Arkema rejects criminal charges over Crosby explosions
7 Aug 2018
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Paris – French speciality chemicals supplier Arkema SA has rejected criminal charges against the company and its top managers in the US as a jury found it responsible for a series of explosions at its flooded plant in Crosby, Texas, last August.
The Harris County grand jury issued a series of indictments on 3 Aug, charging the company and two of its leaders – Arkema North America, CEO Richard Rowe and plant manager Leslie Comardelle – with playing a role in “recklessly” releasing toxic cloud into the air.
With the indictment, Arkema faces up to a €1m fine while Rowe and Comardelle can face up to five years in prison.
“Companies don’t make decisions, people do,” Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg said. “Responsibility for pursuing profit over the health of innocent people rests with the leadership of Arkema.
“Indictments against corporations are rare,” Ogg said. “Those who poison our environment will be prosecuted when the evidence justifies it.”
“As the hurricane approached, Arkema was more concerned about production and profit than people,” added Alexander Forrest, chief of the Environmental Crimes Division at the Harris County District Attorney’s Office.
The explosions at the Crosby plant took place on 31 Aug last year in the aftermath of Hurricane Harvey, after power-cuts led to the loss of refrigeration for some organic peroxides at the site, which exploded due to high temperature.
In a statement published on 3 Aug, Arkema described the decision by the jury as “outrageous”, saying it found it hard to believe “anyone would seek to criminalise the way in which one facility was impacted by such a crushing natural disaster.”
The French supplier also pointed to an eight-month investigation by US Chemical Safety Board, which stated that the Crosby site had plans, procedures and multiple contingency measures to prevent loss of power and refrigeration.
Describing the hurricane as an “act of God”, the board also noted that the Arkema plant met “all requirements related to flood planning, and there simply are no requirements or guidance that would have been enough to prevent the incident in the face of such unexpected flooding.”
“These criminal charges are astonishing, especially since the US Chemical Safety Board concluded that Arkema behaved responsibly,” said Arkema’s statement.
At the end of its eight-month investigation, the Chemical Safety Board noted that Hurricane Harvey was the most significant rainfall event in US history, an “Act of God” that never before has been seen in this country.
US corporate lawyer Rusty Hardin, of Rusty Hardin & Associates, also issued a statement on the same day, saying there was no foundation for a criminal case against Arkema.
“The DA’s office has no legal precedent in Texas courts and there are no cases on point. And they chose to use this unprecedented charge for a tragedy…. It would set an ominous precedent if a company could be held criminally liable for impact suffered as a result of the historic flooding of Hurricane Harvey that no one, including Harris County itself, was prepared for,” said Hardin.
In pursuing these charges against Arkema, said Hardin, “Harris County will have the daunting task of trying to prove that Arkema anticipated the possibility of six feet of floodwater and then decided not to prepare for it.”
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