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RamboLiberal Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-17-11 03:14 PM
Original message
Hauler accused of dumping wastewater all over SW PA region
A Greene County man was charged today with wreaking environmental catastrophe by illegally dumping vast quantities of wastewater from 2003 to 2009 in a half-dozen counties.

Robert A. Shipman, 49, of New Freeport, turned himself in at the Pennsylvania State Police barracks in Waynesburg and was arraigned on 98 charges.

"This was a calculated and long-running scheme to personally profit by illegally dumping wastewater, regardless of the potential for environmental damage," acting state Attorney General Bill Ryan said in a statement.

Various businesses hired Mr. Shipman and his company, Allan's Waste Water Service, of Holbrook, to haul and dispose of waste, which included Marcellus Shale drilling wastewater, sludge and restaurant slop.



Read more: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11076/1132703-455.stm#ixzz1GtEFjKfV
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PA Democrat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-17-11 07:54 PM
Response to Original message
1. Maybe Corbett can appoint Mr. Shipman to head up
the Dept. of Environmental Protection.
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Divernan Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-17-11 08:43 PM
Response to Original message
2. Now we know why the GOP has pushed to get rid of joint and several liability.
Edited on Thu Mar-17-11 09:05 PM by Divernan
The unidentified "businesses" referred to in the article have got to include many of Corbett's campaign contributors, who can now be sued in both criminal and civil courts. In the civil suits, the counties can go for punitive damages, which against these mega-profit corporations, will be very nice indeed. SWEET!

I want to see each of the 1/2 dozen counties pursue this because there are too many of Corbett's stooges left in the Attorney General's office, and they would not pursue the clients of this hauler at all since some would be donors/buddies of the governor. In fact, I don't understand, if this was a longstanding investigation, why the AG's office didn't charge all the business/clients as well, at the same time. Sounds like civil RICO predicate acts to me. It looks like the Governor's interfered with the AG's office to protect his handlers/donors. And if the AG's office IS pressured into pursuing the Governor's buddies, it would probably come to some pissant settlement far below the value of the case against the polluters, allowing them to avoid discovery(see below).

Not only the hauler, but his clients as co-conspirators, can be sued in criminal court, which can result in fines and jail time. The beauty is that the shipper and his business clients can also be sued in civil court where they will be subject to punitive damages and joint and several liability. Odds are so excellent that when the businesses are identified, we will see a list of Corbett's Big Oil contributors!!

PUNITIVE DAMAGES
Punitive damages are calculated not on the proven cost of damage or loss, but on an amount of a defendant's net worth, or in the case of a business, of its value/annual profits, and that amount has got to be enough to punish/hurt the defendant. Punitive damages are granted when the action of the defendant outrages the conscience of the community. Potential for huge bucks there.

JOINT AND SEVERAL LIABILITY
In for a penny, in for a pound.
What joint and several liability provides for is this: Let's say there are 10 defendants - 1 shipper and 9 clients. The jury can determine that one or more of the 9 clients/co-defendants (to a 51% degree of certainty) knew that the guy was dumping illegally, and hold them liable, along with the hauler. Maybe someone like a small mom and pop restaurant owner was too simple to realize the dumping was illegal. Then the jury could let them off the hook. But Big Oil drilling companies? Guilty! Guilty! Guilty! Wouldn't be surprised if the experienced drilling companies didn't give the hauler some suggestions as to where and how to dump the wastewater. And the hauler could easily roll over on them to cut a deal and give evidence against them. Again, the AG's office, in sucking up to Corbett, could choose not to offer such a deal, in order to protect the Big Oil clients.

GO FOR THE DEEP POCKETS!
Now "vast quantities" of toxic materials will translate to a very high verdict - let's say, hypothetically, 50 million dollars for cleaning up the damage, and then another 50 million for punitive damages. The jury will hear testimony and divide up liability based on how much waste originated with each individual defendant. Then you take the verdict, say $100 million and match it to the percentages. Could be, hypothetically, 50% to the hauler and the other 50% divided up among the defendants/clients, based on what portion of the waste came from each one. So you have Joe's Restaurant at 1% and a big oil driller, such as Chesapeake Energy at 20%, and so on. With a huge verdict, chances are good the hauler does not have assets to pay off 50%. Maybe Joe's Restaurant doesn't have assets to pay off its 1%. But the Big Oil drillers have enough assets to pay off the judgement against themselves AND make up the shortfalls of the other defendants! So the courts take all the assets the hauler has and all the assets of Joe's Restaurant, and then hits up the Big Oil Marcellus shale drilling companies for the balance. In other words, even if a company like Chesapeake Energy was held liable for only 1 % of the damages, Chesapeake Energy, because of its deep pockets, could end up paying 99% of the verdict.

