| Halliburton,    the US energy services giant, has admitted destroying evidence relating to    the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil rig explosion in the Gulf of Mexico, the worst    such disaster in American history. A Justice Department    statement released late Thursday said the company had agreed to plead guilty    to criminal conduct that occurred when it was carrying out its own    post-accident investigation. Eleven people died and    4.9 million barrels of oil gushed into the Gulf over a three-month period    after the explosion, with BP -- who leased Deepwater Horizon -- ending up    paying billions of dollars in compensation and cleanup costs. Halliburton Energy    Services, BP's contractor, had been accused by the British oil giant of    destroying evidence. BP has also asked Halliburton to pay damages stemming    from the April 2010 accident off the coast of Louisiana. The Justice Department    statement said Halliburton -- which constructed the cement casing of the well    at the center of the disaster -- had carried out its own internal investigations    in May and June the same year. However, the results of    computer simulations conducted as part of that probe were ordered to be    destroyed and were never recovered, it said. In addition to a guilty    plea -- which is subject to court approval -- Halliburton has agreed to pay    the maximum statutory fine of $200,000. The company said in a statement that    it would make a separate and voluntary $55 million payment to the National    Fish and Wildlife Foundation. The disaster wreaked    havoc on the Gulf region's environment and economy. The central subject of    the cooperation and guilty plea deal was the number of heavy metal collars,    known as centralizers, placed at various points on the cement casing of the    Macondo well that eventually exploded. The Justice Department    said that prior to the blowout, Halliburton had recommended that 21    centralizers be used, but BP instead opted for six. Halliburton's    post-accident tests failed to back up its earlier suggestion. "These simulations    indicated that there was little difference between using six and 21    centralizers. (The) Program Manager was directed to, and did, destroy these    results," the Justice Department statement said. In a later incident in or    around June 2010, similar evidence was also destroyed when Halliburton's    cementing technology director asked another more experienced employee to    repeat the simulations. When he "reached the    same conclusion" he was directed to "get rid of" the    simulations, the statement said. "In agreeing to    plead guilty, Halliburton has accepted criminal responsibility for destroying    the aforementioned evidence," the Justice Department added. Halliburton's statement    said the agreement with the Justice Department would conclude the criminal    investigation into its actions over the giant spill. "A Halliburton    subsidiary has agreed to plead guilty to one misdemeanor violation associated    with the deletion of records created after the Macondo well incident, to pay    the statutory maximum fine of $200,000 and to accept a term of three years    probation," it said. Several government probes    have castigated BP, rig operator Transocean and Halliburton for cutting    corners and missing warning signs that could have prevented the disaster. Last year, BP agreed to pay    $4.5 billion in penalties and pleaded guilty to multiple criminal charges    relating to the explosion and ensuing spill. The company also spent    more than $14 billion on the response and cleanup and has paid another $10    billion to businesses, individuals and local governments that did not join an    ongoing class action lawsuit. | 
YOUR COMMENT
