Just months before trials are set to begin, BP is accusing Halliburton of destroying evidence related to their shoddy cement work that helped cause last yearโs Gulf of Mexico oil disaster. According to Reuters, BP has officially filed their allegations with the courts, hoping to get the ball rolling on an investigation prior to trial.
Halliburton was responsible for supplying the cement on the Deepwater Horizon oil rigโs well, which was found to be substandard in investigations. According to Reuters, via Raw Story:
Citing recent depositions and Halliburtonโs own documents, BP said Halliburton โintentionallyโ destroyed the results of slurry testing for the well, in part to โeliminate any risk that this evidence would be used against it at trial.โ
The oil company also said Halliburton appeared to have lost computer evidence showing how the cement performed, with Halliburton maintaining that the information is simply โgone.โ
BP asked U.S. District Judge Carl Barbier in New Orleans, who oversees spill litigation, to sanction Halliburton by ruling that Halliburtonโs slurry design was โunstable,โ a finding of fact that could be used at trial.
If Halliburton did destroy evidence, this could significantly shift the blame for the oil well, showing that Halliburton had something to hide. This would then take a lot of pressure off of BP andย Transocean.
Already, last yearโs oil leak in the Gulf has helped uncover a treasure trove of information on Halliburton, as well as former CEO and Vice President of the United States Dick Cheney. From an earlier report on DeSmogBlog:
To understand the full story, you have to understand the involvement of both Oynes and Cheney. Chris Oynes oversaw all oil and gas leasing in the Gulf of Mexico for the Minerals Management Service (MMS) for twelve years, meaning he personally oversaw the lease given to the Deepwater Horizon rig. It was during this time that Oynes made a name for himself in Republican politics by allowing oil companies to buy cheap leases to drill in the Gulf of Mexico without paying any taxes on their revenues. According to the resulting Congressional hearings on the matter, the oil companies claim that they repeatedly told Oynes that he needed to be charging taxes, but he refused. When asked by the Congressional committee about this, Oynes told them that he simply forgot to charge taxes. But his gifts to the oil industry didnโt end with the estimated $10 billion tax break. He also allowed the oil companies to fill out their own inspection reports in pencil. Oynes would then have his staff trace over in ink, giving the impression that they were actually doing their jobs.
In a normal scenario, this should have gotten Oynes booted out of the agency. But in 2007, Dick Cheney personally saw to it that Oynes receive a promotion to become the associate director for Offshore Energy and Minerals Management at MMS. Oynes was the perfect fit for Cheney, as Cheney himself had been working for years to dismantle regulations on the oil industry and allow them to write their own rules.
And this is where the plot thickens. During Dick Cheneyโs secret energy task force meetings in 2001, he allowed oil industry executives to help draft legislation that would allow them to operate with almost no oversight (and the oversight that did occur came from cronies like Chris Oynes.) One of the most important rules that they wrote for themselves was that they didnโt have to include an acoustic switch on offshore oil rigs โ a device that blows up and seals off a well permanently in the event of a blowout.
Halliburton, along with Transocean, has already been the target of a $40 billion lawsuit from BP, and these new accusations are certainly not going to help their case in the BP lawsuit or in the major civil suits that are approachingย trial.
Subscribe to our newsletter
Stay up to date with DeSmog news and alerts