BP to pay $130 million for oil spill
NEW ORLEANS: A federal judge on
Wednesday ordered BP to pay more than $130 million in fees to the
court-supervised administrator of its multibillion-dollar settlement with Gulf
Coast businesses and residents after the company's 2010 oil spill.
The ruling from US District Judge
Carl Barbier comes as BP tries to temporarily block claims payments while
former FBI Director Louis Freeh investigates allegations of misconduct by an
attorney who worked on the settlement program. BP also has complained of
broader problems in the program run by court-appointed claims administrator
Patrick Juneau.
The dispute over Juneau's
administrative expenses is just the latest chapter in BP's increasingly
aggressive campaign to challenge his handling of the claims process. Separately,
the company has accused him and Barbier, who is overseeing the oil spill
settlement, of misinterpreting the settlement in a manner that could force the
company to pay billions of dollars in what it says are inflated and fictitious
claims by businesses.
In his ruling Wednesday, Barbier
said Juneau needs to submit his budget proposals earlier than he has been. But
he concluded that BP's refusal to pay for the settlement program's
third-quarter budget wasn't reasonable.
"My primary concern is that
we don't allow these issues to cause a shutdown of the claims facility,"
Barbier said.
His ruling upheld that of US
Magistrate Sally Shushan, who earlier Wednesday ordered BP to pay the fees
after hearing arguments by a company attorney, Juneau and one of the private
plaintiffs' attorneys who brokered the deal. When BP appealed Shushan's
decision, Barbier summoned the parties to his courtroom for another hearing.
In a letter Monday, BP claims
official Maria Travis said Juneau's office hasn't provided adequate
documentation for the money it requested. Travis also alleged that the program
has been plagued by poor productivity and excessive costs.
Shushan said that while the
dispute over claims documentation was regrettable, there was no way she could
cut off funding for administration of the program on such short notice.
"People are dependent. Jobs
are dependent. We just can't have that happen," she said.
Shushan ruled that Juneau must
start submitting budget proposals 60 days before the start of a quarter, beginning
with his budget for the first quarter of 2014. She also issued an order
outlining a process through which BP will be able to review and respond to
Juneau's fourth-quarter budget proposal.
BP attorney Keith Moskowitz said
it is "patently unreasonable"
to expect BP to pay more than $130 million without a more detailed budget
proposal from Juneau. He said the one Juneau submitted in June was "in
summary form without any backup."
"That's simply not how
budgets are created. That's now how businesses are operated," he told
Shushan.
Moskowitz said BP is not trying
to shut down the program, but Juneau said the program would be in jeopardy if
BP did not cover its expenses. "We've got bills that are due today,"
he said.
Juneau also defended his
operation and claimed BP's characterization of his budget request was
distorted.
"We give them what they ask
for," he said. "We give it to them in a format they ask for."
In a separate request, BP has
asked a second time for Barbier to suspend settlement payments until Freeh's
investigation is completed. The federal judge has not yet ruled on that
request. Barbier appointed Freeh, now a private consultant, to investigate Lionel
H. Sutton III, who resigned from Juneau's office on June 21 after being accused
of receiving a portion of settlement proceeds for claims he referred to a law
firm before he went to work for Juneau.
In a court filing Monday, BP said
there was evidence of additional fraud: The Company said at least two lawyers
who have ruled on appeals of disputed settlement awards were partners at law
firms that have represented claimants and filed claims of their own for the
firms to be compensated. BP also said it recently learned of allegations that
someone employed by the settlement program at its Mobile, Alabama, center
helped people submit fraudulent claims in exchange for a portion of the awards.
Juneau's office suspended that employee and a co-worker who allegedly helped
that employee access claims data.
Based on the fresh allegations,
BP renewed its request to delay claims, which Barbier had previously rejected.
Meanwhile, the parties are
awaiting a high-stakes ruling by a three-judge panel of the 5th US Circuit
Court of Appeals. Last month, BP asked the panel to overturn Barbier's
interpretation of the settlement terms governing payouts to businesses.
Awards to businesses are based on
a comparison of their revenues and expenses before and after the spill. BP says
a "policy decision" that
Juneau announced in January 2013 allows businesses to manipulate
those figures in a way that leads to errors in calculating their actual lost
profits.
Plaintiffs' lawyers, however,
claim BP simply undervalued the settlement and underestimated how many
claimants would qualify for payments.
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