government, Halliburton recommended to BP that the Macondo
well contain 21 centralizers, metal collars that can improve
cementing, but BP chose to use six.
The
government said that, during an internal probe into the cementing
after the blowout, Halliburton ordered workers to destroy computer
simulations that showed little difference between using six and 21
centralizers.
Efforts
to locate the simulations forensically were unsuccessful, the
government said.
A
document detailing the allegations was filed with the U.S. District
Court in New Orleans.
BP
and Transocean Ltd, which owned the drilling rig, previously entered
guilty pleas over other aspects of the Gulf oil spill, and agreed to
pay respective criminal fines of $1.26 billion and $400 million.
Both
declined to comment on the Halliburton plea.
Halliburton,
BP and Transocean are also defendants in a federal civil trial that
began in February to apportion blame and set damages for the oil
spill.
The
first witness for Halliburton, cementing service coordinator
Nathaniel Chaisson, had testified that he was concerned about BP's
use of just six centralizers.
The
trial is scheduled to resume in September. Halliburton said in April
it was in talks to settle private claims against it in the damages
trial.
The
case is U.S. v. Halliburton Energy Services Inc, U.S. District Court,
Eastern District of Louisiana, No. 13-00165. The main spill trial is
in re: Oil Spill by the Oil Rig "Deepwater Horizon" in the
Gulf of Mexico, on April 20, 2010 in the same court, No. 10-md-02179
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.