US has launched criminal probe into BP spill

NEW ORLEANS, (Reuters) – The U.S. government has  launched a widely expected criminal and civil investigation  into BP Plc’s massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, U.S.  Attorney General Eric Holder said yesterday, ratcheting up  pressure on the beleaguered British oil company.

“We have begun both a criminal as well as a civil  investigation as is our obligation under the law,” Holder told  reporters after meeting with state and federal prosecutors in  New Orleans. “Our environmental laws are very clear.”

Federal agencies, including the FBI, are participating in  the probe and “if we find evidence of illegal behavior, we will  be forceful in our response,” he said, adding that prosecutors  had a “sufficient basis” to start a criminal probe.

“BP will cooperate with any inquiry that the Department of  Justice undertakes, just as we are doing in response to the  other inquiries that already are ongoing,” the company said in  a statement.

During his first visit to the disaster site where he took a  a tour of the spill, Holder said he saw “oil for miles and  miles, oil that we know has already affected plant and animal  life along the coast.”

Confirmation of the probe, which Holder said started “some  weeks ago,” sent BP’s shares down further after already getting  hammered most of yesterday. The stock plunged 15 percent, or  $6.43, to close at $36.52 at the end regular trading on the New  York Stock Exchange.

Pressure has been building on BP and the Obama  administration to stop the spewing oil, now in its 43rd day and  no end in sight. Legal experts had predicted that it was only a  matter of time before a criminal and civil probe would begin.

Holder declined to say who were the targets of the  investigation, but the Justice Department has already demanded  that at least three companies involved in the spill, BP,  Transocean Ltd and Halliburton Co, preserve their records  related to the accident.

The Justice Department will look for violations of the  Clean Water Act, the Endangered Species Act, the Migratory Bird  Treaty Act and the Oil Pollution Act of 1990, which can be used  to hold them liable for cleanup costs and reimbursement for  government efforts.

Additionally, Holder said that “nothing is off the table at  this point” with regard to the range of charges prosecutors  could pursue, including traditional criminal charges if they  find false statements were made.

“As our review expands in the days ahead, we will be  meticulous, we will be comprehensive, and we will be  aggressive,” Holder told reporters. “We will not rest until  justice is done.”

However, he did acknowledge that the government’s first  priority was to stop the gushing well and clean up the oil.

The April 20 explosion aboard the Transocean Deepwater  Horizon rig killed 11 workers and injured 17 others. Holder  said that there could also be charges related to the “untimely  and tragic deaths of those 11 rig workers.”

This is not the first time BP has been in the Justice  Department’s sights. In October 2007 the company agreed to pay  more than $370 million in fines and restitution to resolve  several environmental and fraud allegations including criminal  charges.

Those included a deadly explosion at a Texas refinery in  2005, pipeline leaks at the Prudhoe Bay field in Alaska in  2006, and an attempt to corner the U.S. propane market in  2004.