By Andrew Longstreth
Not all manslaughter charges are created equal. If they were,
the U.S. Justice Department might have filed just 11 charges of
manslaughter against two BP employees, one for each of the 11
deaths caused by the Deepwater Horizon disaster.
Instead, the government charged Robert Kaluza and Donald
Vidrine, the two highest-ranking BP supervisors onboard the rig
in the hours before the disaster, with 11 counts of involuntary
manslaughter and 11 counts of what's known as seaman's
manslaughter, a federal statute first passed by Congress in 1838
after a string of deadly steamboat accidents. The law, which has
been modified multiple times since then, was intended to hold
captains, engineers and pilots responsible for deaths
attributable to their conduct.
The idea behind the law was that those operating a ship have
a special responsibility toward passengers in their care. As The Wall Street Journal and others have noted, prosecutors face a
lower bar in proving seaman's manslaughter than they do in
ordinary manslaughter cases. Manslaughter charges require a
finding of gross negligence; seaman's manslaughter does not.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit affirmed that
distinction in a 2005 case called U.S. v. O'Keefe, which could
be key precedent in the BP case. U.S. v. O'Keefe involved the
seaman's manslaughter conviction of a tugboat captain whose wife
drowned in the Mississippi River after the vessel capsized. At
trial, the government introduced testimony indicating that the
captain had ingested cocaine on the day of the accident. Prior
to deliberations, the captain's lawyer asked that the jury be
instructed that the government must show the accident was a
result of "gross negligence," defined as "wanton or reckless
disregard for human life."
U.S. District Judge Helen Berrigan in New Orleans disagreed,
ruling that the statute requires only a finding of negligence,
which she defined as an "omission to perform some duty" or a
"violation of some rule or standard of care, which is made to
govern and control one in the discharge of some duty." The 5th
Circuit upheld her ruling and the captain's conviction.
But the 5th Circuit decision left unanswered a threshold
question of whether the government can assert seaman's
manslaughter against Kaluza and Vidrine at all. The two,
remember, are accused of failing to alert engineers onshore that
BP's Macondo well was unstable and of accepting "illogical"
explanations from members of the rig crew for the warning signs.
In the indictment, prosecutors alleged the two men violated the
seaman's manslaughter statute by engaging in "negligence" and
"inattention" to their duties.
Here's what the seaman's manslaughter statute says: "Every
captain, engineer, pilot or other person employed on any
steamboat or vessel, by whose misconduct, negligence or
inattention to his duties on such vessel the life of any person
is destroyed ... shall be fined under this title or imprisoned
not more than ten years, or both."
Vidrine and Kaluza were not captains or engineers of the
Deepwater Horizon. The two have been described by investigators,
including those who wrote the "Chief Counsel's Report" on the
Deepwater disaster, as "well site leaders." According to the
report, well site leaders served as BP's "eyes and ears, and
made important decisions regarding the course of drilling
operations." As the litigation against Vidrine and Kaluza
progresses, a judge may have to confront whether "well site
leaders" should fall within the "other person" category covered
by the seaman's manslaughter statute.
A Westlaw search shows that the statute has rarely been used
in the last decade, and when it has, it's mostly been against
defendants who were responsible for navigating a vessel. In the
case of the convicted tugboat captain, neither the trial judge
nor the 5th Circuit addressed who is covered under the statute
and who is not, but Judge Berrigan emphasized the statute's
purpose of holding responsible those in charge of navigation
"In light of the unique dangers of maritime travel, the
vulnerability of passengers on board such vessels and the
voluntary nature of employment or ownership, it is reasonable to
impose on such crews a heightened degree of care with the
parallel lower threshold for criminal liability," she wrote.
It may be a long shot for Vidrine and Kaluza to argue that
the seaman's manslaughter statute does not apply to them, but
it's probably one worth taking. Vidrine counsel Robert Habans of
Habans & Carriere and Kaluza lawyer Shaun Clarke of Gerger &
Clarke both declined to comment. They have previously said their
clients are innocent and have been unfairly targeted by the
government.
Follow us on Twitter: @alongstreth1, @AlisonFrankel, @ReutersLegal | Like us on Facebook