Halliburton Manager Found Guilty of Destroying Evidence And Fined $1000
posted by M Caulfield
The environmental effects from the 2010 BP oil spill are going
to continue to be felt for years to come. BP officials are
responsible for gross negligence and willfully
criminal misconduct (in many colorful contexts: from
them it was drinkable, to their role in covering up
but where there should be heavy fines and life
sentences levied, the corporation has thus far always
gotten a legal slap on the wrist.
This, that there are two forms of “justice” in the US,
depending on your net worth, has been continually
reaffirmed in so many examples that I know wouldn’t
where to start or end in listing them. Individuals receive
longer prison sentences for possessing any of several
natural plants, than men or corporations whose negligence
has cost human, animal, and vegitative life.
Endangering our collective survival is more legally
tolerated than waving a pen at the police (which can get
The disaster and resulting oil spill devastated marine
and coastal environments, and is debatably the worst
environmental disaster ever seen in the US (with Fukushima
still working to outcompete it globally. The consequences for
this disaster were essentially non-existent, and their choice
to use Corexit (a highly toxic “dispersant” which makes
use it. Not only did they use the highly toxic,
environmentally damaging Corexit, they used about
2 million gallons of it on top of the roughly 5 million
barrels of oil released into the Gulf of Mexico.
Former Halliburton manager, Anthony Badalmenti,
was sentenced Tuesday to one year probation (That's All?)
for having been found guilty of destroying evidence
in the aftermath of BP’s massive 2010 oil spill.
Two BP employees had been indicted several
years ago on manslaughter charges for their
involvement in the disaster that left 11 workers dead.
Along with other fines and charges laid, BP paid a US
settlement worth $4.5 billion, which included $1.3 in
criminal fines.
Badalamenti, along with his one year sentence,
will be required to complete 100 hours of community
service, and to pay a fine of $1000. Badalamenti was
the cementing technology director for Halliburton Energy
Services Inc., he was positioned as the cement
contractor on the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig.
Prosecutors presented evidence that Badalamenti
instructed two Halliburton employees to intentionally
destroy data during a post-spill review of the cement
job on BP’s blown-out Macondo well.
The judge said that the sentence of probation
was very reasonable, and was clearly reassured
that Badalamenti was already a rehabilitated man,
"I still feel that you are a very honorable man...
I have no doubt that you've learned from this mistake."
– the judge stated. (Oh No He Didn't)
Another engineer working for BP was also previously
found by a federal jury in New Orleans guilty for
having destroyed evidence about the Deepwater
Horizon oil spill. Kurt Mix was found to have deleted
hundreds of text messages he sent and received
from his supervisor and a contractor, in an effort to
hide evidence that the company knew more oil was
leaking than it had publicly revealed. Mix was
found on one count of obstruction of justice, and
acquitted on a second count involving a contractor,
his final sentencing is scheduled for March 26.
A single year of probation and a $1000 fine is less
punishment for helping conceal far-reaching crimes
(which affect many species and generations)
than the average cocaine user faces simply for
possession. Some may celebrate that he was found
guilty at all, but the precedent being set by such
a light punishment is the opposite of what many
feel we need: shouldn’t ecocide (and concealing the
Read more:
http://www.exposingtruth.com/halliburton-manager-found-guilty-destroying-evidence/#ixzz3UtDtXNXP
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