More

Gulf Oil Spill Fund Fraudulent Claims Top 7,000

BRIAN SKOLOFF and HARRY R. WEBER   01/27/11 07:40 PM ET   AP

NEW ORLEANS — The $20 billion fund responsible for compensating victims of BP's Gulf of Mexico oil spill has received more than 7,000 potentially fraudulent claims, many of which have been referred to the Justice Department for criminal investigations, the fund's administrator told a Senate panel on Thursday.

Attorney Kenneth Feinberg, who is overseeing the Gulf Coast Claims Facility, said of more than 481,000 claims filed, 7,575 are considered potentially fraudulent. The Justice Department has already indicted eight claimants.

The fund was set up in August to handle thousands of claims for compensation from residents, business owners and fishermen across the Gulf Coast and beyond who can prove they suffered financial losses from BP PLC's April 20 oil well blowout off the coast of Louisiana. The Deepwater Horizon explosion killed 11 rig workers and sent millions of gallons of crude into the Gulf.

Feinberg testified in Washington on Thursday before a subcommittee of the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs. Lawmakers criticized Feinberg's operation of the fund and the slow pace of processing claims, questioning his commitment to transparency.

Feinberg's Washington law firm had been receiving $850,000 a month from BP for its work. He is currently negotiating with BP over a new payment structure for his administration of the fund through August 2013.

"As the Gulf continues to recover, I continue to have serious concerns regarding claims determinations made by this organization," said Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Ala., who noted that 38,604 claims in his home state have yet to receive "one penny in funding."

"The Gulf Coast Claims Facility is not acting with the appropriate urgency I thought it would," Shelby said.

Claimants across the Gulf Coast have also criticized Feinberg, complaining that they are being paid too little, too slowly or not at all.

Those who feel they were shortchanged or wrongly denied compensation can appeal to the U.S. Coast Guard. As of Thursday, Feinberg said the Coast Guard had processed 264 out of 507 appeals. In every case they reviewed, the agency has agreed with the decisions by the claims fund and offered no additional relief.

Feinberg has repeatedly promised fairness and transparency. He called the program a success that has already paid out more than $3.3 billion to about 168,000 claimants. He said roughly half of all claims have been denied because of ineligibility or lack of documentation.

Feinberg also told the panel he would soon begin downsizing the fund's staff because some aren't needed after the claims have been entered into the system. But he said it would be done carefully so it doesn't hurt the fund's ability "to process claims efficiently and effectively."

The fund currently employs about 3,600 people directly or by contract. The first round of cuts will lose 150 people from one of the subcontractors, with more to come.

"As the program moves forward, we simply do not need the same infrastructure that we needed when hundreds of thousands of people were filing for the first time," Feinberg told The Associated Press after the hearing.

The fund will continue operating until 2013 because that's how long claimants have to decide whether to take a final settlement, accept interim quarterly payments or forego the claim and sue instead.

___

Associated Press Writer Dina Cappiello contributed to this report from Washington. Skoloff reported from Ocean Springs, Miss.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST GREEN

NEW ORLEANS — The $20 billion fund responsible for compensating victims of BP's Gulf of Mexico oil spill has received more than 7,000 potentially fraudulent claims, many of which have been refer...
NEW ORLEANS — The $20 billion fund responsible for compensating victims of BP's Gulf of Mexico oil spill has received more than 7,000 potentially fraudulent claims, many of which have been refer...
Filed by Joanna Zelman  |  Report Corrections
 
 
  • Comments
  • 122
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (5 total)
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jimpager
09:59 AM on 02/01/2011
More than 7000 fraudulent claims...the horror of it. And only ONE fraudulent oil company (who ought to be banned from American waters forever). Look Martha, the rich folks 7,000:1 times more ethical than the middle class and poor, right?

Put in a slightly different perspective, though, the 7,500 POTENTIAL fraudulent claims against the 481,000 total claims filed represents (7500/481,000) or 1.5% or so fraudulent claims. When arrayed against the destruction of Gulf habitat, wildlife & fisheries deaths, Gulf economic impact, future health impact, and destruction of families and southern Gulf culture, and of course the deaths of BP employees lost in the original explosion, perhaps the one fraudulent oil company should make sure it shuts the hell up about fraud and should quiet its toadies on the Gulf Coast Claims Facility as well. None of the fraudulent claimants has killed anyone, killed any animals or fish, closed down a single business, caused any health problems, or caused a single family to break up in economic divorce. Only one fraudulent oil company has "accomplished" all that. And the audacity of attempting to deflect guilt from itself to the victims. Had BP not negligently dropped tens of millions of gallons of oil into America's Gulf of Mexico, you know how many fraudulent claims they would have? Zero.

