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Gulf Oil Spill Trial Delayed

HARRY R. WEBER and MICHAEL KUNZELMAN   02/26/12 06:26 PM ET  AP

NEW ORLEANS — A judge has delayed the federal trial over the nation's worst offshore oil disaster by a week, saying Sunday that BP PLC was making some progress in settlement talks with a committee overseeing scores of lawsuits, according to people close to the case.

Two people close to the case told The Associated Press that the decision was made Sunday during a conference call between parties in the Gulf of Mexico oil spill case and U.S. District Judge Carl Barbier. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the call.

They said the judge told those on the call that BP and the Plaintiffs' Steering Committee were "making some progress" in their settlement talks. The steering committee is overseeing lawsuits filed by individuals and businesses following the explosion on the Deepwater Horizon rig on April 20, 2010, in the Gulf. The blast killed 11 workers and led to 206 million gallons of oil spewing from the blown-out well, soiling miles of coastline.

However, the judge did not mention the status of settlement talks between other parties, nor did he mention any figures being discussed, according to the people close to the case.

The brief order issued by Barbier on Sunday said only that the delay was granted "for reasons of judicial efficiency and to allow the parties to make further progress in their settlement discussions."

Among other things, the trial that is now set to begin March 5 is meant to determine the penalties that need to be paid by BP and other companies involved in the oil spill. Billions of dollars are at stake.

BP and the Plaintiffs Steering Committee confirmed in a joint news release that the trial had been delayed. It said the oil giant and the PSC were working to reach an agreement that would "fairly compensate people and businesses affected by the Deepwater Horizon accident and oil spill."

"There can be no assurance that these discussions will lead to a settlement agreement," the joint statement said.

Separately, BP has had discussions in recent days with the federal government and cement contractor Halliburton Energy Services Inc., according to several people close to the case.

If no settlement is reached, Barbier will preside over a three-phase trial that could last the better part of a year. The first phase is designed to identify the causes of the deadly blowout and to assign percentages of fault to the companies involved in the ill-fated drilling project.

Financial analysts estimate BP could wind up paying anywhere from $15 billion to $30 billion over the lawsuits, and BP has estimated in regulatory filings that its total liability for the disaster is $40 billion.

An AP analysis found that the company could conceivably face up to $52 billion in environmental fines and compensation if the judge determines the company was grossly negligent.

The trial may not yield major revelations about the causes of the disaster, but the outcome could bring much-needed relief for tens of thousands of people and businesses whose livelihoods were disrupted by the spill.

Relatives of the 11 people killed in the Deepwater Horizon blast say they are hoping for something more elusive: justice for lost loved ones.

Sheryl Revette, whose husband, Dewey, was among the 11 killed when BP PLC's Macondo well blew out and triggered an explosion on the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig, doesn't have anything to gain financially from the trial. She wants an apology from the oil giant, something she said she hasn't received yet.

"I've never heard a word from them," said Revette, 48, of State Line, Miss. "But an apology isn't going to bring my husband back."

Chris Jones, whose brother, Gordon, was also killed on the rig, had planned to drive in from Baton Rouge with other relatives to attend the start of the trial. He said he has mixed feelings about the prospect of a settlement that would eliminate the need for a trial. Jones said he would disappointed if BP manages to "write a check to solve their problems."

"I was ready to go to trial and see their feet held close to the fire," he said Sunday after learning of the postponement. "It seems like the easy way out to pay whatever the plaintiffs are willing to take."

Jones, an attorney, said he's not surprised that the oil giant would seek to avoid a long, costly trial.

"I know that is part of the game, so to speak," he said. "As long as they're paying a lot of money for the damage they caused, it would give me some relief."

The decisions and actions that led to the explosion and spill already have been painstakingly investigated by the Coast Guard, federal regulators and a presidential commission. Their probes concluded that BP, rig owner Transocean Ltd. and Halliburton deserve to share the blame for a string of risky decisions that were designed to save time and money.

Transocean spokesman Lou Colasuonno wouldn't comment on whether the company, which owned the Deepwater Horizon rig, was participating in settlement talks.

"This deal does not change the facts of the case and Transocean is fully prepared to go to trial," he said of BP's settlement talks with the plaintiffs.

The massive scope of the case – a maze of claims and counterclaims between the companies, federal and state governments and plaintiffs' attorneys – has elicited comparisons to the tobacco litigation of the 1990s.

Roughly 340 plaintiffs' lawyers have worked on the case. BP has spent millions of dollars on experts and law firms. More than 300 depositions have been taken. Millions of pages of legal briefs have been filed. One Justice Department lawyer said it would take him 210 years to read all the pages submitted into the record if he read 1,000 pages a day.

Barbier, a former president of the Louisiana Trial Lawyers Association and appointee of President Bill Clinton, has a reputation for speedy but fair trials. He will hear and decide the case without a jury. Each trial phase is expected to last two to three months, with breaks in between. Even if all parties settle their claims before or during the trial, it could take several months for claims to be paid.

