Politics & Government

Congressman: BP Lied to the American People, Lied to Me

Congressman Edward Markey, who represents Framingham, led the congressional investigation into the 2010 Gulf oil spill; BP was fine $4.5 billion in a settlement.

Press release from Congressman Ed Markey's office. His district includes Framingham.

A $4.5 billion settlement between the United States government and BP includes a guilty plea of obstruction by a BP executive for lying to Congress and manipulating documents related to the size of the spill.

The BP executive charged with obstruction is David Rainey, who testified at the first closed-door briefing held by Rep. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) on May 4, 2010.

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Markey, who was then the Chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee’s Energy and Environment Subcommittee, called this first meeting between Congress and BP, Halliburton and Transocean where employees of those companies disclosed information related to the possible flow rate of the Macondo well, and other details.

Markey continued his investigation into the flow rate and size of the BP oil spill, receiving many documents from BP on the matter.

Find out what's happening in Framinghamfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

In response to requests from the Justice Department earlier this year for information regarding what BP told him about the size of the spill, Markey provided DOJ several hundred pages of documents that he or his Committee staff had received from BP in 2010. He also authorized his staff to be interviewed by Justice Department and FBI agents regarding aspects of his investigation, including BP’s misrepresentations regarding the rate at which oil was flowing out of the failed well.

Those documents are available on the Natural Resources Democratic website HERE.

Markey is now the top Democrat on the Natural Resources Committee.

“Eleven Americans died. Then BP lied to the American people. And then they tried to cover it up. BP deserves this record-breaking penalty," said Markey in a release.

“The Obama administration and the Department of Justice have held BP to the highest level of accountability that the law allows, including for their lies to Congress. Now it is up to Congress to enact laws that raise both the safety standards for offshore drilling and the liability cap for companies that still spill," said Markey.

“Two years after the worst environmental disaster in America's history ended, oil is still being dredged up by storms and recently leaked from wreckage at the bottom of the Gulf. This settlement may have closed a chapter of this disaster with the government, but we still have a responsibility to monitor the lingering effects from the spill and put in place new laws that reduce the likelihood of such a catastrophe occurring ever again," said Markey.

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