So WHO is the real fraud here?
photo
ideasmatter
Knowledge is free
10:49 AM on 01/31/2011
Less than 2% fraudulent? That is a really good result actually. What's more worrisome is the number of delays in rightful claims.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
padrushka
question authority
05:02 AM on 01/31/2011
"potentially fraudulent ": interesting the justice department is right on top of this potential for fraud, when the fraud BP perpetrated on America was ignored.
09:18 PM on 01/29/2011
Half of all claims lack documentation - in other words those claimants haven't been paying their taxes. I have no sympathy for any of them. Prison time would be proper payment.
03:25 PM on 01/31/2011
Prison time for BP? Good Idea.
It's true, they skated on the windfall taxes, let's make the SOB's pay, lock um up too.

I have NO sympathy for car driving FOOLS and the dead planet they bequeath to there children.

GROW A SET, RIDE A BIKE ;-)
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rodger leMonde
I call them as I see them.
01:07 PM on 01/29/2011
These claims should handled with the same regard for BP that BP has shown for the environment and those effected by their misadventure.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
2garen
11:30 PM on 01/28/2011
I wonder how many billions have been spent by the taxpayer to clean up , have our coast guard there, have an admiral on the US payroll support and threaten to arrest American Citizens on public lands, MIliatry/navy/NOAH that no one wants to talk about at the site. Want me to continue my list?
maxfax
Taa - dah!
11:25 PM on 01/28/2011
What a surprise this little tidbit was released today, given that 10s of thousands of legitimate claims have gone unanswered, ignored, or totally misplaced by Feinberg's claims group.  How convenient when he now wants to double his take off the top of the claims fund.  How much more transparent could his agenda be?
 
 
08:44 PM on 01/28/2011
2% is a plague? They are also being investigated right? Bombastic Hyperbole.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
doctorj2u
08:23 PM on 01/28/2011
"Green" is where all the oil spill coverage disappears to, And then Americans wonder why "I never heard about that?"
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Marchmont
08:18 PM on 01/28/2011
The attorney Kenneth Feinberg, who is administering the $20 billion BP fund, told a Congressional hearing that some 170,000 claimants had received full compensation. However the fund has been flooded by thousands of bogus claims as every chancer in the Deep South gets her or her snout into the money swill. Around 8,000 of the most blatant have been passed on to the American authorities but it is not expected that the US Department of Justice will bother to indict more than a handful. It was clear that BP would be taken for a ride after being forced by President Obama to pay out before it was possible for the investigators to apportion blame. Ironically, since BP is mostly American owned, it is American pensioners who will ultimately be fleeced by Obama’s tokenism and rough “justice
11:39 AM on 01/29/2011
Oh no.Are you certain that Poor BP is mostly American owned? If that truly is the case than the whole unpleasant incident should be quietly forgotten like the Exon Valdez incident was.
Is that your point you corporate apologist?
photo
Bienville
Make levees, not war
04:16 PM on 01/29/2011
Nothing in the article identified the Deep South as the source of the fraudulent claims. Like the post Katrina fraud, they could very well come from the West Coast or the Northeast or elsewhere.

By your logic, all corporations should be a pass for any behavior at all. Every one of them is bound to be owned at some level by Americans who expect a return on their investments.
07:35 PM on 01/28/2011
Speaking of fraud, mr. feinberg, where is all that money you were supposed to claw-back on the AIG bonuses ?

Where is it , mr feinberg ?
07:34 PM on 01/28/2011
Seven thousand out of half a million claims is dam good. The seven thousand are presumed not yet found fraudulent.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
doctorj2u
07:13 PM on 01/28/2011
Yeah, it is the victims to blame, not government. Now where have I heard that story before? Oh, I remember! George Bush and the reason his response to Katrina was less than stellar. Dems= repubs. From a New Orleanian that has given up on government on any level.
maxfax
Taa - dah!
11:30 PM on 01/28/2011
I hear you Doc, one thing is for certain, if you recall  millions were made by a corporation that disbursed the Road Home money, we have the same thing here, press release diversion to cover up their inadequacies they accuse the victims.  Btw they did not have any where near the fraud cases they initially claimed during Katrina, I wouldn't be surprised this is the same deal.  Feinberg had his hands full today in Chalmette, in case you missed that.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ginger42
Just the facts, ma'am--Sgt Friday
06:45 PM on 01/28/2011
I would say this committee is doing a very good job. Notice they have flagged this many for checking into. It is not that they actually screwed the government
maxfax
Taa - dah!
11:32 PM on 01/28/2011
Good job?  The problem is they don't know what they're doing.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ginger42
Just the facts, ma'am--Sgt Friday
12:06 AM on 01/29/2011
In a huge plan like this with tons of money and lots of people involved, there will always be "some" fraud. I think by any guideline this panel has done a good job. You are free to have your opinions, but facts I think are on my side
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
06:17 PM on 01/28/2011
BS! Fraud will always exist in programs like this but what is worse is all the people you are hanging out to dry. BP is the thi.e.f hands down.
maxfax
Taa - dah!
11:31 PM on 01/28/2011
Feinberg is making out handily in the process, he'll get his first.