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Gulf Oil Spill Investigation: Dead Animals Scrutinized By Scientists To Determine BP's Liability

PHUONG LE   10/14/10 06:38 PM ET   AP

Oil Spill Bird

NEW ORLEANS — Dead birds are wrapped in foil or paper, then sealed in plastic bags to avoid cross contamination. Dolphin tissue samples and dead sea turtles are kept in locked freezers. Field notebooks are collected and secured.

Scientists examining dead animals that were discovered along the Gulf Coast in the wake of the BP oil spill are observing strict laboratory protocols, knowing everything they touch could become evidence in what may prove to be the biggest environmental case in U.S. history.

Like detectives on a murder case, government scientists – and outside experts under contract to the government – are using CSI-style techniques to determine whether the oil is to blame for the wildlife deaths.

The U.S. Justice Department is investigating whether those responsible for the spill violated environmental laws that carry civil and sometimes criminal penalties, and the scientists are taking extraordinary steps to make sure their findings hold up in court.

"What we want to do is to make sure that the findings and the results we get aren't called into question in court based on chain of custody or other legal issues," said Dr. Michael Ziccardi, a veterinarian. "We're treating oiled wildlife response like a crime scene."

Justice Department spokeswoman Hannah August declined to comment on the investigation. Attorney General Eric Holder said in June that the government will prosecute violations of such laws as the Clean Water Act, the Migratory Bird Treaty Act and the Endangered Species Act.

The number of dead creatures will help determine the fines and penalties levied against BP and other companies involved.

Wildlife deaths will also figure into the government's assessment of the spill's damage to the Gulf's natural resources. That accounting could take years and will be used to bill BP and the other companies for the cost of restoring the environment.

By some estimates, they could be forced to pay billions of dollars – more, perhaps, than the penalties associated with the Exxon Valdez disaster.

Exxon was hit with a record criminal fine of $150 million for the 1989 tanker spill in Alaska but ultimately paid $125 million in penalties. It also agreed to pay $900 million to settle federal and state civil claims. The spill of nearly 11 million gallons was the largest in U.S. history until it was eclipsed by the Gulf gusher that spewed some 206 million gallons from the blown-out BP well over three months.

BP spokesman Robert Wine noted the oil company set aside $32.2 billion during the second quarter to cover the long-term cost of the spill.

Since the Deepwater Horizon rig exploded April 20, killing 11 workers and triggering the spill, authorities have found thousands of dead animals.

But animals die every year in the Gulf from a variety of factors, including fishing, hurricanes, low oxygen levels and disease. And the vast majority of the hundreds of dead dolphins and sea turtles have had no visible signs of oil, so scientists have been forced to look more deeply.

"Is there damage to the eyes, to the skin? Are there lesions in the stomach or in the lungs, which can occur during oil exposure. Is there microscopic damage to the liver, the kidney?" said Ziccardi, who directs the Oiled Wildlife Care Network at the University of California at Davis.

The results of the laboratory tests are still being compiled.

The dead animals are being kept at universities and public and private research centers across the Gulf Coast.

Carcasses are taken from the freezer, thawed, photographed and examined internally and externally. Anyone who handles one of the carcasses must sign a log sheet that is used to keep track of when remains are removed and when are they put back. The notebooks in which scientists recorded when and where they found a particular animal are regarded as vital evidence, too.

"Pretty much in this case here," said Peter Tuttle, acting Interior Department case coordinator for the natural damage process, "everything is considered evidence."

___

Online:

U.S. government list of Gulf wildlife collected: http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/health/oilspill.htm

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NEW ORLEANS — Dead birds are wrapped in foil or paper, then sealed in plastic bags to avoid cross contamination. Dolphin tissue samples and dead sea turtles are kept in locked freezers. Field no...
NEW ORLEANS — Dead birds are wrapped in foil or paper, then sealed in plastic bags to avoid cross contamination. Dolphin tissue samples and dead sea turtles are kept in locked freezers. Field no...
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11:49 AM on 10/18/2010
Do not forget that B P would not allow access to the beaches and hired workers to take the d e a d animals to be destroyed or hidden so they would not be part of the count that is needed to extrapolate how much animal life was really lost. This is obstruction of justice.

The people who should have claims against B P were hired to clean up the mess. The workers were not allowed gas masks. They were exposed to Corexit in this work. How are they going to fight for their claims when they are all d e a d?

Why do I ask this? Nearly all the workers who were exposed to Corexit during the cleanup in Alaska are no longer alive.

links below.
11:42 AM on 10/18/2010
BP you're silence is deafening on what you're doing for the Gulf. I do however continue to hear the familiar ka-ching sound your famous for.
09:47 AM on 10/15/2010
BP's American assets should have been taken over by our government. Against the orders of the President, BP refused to stop using the very, very toxic chemical.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joffan
Time is an illusion. Lunchtime doubly so.
09:53 PM on 10/16/2010
Without the use of dispersant, many more creatures would have died. Is that what you would have preferred?

Corexit is toxic at full strength but not when diluted to about 1%. Undispersed oil is a long-term hazard. Choose.
11:19 AM on 10/17/2010
The dispersant is more dangerous than the oil. It eats through fat. It burns through leather. It makes things urinate and defecate bloood. It has gotten into pools in Florida. It is highly toxic. The family's pool had much less than one percent in it and it caused them very bad health problems every time they got in their pool. Is BP paying you?
11:21 AM on 10/17/2010
There are dispersants that were just as effective, but without the toxicity. Corexit is not even allowed to be used in Britain. BP had all of these gallons of it and wanted to get rid of it.
09:45 AM on 10/15/2010
People, don't forget that BP would not allow anybody near the beaches and hired people to collect the bodies of all the dead animals that they could find so that the extrapolation of how many animals died would be skewed in their favor because by law for every animal found, it increases how much they would be fined.
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05:45 PM on 10/14/2010
After the Unity exhibited by Chile and its appeal to the World for assistance to save the miners - the Gulf response is deplorable and we should all be embarrassed and ashamed of OUR collective United States response to the BP disaster. We used to be the best. No more.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
HLL
Women, their rights & nothing less ~ SusanBAnthony
04:54 PM on 10/14/2010
Good. At least those poor animals will not have suffered and died in vain. I hope BP has to cough up hundreds of billions ☮

Sea Turtle Restoration:
http://www.seaturtles.org/

International Bird Rescue Research Center:
http://www.ibrrc.org/

TRI-STATE Bird Rescue & Research (In Louisiana):
http://www.tristatebird.org/

Dolphins washed up on U.S. coast:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/wildlife/7713466/Gulf-of-Mexico-oil-spill-dead-dolphins-found-washed-up-on-US-coast.html
06:23 PM on 10/14/2010
Thanks you for the links. The animals deserve an apology for our lack of concern for their habitat.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
HLL
Women, their rights & nothing less ~ SusanBAnthony
06:59 PM on 10/14/2010
YW. I couldn't agree more. Fanned for your compassion ☮
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Almondo
Agnostic Realist Tradevknaught
07:44 PM on 10/14/2010
Thanks for the links my friend.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
HLL
Women, their rights & nothing less ~ SusanBAnthony
09:40 PM on 10/14/2010
Most welcome, my friend ♥ ☮