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BP fined, charged in oil spill that showed ‘profit over prudence’

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The spill volume was just not a matter of gauging environmental harm, it also had financial implications: The more oil released into the gulf environment, the greater the civil penalties BP faced under federal environmental law.

“BP lied to me,” Rep. Edward J. Markey, D-Mass., said Thursday at a Capitol Hill news conference. “And they lied to all Americans.”

“They were deliberately low balling the number because their liability is directly tied to the number of barrels of oil that flow into the ocean,” he said. “They deserve this record-breaking penalty.”

Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., said in a written statement that he was pleased that the Justice Department “brought the hammer down on BP. … Now that this is worked out, it’s time to move on to the civil side of things and get Gulf Coast residents every cent they deserve.”

Congress held a spate of high-profile hearings after the spill. Rainey, BP’s vice president of exploration in the gulf, met with congressional investigators at a May 2010 closed-door briefing held by Markey, then chairman of a House subcommittee on energy and the environment.

“Rainey allegedly cherry-picked pages from documents, withheld other documents altogether and lied to Congress and others to make this spill appear less catastrophic than it was,” Breuer, the assistant attorney general, said.

David Uhlmann, former head of the Environmental Crimes Section at the Justice Department, characterized the fine, although unprecedented, as being “on the low end of the acceptable range.”

“ When you look at a $4.5 billion alongside the tens of billion of dollars of harm that was caused by the Gulf oil spill and the tragic loss of life on the Deepwater Horizon, it’s hard to escape the conclusion that today’s settlement is a relatively modest financial penalty for BP,” Uhlmann said.

Uhlmann, a professor at the University of Michigan Law School, said he found the manslaughter charges against the BP rig supervisors “troubling” and predicted the case could face a stiff challenge in court.

“The question in my mind is whether a criminal charge would have been better reserved for those at least a few rungs higher up the ladder, not a team leader on a drill rig 70 miles in the Gulf of Mexico,” Uhlmann said. “They were not the ones responsible for BP’s terrible corporate culture for compliance and safety issues.”

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