___

Weber reported from Atlanta. Associated Press writer Cain Burdeau in New Orleans contributed to this report.

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NEW ORLEANS — A judge has delayed the federal trial over the nation's worst offshore oil disaster by a week, saying Sunday that BP PLC was making some progress in settlement talks with a committ...
NEW ORLEANS — A judge has delayed the federal trial over the nation's worst offshore oil disaster by a week, saying Sunday that BP PLC was making some progress in settlement talks with a committ...
NEW ORLEANS — A judge has delayed the federal trial over the nation's worst offshore oil disaster by a week, saying Sunday that BP PLC was making some progress in settlement talks with a committ...
NEW ORLEANS — A judge has delayed the federal trial over the nation's worst offshore oil disaster by a week, saying Sunday that BP PLC was making some progress in settlement talks with a committ...
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weiryc
buddyboygabe
10:58 AM on 02/28/2012
in the mean time, attorney makes so much money, while others get's a shaft!!!!!
10:56 AM on 02/28/2012
This bunch should be bound hand and foot and dumped into a swimming pool filled with oil. Let the punishment fit the crime.
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cskirk
03:48 PM on 02/27/2012
And while gas prices rise for the 20th straight day, Obama again does nothing and has no idea what to do. Great leader as always.
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weiryc
buddyboygabe
11:03 AM on 02/28/2012
true!!! funny thing is that, during the Bush's era, a "streamline medias" covered 4 TIMES more than the current president, and the price was much lower than today's awful prices, and such a "double standards" by the news media...back than Peloci, Reid, and OBAMA's bashing of Bush, and now they(Demo's) going into HIDING!!!!
01:57 PM on 02/27/2012
FACE IT THE OIL PEOPLE ARE THE MOST EVIL ENTITY ON EARTH, THE ONLY THING THY HAVE EVER CARED ABOUT IS BOTTOME LINE PROFITS...THEY HAVE ENOUGHT MONEY TO CONTROL ANY COUNTRY, AS THEY HAVE HERE FOR A LONG TIME....FROM JIMMY CARTER WHO THEY RAN UP THE COST OF GAS TO A RECORD AMOUNT, TO WHAT THEY ARE DOING NOW...NO PRESIDENT HAS CONTROL OF WHAT THE OIL PEOPLE ARE DOING, NOT BUSH, OBAMA OR REAGAN...THEY ARE JUST EVIL.
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WESmith
Energy Conservation can save you M-O-N-E-Y!!!!!!!!
09:12 PM on 02/27/2012
Jimmy Carter nationalized oil. We The People make more profit from the petroleum industry than all 13,000 American oil companies combined.
We are the evil ones.
We are the Deniers.
We lie to ourselves.
With our love affair with the gasoline-powered vehicle, We are polluting the world. We pay oil companies to supply us with the poisons we spew.
10:41 AM on 02/28/2012
I AGREE OIL IS OUR DOWNFALL, I AM AT A MIST WHY OUR COUNTRY DOES NOT NATIONALIZE THE OIL AND RUN THE OIL BUSINESS LIKE OTHER COUTRIES....IT IS THE VEIHICLE FOR THE MOST GREATY, EVIL PEOPLE TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF ALL OF US.
aevf101
divided by = diversity
10:55 AM on 02/28/2012
One hundred years ago the railroad barons were the evil ones.
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4me2knw
Oh what tangled webs we weave.
01:42 PM on 02/27/2012
This is another game they play, leave it in litigation for years and years until people give up or have died waiting.
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lacabrera
11:32 AM on 02/27/2012
Just gave them a new fishing Rod and some Bait !
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InnaGaddaDaVida
follow the beat of your own drum
11:24 AM on 02/27/2012
Corporate Rule #36: When you can't win, bury it in paperwork.
11:17 AM on 02/27/2012
_I guess that when they first built it, no one bothered to ask: "What If there's an oil leak?"..."What if a hurricane comes through here?"..."What if....what if...what if..."
`
I remember reading about an Alabama fisherman who commited suicide after he realized
that his livelihood was gone. ` The birds didn't look like birds; the fish didn't look like fish. ` Sad._
03:47 PM on 02/27/2012
The platforms that these wells are on are built for hurricanes and tsunamis. The line is built to snap, shut off and cap the oil well whenever there is sheer pressure on it.

However the system was not built to withstand a platform crashing directly on top of it. Which is what happened after it caught fire and collapsed.

