[THS] BP And Halliburton Attempt To Buy Off Government Officials
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Sun Jun 6 18:52:04 CEST 2010
http://www.truthout.org/bp-and-halliburton-build-legal-teams-attempt-to-buy-off-government-officials60165
BP And Halliburton Build Legal Teams, Attempt To Buy Off Government Officials
Saturday 05 June 2010
by: Alex Seitz-Wald | ThinkProgress
photo
(Image: Lance Page / t r u t h o u t; Adapted: alexanderljung, tsand)
Facing possible jail time for their roles in the largest oil spill in American history, BP
and Halliburton are building high-powered legal teams with deep Department of
Justice and White House ties. But the companies are pursuing other means to
defend themselves as well.
Halliburtons campaign donations have spiked as it tries to curry favor with key
members of Congress investigating the disaster. The company donated $17,000 in
May, making it the busiest donation month for Halliburtons PAC since September
2008, Politico reports. Thirteen of the 14 contributions from May went to
Republicans, while seven went to members of Congress who are on committees with
oversight of the oil spill and its aftermath:
About one week before executive Timothy Probert appeared before the House
Energy and Commerces investigative subcommittee, Halliburton donated $1,500 to
Ranking Republican Joe Bartons reelection effort. It was Halliburtons second-largest
donation of the month topped only by $2,500 to former Rep. Pat Toomey (R-Pa.),
who is running for the Senate.
In the Senate, Idaho Republican Mike Crapo, who serves on the Environment and
Public Works Committee, Georgia Republican Johnny Isakson, who serves on the
Commerce Committee and North Carolina Republican Richard Burr (N.C.), who serves
on the Energy and Natural Resources Committee, all got $1,000. Sen. Chuck Grassley
(R-Iowa) also got $1,000.
Meanwhile, a Hill analysis found that primarily during the Bush administration, BP and
other oil companies paid for dozens of trips and meals for officials from the
Department of Interior, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and the
Department of Homeland Security agencies deeply involved in the regulation of oil
exploration and spill cleanup. BP had the highest tab for gifts to government
officials of all oil and gas companies:
BP and its affiliates BP America and BP Exploration show up in the gift reports
at least 16 different times, paying for meals as well as for oil and gas industry
seminars and tours of oil facilities. The cost of the gifts totaled more than $7,200.
Only two industry-funded trips took place during the first nine months of President
Obamas administration. In 2004, BP paid for a group of Interior officials to visit an
offshore rig in the Gulf of Mexico. The group included then-deputy secretary J.
Steven Griles, who later went to prison for his role in Jack Abramoff scandal. In 2005,
BP paid for travel and meals for then-Interior Secretary Gale Norton and then-
Minerals Management Service (MMS) Director Johnnie Burton to attended the
dedication ceremony of another offshore rig in the Gulf. BP also paid for officials from
the EPA and the Fish and Wildlife Service to visit Prudhoe Bay, Alaska over a period of
several years. A recent Interior Inspector General report covering 2005 to 2007 found
a culture of lax oversight and cozy ties to industry. Since January of 2008, BP
lobbyists have spent $30 million to influence legislation, according to the Center for
Responsive Politics.
Some coastal governors have benefited from BP as well. BP and other oil companies
gave Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour (R) $1.8 million dollars for his campaign, and
since the spill, hes been aggressively downplaying the disaster and encouraging
people to visit his states oily beaches. Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell (R) traveled to a
BP-funded conference in Houston last month to lobby aggressively to drill for oil and
natural gas without delay. Meanwhile, Texas Gov. Rick Perry (R) dismissed potential
BP negligence by calling the spill an act of God at a trade association funded by BP
in May.
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