RULES OF EVIDENCE/DISCOVERY
And as I think about it, this is a fantastic opportunity, because NOW, the state and the individual county courts, in both criminal and civil cases can force the drillers/clients to finally reveal each and every toxic substance present in the waste water, and the amounts of each which were used in their drilling. Up until now, they have refused to identify all the toxins, and the amounts used, claiming trade secrets or some such crap. And of course Corbett & his stooges in the General Assembly, DEP and DCNR were not about to demand that information.


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blue neen Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-17-11 08:49 PM
Response to Reply #2
3. Excellent post!
You described things that most of us would have never realized...I am a lot more well-informed because of DU, particularly this PA forum lately.

Thanks! :)

It is quite frightening to imagine all of the places Mr. Shipman dumped this wastewater. One thing we can be sure of though---it wasn't Tom Corbett's backyard!
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Divernan Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-17-11 09:08 PM
Response to Reply #3
5. Thanks! I'd love to work on the prosecution for this case!
As a retired attorney and one time trial lawyer, I'm like an old fire horse getting excited by the smell of smoke!

And as a former law professor who taught trial advocacy, etc., I think this whole mess would make a hell of an exam question!
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Divernan Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-17-11 09:03 PM
Response to Original message
4. I was just taking a look at some civil RICO cases,
Edited on Thu Mar-17-11 09:30 PM by Divernan
And suspect that in this matter, we're looking at kickbacks, conspiracy, and honest services fraud, to name a few possibilities.

Recent notable prosecutions/convictions for honest services fraud were Washington lobbyist/power broker, Jack Abramoff; former Enron CEO Jeffrey Skilling; former Illinois Governor, George Ryan; former Alabama Governor Don Siegelman (although I think he was railroaded by false testimony); Duke Cunningham, a California Congressman; newspaper magnate, Conrad Black; and a whole slew of state legislators.

On edit:

Here's a link to a far more detailed story than the Post-Gazette.
http://groups.google.com/group/nywellwatch-forum/browse_thread/thread/69f99f2b9c79ad53

It identifies the various businesses, describes the various ways he dumped the sludge/water, and interestingly one of the comments mentions that Dem. State House Representative Phyllis Mundy submitted a bill which would have required tracking waste water from the wells to wherever the water was dumped, to make sure it was legally disposed of, but of course the GOP House defeated the bill.
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Divernan Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-17-11 09:15 PM
Response to Original message
6. And another goddamn point! DEP/EPA's vaunted testing never found this?
We're not supposed to worry, oh no, about the quality of our water, or radiation in our water or dumping areas, because DEP has tested and told us our water's just fine. And at the recent budget hearings, Corbett's DEP and DCNR stooges/acting Secretaries testified that they didn't need any more funds budgeted to hire/train more inspectors, even though the number of wells will increase from 5,000 to 7,200 this year.

Not even three months into his term, and the stench from Corbett's administration stinks to high heaven.
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Divernan Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-18-11 10:42 AM
Response to Original message
7. Tip came from a FORMER state environmental regulator.
Apparently, a state agency/DEP KNEW about this and did nothing. A whistle blower triggered the investigation, which has been lengthy. And our crack DEP has still not revoked the hauler's permit - they are merely reviewing the permit.

"Despite the charges, and despite the fact that a tip from a former state environmental regulator helped launch the investigation, the state Department of Environmental Protection had not suspended or revoked the company's waste transportation safety authorization as of late Thursday afternoon.

The company was open for business, according to its attorney.

"Allan's Waste Water Service continues to operate on a day-to-day basis and serve its customers well," lawyer Christopher Capozzi said.

Katy Gresh, a DEP spokeswoman, said a permit review is under way. Dep staff first learned Thursday the extent of the allegations against Mr. Shipman and his company, she said."

Read more: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11077/1132812-454.stm#ixzz1GxxG7ZPs
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JPZenger Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Mar-18-11 12:03 PM
Response to Reply #7
8. This was covered in Gasland 2 years ago
Edited on Fri Mar-18-11 12:05 PM by JPZenger
When Gasland was filmed over 2 years ago, he included a guy doing this exact thing - releasing polluted water from gas drilling with all kinds of chemicals from a truck along a creek. I believe a whistleblower gave the filmmaker a sample of the water in a large jar, which the filmmaker carried around.

Oh, noooo, that couldn't be true, because we are told that movie was all make-believe.
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