Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Halliburton manager pleads guilty to destroying Gulf spill evidence

Tue, 15th Oct 2013 19:14

NEW ORLEANS, Oct 15 (Reuters) - A Halliburton Co manager formally pleaded guilty in U.S. federal court on Tuesdayto destroying evidence in connection with the oilfield servicescompany's role in the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexicoin 2010.

The plea by Anthony Badalamenti, former cementing technologydirector, was submitted a month after Halliburton also pleadedguilty to similar charges over the deletion of computersimulations of the stability of the ill-fated Macondo well.

Halliburton provided cementing services for BP at theMacondo drilling operation - including the placement of"centralizers," or huge plugs, at various points in piping as itwas placed inside the drilled well. Centralizers help ensurecement properly seals a well.

Halliburton had recommended BP use 21 centralizers in theMacondo well, and BP chose to use six. Halliburton later claimedthat if BP had followed its recommendation to use more, the wellwould have been more stable.

According to court documents, the government alleged that inMay 2010, as part of Halliburton's review of the oil spill whichbegan in April and was plugged in July, Badalamenti directedanother manager to run computer simulations comparingperformance of 21 centralizers with that of six.

In June that year, Badalamenti allegedly directed a secondmanager to run a similar comparison.

Both times, the simulations indicated there was littledifference between use of 21 centralizers as opposed to six.Prosecutors allege that both times, Badalamenti ordered themanagers to delete the simulation results from their computers,and both complied - even though a company executive had askedemployees to preserve material related to the well.

The Macondo accident killed 11 workers and the governmentsays 4.9 million barrels of oil spilled into the sea. It took 87days to contain the well.

In an ongoing, multi-phase civil trial over the cause of thewell explosion in federal court in New Orleans, both thegovernment and BP contend that faulty cement work by Halliburtoncontributed to the disaster.

BP also contends that Halliburton destroyed computerevidence that would have shown those errors.

Related Shares

More News
30 May 2024 20:55

Trinidad court recognizes ConocoPhillips' $1.3 bln claim against Venezuela

May 30 (Reuters) - A Trinidad and Tobago court order has granted ConocoPhillips the right to enforce a $1.33 billion claim against Venezuela for pas...

29 May 2024 21:16

BP, Trinidad's NGC receive US license for gas development with Venezuela

May 29 (Reuters) - British oil major BP and Trinidad and Tobago's state energy firm NGC have received a two-year license from the U.S. Treasury Depa...

27 May 2024 11:00

BP, EOG Resources in talks to jointly develop Trinidad gas field

May 27 (Reuters) - Oil major BP and U.S. shale producer EOG Resources are in discussions to jointly develop a natural gas field off the coast of Tri...

25 May 2024 17:56

South Africa's Central Energy Fund acquires Durban refinery land, assets

CAPE TOWN, May 25 (Reuters) - South Africa's state-owned Central Energy Fund has acquired land and assets at the country's largest refinery which ha...

23 May 2024 21:40

Republican-led states ask Supreme Court to quash Big Oil climate lawsuits

May 23 (Reuters) - Nineteen Republican attorneys general have filed a rare complaint directly with the U.S. Supreme Court asking it to block several...

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.