Greg PalastExxon Lubricated by Bush JudgesTue Sep 2 21:11:18 200364.140.158.23Exxon Lubricated by Bush JudgesTuesday, September 2, 2003Fourteen years after Exxon Valdez slimed over one thousand milesof Alaskan beaches, the oily company has yet to pay most of thedamages awarded by the jury. The $4 billion Exxon owes for"punitive" damages is getting off easy: by Exxon's owncalculation it merely equals the cost of the damage they inflicted.I know. I worked for the native villages whose coastline wasoiled - IS oiled... the gunk is still there, still deadly, nomatter the mendacious Exxon mouthpieces tell you.Now, Exxon-Mobil, the Number One campaign contributor to theGeorge W. Bush campaigns, has gotten their big fat sloppy payoff.Last week, the Bushified appellate courts in Texas ordered theAlaskan judge once again to review the award.Exxon's grinnin'. More delay. Which doesn't bother my friendPaul Kompkoff of Chenega. The elderly sealhunter passed awaywaiting for his compensation.Exxon calls the Exxon Valdez an "accident." Wasn't their fault.Accident my ass, it was ...A Well-Designed Disaster: The Untold Story of the Exxon ValdezOn March 24, 1989, the Exxon Valdez broke open and covered twelvehundred miles of Alaska?s shoreline with oily sludge.The official story remains ?Drunken Skipper Hits Reef.? Don?tbelieve it.In fact, when the ship hit, Captain Joe Hazelwood was nowherenear the wheel, but belowdecks, sleeping off his bender. The manleft at the helm, the third mate, would never have hit Bligh Reefhad he simply looked at his Raycas radar. But he could not,because the radar was not turned on. The complex Raycas systemcosts a lot to operate, so frugal Exxon management left it brokenand useless for the entire year before the grounding.The land Exxon smeared and destroyed belongs to the Chugachnatives of the Prince William Sound. Within days of the spill,the Chugach tribal corporation asked me and my partner LenoraStewart to investigate allegations of fraud by Exxon and thelittle-known ?Alyeska? consortium. In three years? digging, wefollowed a twenty-year train of doctored safety records, illicitdeals between oil company chiefs, and programmatic harassment ofwitnesses. And we documented the oil majors? brilliant success inthat old American sport, cheating the natives. Our summary ofevidence ran to four volumes. Virtually none of it was reported:The media had turned off its radar. Here?s a bit of the storyyou?ve never been told:- We discovered an internal memo describing a closed, top Levelmeeting of oil company executives in Arizona held just ten monthsbefore the spill. It was a meeting of the ?Alyeska OwnersCommittee,? the six-company combine that owns the Alaska pipelineand most of the state?s oil. In that meeting, say the notes, thechief of their Valdez operations, Theo Polasek, warned executivesthat containing an oil spill ?at the mid-point of Prince WilliamSound not possible with present equipment??exactly where the ExxonValdez grounded. Polasek needed millions of dollars forspillcontainment equipment. The law required it, the companiespromised it to regulators, then at the meeting, the proposedspending was voted down. The oil company combine had a cheaperplan to contain any spill?don?t bother. According to an internalmemorandum, they?d just drop some dispersants and walk away.That?s exactly what happened. ?At the owners committee meeting inPhoenix, it was decided that Alyeska would provide immediateresponse to oil spills in Valdez Arm and Valdez Narrows only? ?not the Prince William Sound.- Smaller spills before the Exxon disaster would have alertedgovernment watchdogs that the port?s oil-spill-containment systemwas not up to scratch. But the oil group?s lab technician, ErleneBlake, told us that management routinely ordered her to changetest results to eliminate ?oil-in-water? readings. The procedurewas simple, says Blake. She was told to dump out oily water andrefill test tubes from a bucket of cleansed sea water, which theycalled ?the Miracle Barrel.?- A confidential letter dated April 1984, fully four years beforethe big spill, written by Captain James Woodle, then the oilgroup?s Valdez Port commander, warns management that ?Due to areduction in manning, age of equipment, limited training and lackof personnel, serious doubt exists that [we] would be able tocontain and clean up effectively a medium or large size oilspill.? Woodle told us there was a spill at Valdez before theExxon Valdez collision, though not nearly as large. When heprepared to report it to the government, his supervisor forcedhim to take back the notice, with the Orwellian command, ?Youmade a mistake. This was not an oil spill.?In response to requests from readers here?s a few things you cando:The rest of this story can be found on page 263 in ?The BestDemocracy Money Can Buy?.- Stop pumping gas at ExxonMobil stations- Get involved with the Stop Esso Campaign at http://www.stopesso.com/ - Forward this email to your friends and familyTo receive more of Greg's investigative reports click here: http://www.gregpalast.com/contact.cfm Greg Palast is author of the bestseller, "The Best DemocracyMoney Can Buy," and the worstseller, "Democracy and Regulation."The later, regarding the dangers of deregulation, written withTheo MacGregor and Jerrold Oppenheim, was financed and publishedby the United Nations ILO.Media enquiries: media@gregpalast.com
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