I'm not sure there are any safety measures that could be taken into account for that. Although I'm sure that the oil companies are working on it right now.
11:00 AM on 02/27/2012
SOUNDS LIKE A COVER UP.WHY? IS THIS TAKING SO LONG.
12:00 PM on 02/27/2012
The resolution of the Exon Valdese law suits took twenty years and the payments were less than five percent of the amount of damages.
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4me2knw
Oh what tangled webs we weave.
01:44 PM on 02/27/2012
20 years but we have the right to a speedy and fair trial? Right, tell me another good one.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WESmith
Energy Conservation can save you M-O-N-E-Y!!!!!!!!
09:41 PM on 02/27/2012
These payments were disbursed by the government. What money wasn't disbursed was kept by the government. Exxon never saw the money again.
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10:55 AM on 02/27/2012
Through higher gas prices, not only are consumers likely paying for the oil clean up in the Gulf, but they're likely paying for the attorneys defending the oil companies as well as the insurance companies on the hook. Worse, profits for shareholders appear to be skyrocketing rather than diminishing as one would expect from having to pay for the clean up.

Given today's technology, we cannot live without the oil industry. They provide a very vital service to our nation. However, why are we giving highly profitable big businesses controlling necessities, like oil companies, tax breaks? Given oil companies appear to be raising the price of their product faster than wages and supply and demand isn't this squeezing our economy leaving little money to spend on small businesses traditionally employing 50% of the private sector workers, thus high unemployment? Why are our taxes bloating the salaries of oil industry CEOs making upwards of $24,000 PER HOUR and stakeholders upwards of $300,000 PER HOUR? Giving tax breaks to highly profitable big business enriches the elite while reducing our tax revenues needed to repair roads and bridges; hire teachers, policemen and firemen; fund research and development like we did for the Internet that created millions of jobs.

I am not jealous of those who make it rich off their talents. I applaud them. I am not jealous of those who enrich themselves off the backs of the average consumer and taxpayer. I resent them.
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4me2knw
Oh what tangled webs we weave.
01:46 PM on 02/27/2012
Agreed. Ask these elites if they care. They don't. They just laugh and laugh all the way to the bank.
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04:20 PM on 02/27/2012
With enough people talking about this inequality, change can happen. It may be at a snails pace, but it will happen.

I want big business to thrive, however, not at the expense of small business, consumers and the average Joe taxpayer. State the inequality as often as you can. Mass media tends to avoid this issue because they are likely dependent upon big business advertising dollars. Politicians won't address this inequality because winning elections is dependent upon big business campaign donations while others are offered high paying private sector jobs for writing policy disproportionately benefitting the elite.
02:01 PM on 02/27/2012
Thank you for a comment that got to the point in an simple yet understandable way, didn't rant and rave and didn't engage in Left-Right political bashing.

One thing that sticks in my craw is the exporting of fuel from the United States because it brought a larger price. The price is determined in the world market, and supply and demand is a big factor. Our export 'rules', for lack of a better word, allow this while at the same time we are importing oil. The largest export from the United States in 2011 was fuel, and this makes me even further irritated with our government. This should be stopped.
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Hank Chiappetta
10:50 AM on 02/27/2012
Nationalized all energy
12:03 PM on 02/27/2012
You know why that won't happen. Hell they want to sell of the post office.
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WESmith
Energy Conservation can save you M-O-N-E-Y!!!!!!!!
09:13 PM on 02/27/2012
Already happened in 1977. That is why we have the Department of Energy.
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larryvnyrd
Left wing, long haired, trade unionist, liberal
10:50 AM on 02/27/2012
this will never reach a jury. This trial will be settled before or during procedings
02:02 PM on 02/27/2012
I hope so. That would save the taxpayers a bunch!
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yahooserious
Texas....Just keep on keepin' on...
10:48 AM on 02/27/2012
Soooo...... Actually, it means the lawyers are getting closer to agreeing how much they are willing to accept for their fees. The people who lost their famillies mean nothing to them.
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InnaGaddaDaVida
follow the beat of your own drum
11:25 AM on 02/27/2012
Sad, and unfortunately, true.
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lacabrera
11:38 AM on 02/27/2012
THE ONES THAT LOST THEIR LIVES ALREADY GOT PAID , THIS IS FOR THE PEOPLE THAT SAID THEY LOST MONEY BY NOT BEING ABLE TO GO FISHING ,AND THE ONES THAT USE TO HANG OUT ON THE BEACH .
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yahooserious
Texas....Just keep on keepin' on...
07:30 PM on 02/27/2012
Either way, the lawyers are the ones who will benefit. Whoever sued will get the dregs.
April22
Some experiences in life are ineffable
10:40 AM on 02/27/2012
According to one article dated April 2011 and appearing in "Hawaii News Now," 11 deep-water drilling permits have been issued by the US Dept. of the Interior since the BP oil spill.

Interesting how this information rarely makes headlines, even here on the Huff.

Academy award outcomes, yes.

http://www.hawaiinewsnow.com/story/14478390/11-deepwater-drilling-permits-issued-since-disaster
10:37 AM on 02/27/2012
The trial had to be delayed because the fix was not sufficiently in. They will balk at paying any more than about fifteen bucks for polluting the Gulf, killing the people on Deepwater Horizon, destroying wildlife and the livlihoods of those who made their living from fishing, shrimping etc.in the Gulf. Yeah, it is back, just not as much and not as good.